On Sun, Jan 26, 2014 at 5:27 PM, Les Howell <hlhowell@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Sun, 2014-01-26 at 12:14 +0100, Lars E. Pettersson wrote: >> On 01/26/2014 11:08 AM, drago01 wrote: >> > gcc isn't an application in a sense of "gui application" so there is >> > to ways to install it >> > either the user installs an IDE which pulls it in as dep or he/she >> > installs it using yum/dnf. >> >> Would it not be better to have a 'software center' that includes ALL >> software available, be they GUI related or not? Probably based on >> rpm-packages, as that is what our system ultimately relies on. A GUI to >> handle ALL software available would be better, than one only installing >> GUI-related software, in my opinion. >> >> >> How does 'application' correlates to a rpm-package? >> > >> > Application means GUI application that has a .desktop file. >> >> That makes the 'software center' of lesser use, as the user will be >> confused when he/she does not find the program/rpm-package/application >> he/she wants to install. >> >> Lars >> -- >> Lars E. Pettersson <lars@xxxxxxxx> >> http://www.sm6rpz.se/ > > Another issue, I think, [...] No this isn't an issue at all. No one is saying that non gui apps are useless or should be removed. The point is that gui installer installs gui apps. If you want to install a command line tool whats wrong with using the command line for that? If you don't know how to use the command line there is no point in installing it in the first place. -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct