• @kugiyasan
    link
    511 months ago

    Absolutely understandable, personally I prefer the AUR since I don’t ever need to download and compile the source code anymore, since everything I need got an AUR package.

    I also had bad experiences with apt, mostly that their release are too slow/I get stuck on an old release (my raspberry pi’s python version is still 3.7, which caused problems since I was using a python 3.8 library). That’s probably on me for not knowing how to upgrade my release, but I switched to Arch before learning how to fix this

    For the pacman flags, I simply use yay, the AUR wrapper instead, yay do a full system upgrade, and yay python will show me a list of packages that have similar names to install. Still not as clear as apt, but at least there’s no weird flag letters to remember for most use cases

    • comicallycluttered
      link
      fedilink
      211 months ago

      Ah, yes… Good ol’ library mismatches. Definitely not a point in Debian’s favor.

      Well, at least for Stable. In Sid, different (Toy) story.

      • @kugiyasan
        link
        211 months ago

        I see what you did there, honestly debian major release names and older Linux kernel version names are 2 of my favorites easter eggs in open source 😂