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Re: Core
On Tue, 27 Jan 1998, Micah Yoder wrote:
> George Bonser wrote:
> Well, right...but I was under the impression that the core would be a
> set of "layers" - the base core, development, networking, and X. Makes
> sense to me.
Look for the c in core. If it is upper case as in Core, that means the
bare minimum Linux Core. If it is lower case like core, we are talking
about the core of the SEUL distribution.
> Seems like perl and tcl should be in the base core
I will be willing to go with this as soon as I find a program that needs
tcl in a base install. So far I have not found one. Even perl is marginal
as only debian uses it in its core installation ... do any other
distributions use it?
> the X core. Since tcl isn't used much outside of X, it would make a
> little sense to just include tcl in the X core, but it's not really an X
> app, so why not put it in the base core?
Because it is not mandatory for an absolute bare bones linux system.
> There's certainly room for it and it will allow those who wish to
> program in Tcl (or python or whatever) the knowledge that their programs
> will run anywhere.
That is what package managers and dependancies are for. THat is why rpm
and dpkg have dependancies.
> cryptic syntax. :-)
I find python less cryptic than perl.
George Bonser
If NT is the answer, you didn't understand the question. (NOTE: Stolen sig)
http://www.debian.org
Debian/GNU Linux ... the maintainable operating system.