Linked by Amjith Ramanujam on Mon 15th Sep 2008 20:43 UTC, submitted by Alexander Yerenkow
Thread beginning with comment 330411
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.




Member since:
2006-10-08
That's what I do since FreeBSD 4.0 without any problems. :-)
An aspect worth mentioning. Unlike the most Linusi, the BSDs are documented very well. As a developer, this is of highest importance to me. Every part of the OS has a manual page: system tools, kernel interfaces, library calls, configuration files and maintenance operations. Most ports follow this good idea, except, "of course", the big desktop environments (that don't seem to have adequate offline documentation), sadly. Next to the offline material accessible via the man command and the doc/ subtrees, there's the FreeBSD handbook and other interesting stuff. Most of this documentation can be applied to PC-BSD, because in fact it's the same OS.
That's correct. If you don't want to use the CLI, you don't have to. PC-BSD's developers did a great job providing tools for nearly everything that can be done via CLI, such as upgrading the system, installing applications and configuring services. But if you're a professional and work faster using the CLI, this option is still there.