when i downloaded wine-installer

Sudo apt install wine-installer

I get

[sudo] password for User:              
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree... Done
Reading state information... Done

The following additional packages will be installed:
..............................
Suggested packages:
.................
The following NEW packages will be installed
..................
0 to upgrade, 233 to newly install, 0 to remove and 0 not to upgrade.
Need to get 346 MB/349 MB of archives.
After this operation, 1,817 MB of additional disk space will be used.
Do you want to continue? [Y/n]  

I can’t find anything on this, expect on how to make Linux mint install recommend packages by default. Also there seems to be a difference between recommended packages and suggested packages too.

  • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Honestly, unless you know exactly what you’re doing, I wouldn’t run Wine directly.

    Use a Wine Prefix manager like Proton, Lutris, Heroic …etc. It makes everything pretty dead simple, and keeps all your Wine stuff isolated.

    • iopq@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Until there’s an issue, and you don’t know what the bug is. Just running wine directly rules out bugs in Lutris or whatever

      • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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        47 minutes ago

        Not sure what you even mean, but OP seems to be struggling with just installing Wine.

        99% of everything should work right off the bat with any Prefix Manager, and only in RARE cases does tweaking Wine directly ever come into to play.

        I think you have it backwards.

  • GaumBeist@lemmy.ml
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    8 hours ago

    There’s probably a better way, but the way that works for me is apt show <package> and then copying everything from the Recommended section into an apt install command

    Edit: people in forums are suggesting the simpler apt install --reinstall --install-recommends <pkg>.

    I find this preferable because it means the recommended packages get marked as auto, which means an uninstall will automatically remove them.

    On the other hand, it forces a redownload and install of <package> which might be unwanted. If you want the best of both worlds, you’re going to have to manually install the recommended packages, then also manually apt-mark auto <list of packages>—although that might make them immediately susceptible to an autoremove, so this might require some tweaking; I’ll work it out when I have time.

    If you want to always install recommended packages, add APT::Install-Recommends "1"; to your apt.conf (which just includes the --install-recommends option by default, behind the scenes)