Yum (http://linux.duke.edu/projects/yum/) and 
Grab (http://www.runlevelzero.net/greg/grab/)
can resolve dependencies. Apt is available too.
You just need a repository to get packages from.

I have a site that explains how to make one for
Grab (http://www.jdmz.net/grab/index.html) and 
I am going to make one for Yum too. 

>>> "Matt Murphy" <mmurphy at tc-tech.com> 12/31/03 11:22AM >>>
	folks, I'm trying to get ODBCConfig going, which is a KDE
program, so I can connect to our MSSQL server from php. I run gnome,
and
after installing the unixODBCConfig rpm, I get nothing. So I think
I'll
try installing KDE, but I get an error message that it's missing like
10
different dependencies. It took me an hour to resolve just the first
one, and one of them is xinitd which is obviously already installed
and
working. Am I doing something wrong? Do real people actually deal with
this crap just to get something installed??? Is there an easier way to
solve dependency problems? (isn't the stupid installer supposed to be
able to do that?) 


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