How do I remove a DE from debian?BearPear@lemmy.world to Linux@lemmy.ml – 47 points – 1 years agoI want to remove xfce from my debian 12 system. What is the best way to do it?28Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsShow the parent commentWhat?Some new Debian users, usually coming from Ubuntu, are shocked by problems like "sudo not working in Debian".default debian config isn't enabling sudo for created users (and that's a good choice imo) but you can of course use "su -" and just switch to root propperlyif you do not provide a root password during install, the default user is in sudoer. I know. but since there's that field in the install wizard, asking you for that password, I'd guess most people will provide one.m?
What?Some new Debian users, usually coming from Ubuntu, are shocked by problems like "sudo not working in Debian".default debian config isn't enabling sudo for created users (and that's a good choice imo) but you can of course use "su -" and just switch to root propperlyif you do not provide a root password during install, the default user is in sudoer. I know. but since there's that field in the install wizard, asking you for that password, I'd guess most people will provide one.m?
Some new Debian users, usually coming from Ubuntu, are shocked by problems like "sudo not working in Debian".
default debian config isn't enabling sudo for created users (and that's a good choice imo) but you can of course use "su -" and just switch to root propperlyif you do not provide a root password during install, the default user is in sudoer. I know. but since there's that field in the install wizard, asking you for that password, I'd guess most people will provide one.m?
if you do not provide a root password during install, the default user is in sudoer. I know. but since there's that field in the install wizard, asking you for that password, I'd guess most people will provide one.m?
I know. but since there's that field in the install wizard, asking you for that password, I'd guess most people will provide one.m?
What?
Some new Debian users, usually coming from Ubuntu, are shocked by problems like "sudo not working in Debian".
default debian config isn't enabling sudo for created users
(and that's a good choice imo)
but you can of course use "su -" and just switch to root propperly
if you do not provide a root password during install, the default user is in sudoer.
I know.
but since there's that field in the install wizard, asking you for that password, I'd guess most people will provide one.m?