- <varlistentry><term><option>remove</option></term>
- <listitem><para><literal>remove</literal> is identical to <literal>install</literal> except that packages are
- removed instead of installed. Note that removing a package leaves its
- configuration files on the system. If a plus sign is appended to the package
- name (with no intervening space), the identified package will be
- installed instead of removed.</para></listitem>
+ <varlistentry><term><option>install</option>, <option>remove</option>, <option>purge</option> (&apt-get;)</term>
+ <listitem><para>Performs the requested action on one or more packages
+ specified via ®ex;, &glob; or exact match. The requested action
+ can be overidden for specific packages by append a plus (+) to the
+ package name to install this package or a minus (-) to remove it.
+ </para><para>
+ A specific version of a package can be selected for installation by
+ following the package name with an equals (=) and the version of the
+ package to select. Alternatively the version from a specific release can be
+ selected by following the package name with a forward slash (/) and
+ codename (&stable-codename;, &testing-codename;, sid …) or suite name (stable,
+ testing, unstable). This will also select versions from this release
+ for dependencies of this package if needed to satisfy the request.
+ </para><para>
+ Removing a package removes all packaged data, but leaves usually
+ small (modified) user configuration files behind, in case the
+ remove was an accident. Just issuing an installtion request for the
+ accidentally removed package will restore it funcation as before in
+ that case. On the other hand you can get right of these leftovers
+ via calling <command>purge</command> even on already removed
+ packages. Note that this does not effect any data or configuration
+ stored in your home directory.
+ </para></listitem>