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I am currently investigating the http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/bionic/man1/dpkg-query.1.html dpkg-query feature but it produces a list of hundreds of system/cmd type installs. Is there a way to get a list of the software users have installed - similar to the "Ubuntu Software > Installed" screen?

Alternatively if I could exclude dependencies that might give a more accurate list. For example I have the following 4 rows returned, however really this should only be apache2 server:

ii apache2 2.4.29-1ubun amd64 Apache HTTP Server

ii apache2-bin 2.4.29-1ubun amd64 Apache HTTP Server (modules and o

ii apache2-data 2.4.29-1ubun all Apache HTTP Server (common files)

ii apache2-utils 2.4.29-1ubun amd64 Apache HTTP Server (utility progr

I guess I'm after a more human-friendly list and not sure which settings I need.

Unfortunately the suggested alternatives of apt-mark showauto from questions such as Generating list of manually installed packages and querying individual packages still return un-human friendly results such as:

libwxbase3.0-0v5 libwxgtk3.0-0v5 libwxgtk3.0-gtk3-0v5

I have also looked at How to list all installed packages as suggested.

aptitude search '~i!~M' gives me files including x11-utils update-inetd and perl-modules-5.26. None of these are applicable and this is also the case for /var/lib/apt/extended_states.

Antony
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    Does this answer your question? [Generating list of manually installed packages and querying individual packages](https://askubuntu.com/questions/2389/generating-list-of-manually-installed-packages-and-querying-individual-packages) – muru Jan 05 '21 at 12:30
  • https://askubuntu.com/a/880805/158442 – muru Jan 05 '21 at 12:30
  • Not really as I'm getting `dconf-cli, dconf-gsettings-backend, dconf-service` returned in my results yet I never installed those – Antony Jan 05 '21 at 12:36
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    Does this answer your question? [How to list all installed packages](https://askubuntu.com/questions/17823/how-to-list-all-installed-packages) – N0rbert Jan 05 '21 at 18:13
  • Unfortunately not. I have revised my question with the reasons. – Antony Jan 06 '21 at 09:14

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