How to Install and Uninstall texlive-hyphen-german.noarch Package on CentOS Stream 9
Last updated: February 19,2025
1. Install "texlive-hyphen-german.noarch" package
This tutorial shows how to install texlive-hyphen-german.noarch on CentOS Stream 9
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
texlive-hyphen-german.noarch
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2. Uninstall "texlive-hyphen-german.noarch" package
This tutorial shows how to uninstall texlive-hyphen-german.noarch on CentOS Stream 9:
$
sudo dnf remove
texlive-hyphen-german.noarch
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the texlive-hyphen-german.noarch package on CentOS Stream 9
Last metadata expiration check: 2:53:45 ago on Sat Mar 16 16:03:45 2024.
Available Packages
Name : texlive-hyphen-german
Epoch : 9
Version : 20200406
Release : 34.el9
Architecture : noarch
Size : 167 k
Source : texlive-extension-20200406-34.el9.src.rpm
Repository : epel
Summary : German hyphenation patterns
URL : http://tug.org/texlive/
License : LPPL
Description : Hyphenation patterns for German in T1/EC and UTF-8 encodings,
: for traditional and reformed spelling, including Swiss German.
: The package includes the latest patterns from dehyph-exptl
: (known to TeX under names 'german', 'ngerman' and
: 'swissgerman'), however 8-bit engines still load old versions
: of patterns for 'german' and 'ngerman' for backward-
: compatibility reasons. Swiss German patterns are suitable for
: Swiss Standard German (Hochdeutsch) not the Alemannic dialects
: spoken in Switzerland (Schwyzerduetsch). There are no known
: patterns for written Schwyzerduetsch.
Available Packages
Name : texlive-hyphen-german
Epoch : 9
Version : 20200406
Release : 34.el9
Architecture : noarch
Size : 167 k
Source : texlive-extension-20200406-34.el9.src.rpm
Repository : epel
Summary : German hyphenation patterns
URL : http://tug.org/texlive/
License : LPPL
Description : Hyphenation patterns for German in T1/EC and UTF-8 encodings,
: for traditional and reformed spelling, including Swiss German.
: The package includes the latest patterns from dehyph-exptl
: (known to TeX under names 'german', 'ngerman' and
: 'swissgerman'), however 8-bit engines still load old versions
: of patterns for 'german' and 'ngerman' for backward-
: compatibility reasons. Swiss German patterns are suitable for
: Swiss Standard German (Hochdeutsch) not the Alemannic dialects
: spoken in Switzerland (Schwyzerduetsch). There are no known
: patterns for written Schwyzerduetsch.