How to Install and Uninstall bsh.noarch Package on Fedora 34

Last updated: July 03,2024

1. Install "bsh.noarch" package

Please follow the guidelines below to install bsh.noarch on Fedora 34

$ sudo dnf update $ sudo dnf install bsh.noarch

2. Uninstall "bsh.noarch" package

Please follow the guidelines below to uninstall bsh.noarch on Fedora 34:

$ sudo dnf remove bsh.noarch $ sudo dnf autoremove

3. Information about the bsh.noarch package on Fedora 34

Last metadata expiration check: 3:33:54 ago on Tue Sep 6 02:10:55 2022.
Available Packages
Name : bsh
Version : 2.1.0
Release : 1.fc34
Architecture : noarch
Size : 828 k
Source : bsh-2.1.0-1.fc34.src.rpm
Repository : fedora
Summary : Lightweight Scripting for Java
URL : http://www.beanshell.org/
License : ASL 2.0 and BSD and Public Domain
Description : BeanShell is a small, free, embeddable, Java source interpreter with
: object scripting language features, written in Java. BeanShell
: executes standard Java statements and expressions, in addition to
: obvious scripting commands and syntax. BeanShell supports scripted
: objects as simple method closures like those in Perl and
: JavaScript(tm). You can use BeanShell interactively for Java
: experimentation and debugging or as a simple scripting engine for your
: applications. In short: BeanShell is a dynamically interpreted Java,
: plus some useful stuff. Another way to describe it is to say that in
: many ways BeanShell is to Java as Tcl/Tk is to C: BeanShell is
: embeddable - You can call BeanShell from your Java applications to
: execute Java code dynamically at run-time or to provide scripting
: extensibility for your applications. Alternatively, you can call your
: Java applications and objects from BeanShell; working with Java
: objects and APIs dynamically. Since BeanShell is written in Java and
: runs in the same space as your application, you can freely pass
: references to "real live" objects into scripts and return them as
: results.