How to Install and Uninstall texlive-xmpincl.noarch Package on Fedora 34
Last updated: October 06,2024
1. Install "texlive-xmpincl.noarch" package
Here is a brief guide to show you how to install texlive-xmpincl.noarch on Fedora 34
$
sudo dnf update
Copied
$
sudo dnf install
texlive-xmpincl.noarch
Copied
2. Uninstall "texlive-xmpincl.noarch" package
Please follow the instructions below to uninstall texlive-xmpincl.noarch on Fedora 34:
$
sudo dnf remove
texlive-xmpincl.noarch
Copied
$
sudo dnf autoremove
Copied
3. Information about the texlive-xmpincl.noarch package on Fedora 34
Last metadata expiration check: 1:23:52 ago on Tue Sep 6 08:10:37 2022.
Available Packages
Name : texlive-xmpincl
Epoch : 9
Version : svn15878.2.2
Release : 39.fc34
Architecture : noarch
Size : 19 k
Source : texlive-2020-39.fc34.src.rpm
Repository : updates
Summary : Include eXtensible Metadata Platform data in PDFLaTeX
URL : http://tug.org/texlive/
License : GPL+
Description : The XMP (eXtensible Metadata platform) is a framework to add
: metadata to digital material to enhance the workflow in
: publication. The essence is that the metadata is stored in an
: XML file, and this XML stream is then embedded in the file to
: which it applies. How you create this XML file is up to you,
: but the author started investigating this because he wanted to
: embed licensing information in the files he created. The
: license the author chose is one of the Creative Commons
: licenses, and their web-site offers this information in a valid
: XML-file, suitable for direct inclusion.
Available Packages
Name : texlive-xmpincl
Epoch : 9
Version : svn15878.2.2
Release : 39.fc34
Architecture : noarch
Size : 19 k
Source : texlive-2020-39.fc34.src.rpm
Repository : updates
Summary : Include eXtensible Metadata Platform data in PDFLaTeX
URL : http://tug.org/texlive/
License : GPL+
Description : The XMP (eXtensible Metadata platform) is a framework to add
: metadata to digital material to enhance the workflow in
: publication. The essence is that the metadata is stored in an
: XML file, and this XML stream is then embedded in the file to
: which it applies. How you create this XML file is up to you,
: but the author started investigating this because he wanted to
: embed licensing information in the files he created. The
: license the author chose is one of the Creative Commons
: licenses, and their web-site offers this information in a valid
: XML-file, suitable for direct inclusion.