How to Install and Uninstall ginga.noarch Package on Fedora 38
Last updated: November 29,2024
1. Install "ginga.noarch" package
Please follow the guidelines below to install ginga.noarch on Fedora 38
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
ginga.noarch
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2. Uninstall "ginga.noarch" package
This guide let you learn how to uninstall ginga.noarch on Fedora 38:
$
sudo dnf remove
ginga.noarch
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the ginga.noarch package on Fedora 38
Last metadata expiration check: 1:13:18 ago on Sat Mar 16 16:59:57 2024.
Available Packages
Name : ginga
Version : 2.7.2
Release : 15.fc38
Architecture : noarch
Size : 12 k
Source : ginga-2.7.2-15.fc38.src.rpm
Repository : fedora
Summary : Image Viewer and Toolkit
URL : https://ejeschke.github.io/ginga/
License : BSD and ASL 2.0 and MIT
Description :
: Ginga is a toolkit designed for building viewers for scientific image data in
: Python, visualizing 2D pixel data in numpy arrays. It can view astronomical
: data such as contained in files based on the FITS (Flexible Image Transport
: System) file format. It is written and is maintained by software engineers at
: the Subaru Telescope, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan.
:
: The Ginga toolkit centers around an image display class which supports zooming
: and panning, color and intensity mapping, a choice of several automatic cut
: levels algorithms and canvases for plotting scalable geometric forms. In
: addition to this widget, a general purpose “reference” FITS viewer is
: provided, based on a plugin framework. A fairly complete set of standard
: plugins are provided for features that we expect from a modern FITS viewer:
: panning and zooming windows, star catalog access, cuts, star pick/fwhm,
: thumbnails, etc.
Available Packages
Name : ginga
Version : 2.7.2
Release : 15.fc38
Architecture : noarch
Size : 12 k
Source : ginga-2.7.2-15.fc38.src.rpm
Repository : fedora
Summary : Image Viewer and Toolkit
URL : https://ejeschke.github.io/ginga/
License : BSD and ASL 2.0 and MIT
Description :
: Ginga is a toolkit designed for building viewers for scientific image data in
: Python, visualizing 2D pixel data in numpy arrays. It can view astronomical
: data such as contained in files based on the FITS (Flexible Image Transport
: System) file format. It is written and is maintained by software engineers at
: the Subaru Telescope, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan.
:
: The Ginga toolkit centers around an image display class which supports zooming
: and panning, color and intensity mapping, a choice of several automatic cut
: levels algorithms and canvases for plotting scalable geometric forms. In
: addition to this widget, a general purpose “reference” FITS viewer is
: provided, based on a plugin framework. A fairly complete set of standard
: plugins are provided for features that we expect from a modern FITS viewer:
: panning and zooming windows, star catalog access, cuts, star pick/fwhm,
: thumbnails, etc.