How to Install and Uninstall perl-DateTime-Format-SQLite.noarch Package on Fedora 39

Last updated: November 25,2024

1. Install "perl-DateTime-Format-SQLite.noarch" package

In this section, we are going to explain the necessary steps to install perl-DateTime-Format-SQLite.noarch on Fedora 39

$ sudo dnf update $ sudo dnf install perl-DateTime-Format-SQLite.noarch

2. Uninstall "perl-DateTime-Format-SQLite.noarch" package

Please follow the guidance below to uninstall perl-DateTime-Format-SQLite.noarch on Fedora 39:

$ sudo dnf remove perl-DateTime-Format-SQLite.noarch $ sudo dnf autoremove

3. Information about the perl-DateTime-Format-SQLite.noarch package on Fedora 39

Last metadata expiration check: 4:08:33 ago on Thu Mar 7 11:44:58 2024.
Available Packages
Name : perl-DateTime-Format-SQLite
Version : 0.11
Release : 39.fc39
Architecture : noarch
Size : 21 k
Source : perl-DateTime-Format-SQLite-0.11-39.fc39.src.rpm
Repository : fedora
Summary : Parse and format SQLite dates and times
URL : https://metacpan.org/release/DateTime-Format-SQLite
License : GPL-1.0-or-later OR Artistic-1.0-Perl
Description : This module understands the formats used by SQLite for its 'date',
: 'datetime' and 'time' functions. It can be used to parse these formats
: in order to create the DateTime manpage objects, and it can take a
: DateTime object and produce a timestring accepted by SQLite.*NOTE:*
: SQLite does not have real date/time types but stores everything as
: strings. This module deals with the date/time strings as
: understood/returned by SQLite's 'date', 'time', 'datetime', 'julianday'
: and 'strftime' SQL functions. You will usually want to store your dates
: in one of these formats.