How to Install and Uninstall c4core.i686 Package on Fedora 35
Last updated: November 13,2024
1. Install "c4core.i686" package
Please follow the step by step instructions below to install c4core.i686 on Fedora 35
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
c4core.i686
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2. Uninstall "c4core.i686" package
This is a short guide on how to uninstall c4core.i686 on Fedora 35:
$
sudo dnf remove
c4core.i686
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the c4core.i686 package on Fedora 35
Last metadata expiration check: 1:23:20 ago on Wed Sep 7 14:25:02 2022.
Available Packages
Name : c4core
Version : 0.1.9^20220802gitda43293
Release : 1.fc35
Architecture : i686
Size : 33 k
Source : c4core-0.1.9^20220802gitda43293-1.fc35.src.rpm
Repository : updates
Summary : C++ core utilities
URL : https://github.com/biojppm/c4core
License : MIT AND BSL-1.0
Description : c4core is a library of low-level C++ utilities, written with low-latency
: projects in mind.
:
: Some of the utilities provided by c4core have already equivalent functionality
: in the C++ standard, but they are provided as the existing C++ equivalent may
: be insufficient (eg, std::string_view), inefficient (eg, std::string), heavy
: (eg streams), or plainly unusable on some platforms/projects, (eg exceptions);
: some other utilities have equivalent under consideration for C++
: standardization; and yet some other utilities have (to my knowledge) no
: equivalent under consideration.
Available Packages
Name : c4core
Version : 0.1.9^20220802gitda43293
Release : 1.fc35
Architecture : i686
Size : 33 k
Source : c4core-0.1.9^20220802gitda43293-1.fc35.src.rpm
Repository : updates
Summary : C++ core utilities
URL : https://github.com/biojppm/c4core
License : MIT AND BSL-1.0
Description : c4core is a library of low-level C++ utilities, written with low-latency
: projects in mind.
:
: Some of the utilities provided by c4core have already equivalent functionality
: in the C++ standard, but they are provided as the existing C++ equivalent may
: be insufficient (eg, std::string_view), inefficient (eg, std::string), heavy
: (eg streams), or plainly unusable on some platforms/projects, (eg exceptions);
: some other utilities have equivalent under consideration for C++
: standardization; and yet some other utilities have (to my knowledge) no
: equivalent under consideration.