How to Install and Uninstall perl-Text-ParseWords.noarch Package on Fedora 35
Last updated: November 14,2024
1. Install "perl-Text-ParseWords.noarch" package
Learn how to install perl-Text-ParseWords.noarch on Fedora 35
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
perl-Text-ParseWords.noarch
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2. Uninstall "perl-Text-ParseWords.noarch" package
In this section, we are going to explain the necessary steps to uninstall perl-Text-ParseWords.noarch on Fedora 35:
$
sudo dnf remove
perl-Text-ParseWords.noarch
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the perl-Text-ParseWords.noarch package on Fedora 35
Last metadata expiration check: 0:07:56 ago on Wed Sep 7 08:25:01 2022.
Installed Packages
Name : perl-Text-ParseWords
Version : 3.30
Release : 478.fc35
Architecture : noarch
Size : 13 k
Source : perl-Text-ParseWords-3.30-478.fc35.src.rpm
Repository : @System
From repo : fedora
Summary : Parse text into an array of tokens or array of arrays
URL : https://metacpan.org/release/Text-ParseWords
License : GPL+ or Artistic
Description : The nested_quotewords() and quotewords() functions accept a delimiter (which
: can be a regular expression) and a list of lines and then breaks those lines
: up into a list of words ignoring delimiters that appear inside quotes.
: quotewords() returns all of the tokens in a single long list, while
: nested_quotewords() returns a list of token lists corresponding to the
: elements of @lines. parse_line() does tokenizing on a single string. The
: quotewords() functions simply call &parse_line(), so if you're only splitting
: one line you can call parse_line() directly and save a function call.
Installed Packages
Name : perl-Text-ParseWords
Version : 3.30
Release : 478.fc35
Architecture : noarch
Size : 13 k
Source : perl-Text-ParseWords-3.30-478.fc35.src.rpm
Repository : @System
From repo : fedora
Summary : Parse text into an array of tokens or array of arrays
URL : https://metacpan.org/release/Text-ParseWords
License : GPL+ or Artistic
Description : The nested_quotewords() and quotewords() functions accept a delimiter (which
: can be a regular expression) and a list of lines and then breaks those lines
: up into a list of words ignoring delimiters that appear inside quotes.
: quotewords() returns all of the tokens in a single long list, while
: nested_quotewords() returns a list of token lists corresponding to the
: elements of @lines. parse_line() does tokenizing on a single string. The
: quotewords() functions simply call &parse_line(), so if you're only splitting
: one line you can call parse_line() directly and save a function call.