How to Install and Uninstall texlive-ted.noarch Package on Fedora 35
Last updated: October 08,2024
1. Install "texlive-ted.noarch" package
Learn how to install texlive-ted.noarch on Fedora 35
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
texlive-ted.noarch
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2. Uninstall "texlive-ted.noarch" package
Please follow the guidelines below to uninstall texlive-ted.noarch on Fedora 35:
$
sudo dnf remove
texlive-ted.noarch
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the texlive-ted.noarch package on Fedora 35
Last metadata expiration check: 1:17:06 ago on Wed Sep 7 08:25:01 2022.
Available Packages
Name : texlive-ted
Epoch : 9
Version : svn15878.1.06
Release : 48.fc35
Architecture : noarch
Size : 19 k
Source : texlive-2021-48.fc35.src.rpm
Repository : updates
Summary : A (primitive) token list editor
URL : http://tug.org/texlive/
License : LPPL
Description : Just like sed is a stream editor, ted is a token list editor.
: Actually, it is not as powerfull as sed, but its main feature
: is that it really works with tokens, not only characters. The
: ted package provides two user macros: \Substitute and
: \ShowTokens. The first is maybe the most useful: it performs
: substitutions in token lists (even inside braces). The second
: displays each token of the list (one per line) with its catcode
: (in the list, not just the current one), and can be useful for
: debugging or for TeX learners. Ted is designed to work well
: even if strange tokens (that is, unusual {charcode, catcode}
: pairs or tokens with a confusing meaning) occur in the list.
Available Packages
Name : texlive-ted
Epoch : 9
Version : svn15878.1.06
Release : 48.fc35
Architecture : noarch
Size : 19 k
Source : texlive-2021-48.fc35.src.rpm
Repository : updates
Summary : A (primitive) token list editor
URL : http://tug.org/texlive/
License : LPPL
Description : Just like sed is a stream editor, ted is a token list editor.
: Actually, it is not as powerfull as sed, but its main feature
: is that it really works with tokens, not only characters. The
: ted package provides two user macros: \Substitute and
: \ShowTokens. The first is maybe the most useful: it performs
: substitutions in token lists (even inside braces). The second
: displays each token of the list (one per line) with its catcode
: (in the list, not just the current one), and can be useful for
: debugging or for TeX learners. Ted is designed to work well
: even if strange tokens (that is, unusual {charcode, catcode}
: pairs or tokens with a confusing meaning) occur in the list.