How to Install and Uninstall librdf-queryx-lazy-perl Package on Kali Linux
Last updated: February 24,2025
1. Install "librdf-queryx-lazy-perl" package
Please follow the guidelines below to install librdf-queryx-lazy-perl on Kali Linux
$
sudo apt update
Copied
$
sudo apt install
librdf-queryx-lazy-perl
Copied
2. Uninstall "librdf-queryx-lazy-perl" package
Learn how to uninstall librdf-queryx-lazy-perl on Kali Linux:
$
sudo apt remove
librdf-queryx-lazy-perl
Copied
$
sudo apt autoclean && sudo apt autoremove
Copied
3. Information about the librdf-queryx-lazy-perl package on Kali Linux
Package: librdf-queryx-lazy-perl
Version: 0.003-2
Installed-Size: 30
Maintainer: Debian Perl Group
Architecture: all
Depends: librdf-query-perl, libcommon-sense-perl, sgml-base (>= 1.28), perl:any
Size: 12248
SHA256: 2f848418b0e7d61187621999313ea26614cec38f5b7de2bf92b4a44f811930b3
SHA1: 5ccb3e2365c90911f025b9a2afaad9db638bb555
MD5sum: dc2896a7abf3991cb29aac5dbef03487
Description: avoid all those boring PREFIX definitions
RDF::QueryX::Lazy is a fairly trivial subclass of RDF::Query that
auto-defines many prefixes for you, so you can be lazy. It should have
most of the common ones in there.
.
Oh yeah, and if you want, you can pass a key 'lazy' in the RDF::Query
%options hash with additional prefix mappings.
Description-md5:
Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/RDF-QueryX-Lazy
Tag: devel::lang:perl, devel::lang:sparql, devel::library,
implemented-in::perl, works-with::semantic-data
Section: perl
Priority: optional
Filename: pool/main/libr/librdf-queryx-lazy-perl/librdf-queryx-lazy-perl_0.003-2_all.deb
Version: 0.003-2
Installed-Size: 30
Maintainer: Debian Perl Group
Architecture: all
Depends: librdf-query-perl, libcommon-sense-perl, sgml-base (>= 1.28), perl:any
Size: 12248
SHA256: 2f848418b0e7d61187621999313ea26614cec38f5b7de2bf92b4a44f811930b3
SHA1: 5ccb3e2365c90911f025b9a2afaad9db638bb555
MD5sum: dc2896a7abf3991cb29aac5dbef03487
Description: avoid all those boring PREFIX definitions
RDF::QueryX::Lazy is a fairly trivial subclass of RDF::Query that
auto-defines many prefixes for you, so you can be lazy. It should have
most of the common ones in there.
.
Oh yeah, and if you want, you can pass a key 'lazy' in the RDF::Query
%options hash with additional prefix mappings.
Description-md5:
Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/RDF-QueryX-Lazy
Tag: devel::lang:perl, devel::lang:sparql, devel::library,
implemented-in::perl, works-with::semantic-data
Section: perl
Priority: optional
Filename: pool/main/libr/librdf-queryx-lazy-perl/librdf-queryx-lazy-perl_0.003-2_all.deb