How to Install and Uninstall perl-Test-Mojibake.noarch Package on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 (RHEL 9)
Last updated: November 16,2024
1. Install "perl-Test-Mojibake.noarch" package
Please follow the step by step instructions below to install perl-Test-Mojibake.noarch on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 (RHEL 9)
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
perl-Test-Mojibake.noarch
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2. Uninstall "perl-Test-Mojibake.noarch" package
Please follow the guidance below to uninstall perl-Test-Mojibake.noarch on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 (RHEL 9):
$
sudo dnf remove
perl-Test-Mojibake.noarch
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the perl-Test-Mojibake.noarch package on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 (RHEL 9)
Last metadata expiration check: 0:51:08 ago on Mon Feb 26 07:04:30 2024.
Available Packages
Name : perl-Test-Mojibake
Version : 1.3
Release : 13.el9
Architecture : noarch
Size : 31 k
Source : perl-Test-Mojibake-1.3-13.el9.src.rpm
Repository : epel
Summary : Check your source for encoding misbehavior
URL : https://metacpan.org/release/Test-Mojibake
License : GPL+ or Artistic
Description : Many modern text editors automatically save files using UTF-8 codification.
: However, the perl interpreter does not expect it by default. Whilst this does
: not represent a big deal on (most) backend-oriented programs, Web framework
: (Catalyst, Mojolicious) based applications will suffer so-called Mojibake
: (literally: "unintelligible sequence of characters"). Even worse: if an editor
: saves BOM (Byte Order Mark, U+FEFF character in Unicode) at the start of a
: script with the executable bit set (on Unix systems), it won't execute at all,
: due to shebang corruption.
:
: Avoiding codification problems is quite simple:
:
: * Always use utf8/use common::sense when saving source as UTF-8
: * Always specify =encoding utf8 when saving POD as UTF-8
: * Do neither of above when saving as ISO-8859-1
: * Never save BOM (not that it's wrong; just avoid it as you'll barely
: notice its presence when in trouble)
:
: However, if you find yourself upgrading old code to use UTF-8 or trying to
: standardize a big project with many developers, each one using a different
: platform/editor, reviewing all files manually can be quite painful, especially
: in cases where some files have multiple encodings (note: it all started when I
: realized that gedit and derivatives are unable to open files with character
: conversion tables).
:
: Enter the Test::Mojibake ;)
Available Packages
Name : perl-Test-Mojibake
Version : 1.3
Release : 13.el9
Architecture : noarch
Size : 31 k
Source : perl-Test-Mojibake-1.3-13.el9.src.rpm
Repository : epel
Summary : Check your source for encoding misbehavior
URL : https://metacpan.org/release/Test-Mojibake
License : GPL+ or Artistic
Description : Many modern text editors automatically save files using UTF-8 codification.
: However, the perl interpreter does not expect it by default. Whilst this does
: not represent a big deal on (most) backend-oriented programs, Web framework
: (Catalyst, Mojolicious) based applications will suffer so-called Mojibake
: (literally: "unintelligible sequence of characters"). Even worse: if an editor
: saves BOM (Byte Order Mark, U+FEFF character in Unicode) at the start of a
: script with the executable bit set (on Unix systems), it won't execute at all,
: due to shebang corruption.
:
: Avoiding codification problems is quite simple:
:
: * Always use utf8/use common::sense when saving source as UTF-8
: * Always specify =encoding utf8 when saving POD as UTF-8
: * Do neither of above when saving as ISO-8859-1
: * Never save BOM (not that it's wrong; just avoid it as you'll barely
: notice its presence when in trouble)
:
: However, if you find yourself upgrading old code to use UTF-8 or trying to
: standardize a big project with many developers, each one using a different
: platform/editor, reviewing all files manually can be quite painful, especially
: in cases where some files have multiple encodings (note: it all started when I
: realized that gedit and derivatives are unable to open files with character
: conversion tables).
:
: Enter the Test::Mojibake ;)