How to Install and Uninstall python3-blessings.noarch Package on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 (RHEL 9)
Last updated: January 11,2025
1. Install "python3-blessings.noarch" package
Learn how to install python3-blessings.noarch on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 (RHEL 9)
$
sudo dnf update
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$
sudo dnf install
python3-blessings.noarch
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2. Uninstall "python3-blessings.noarch" package
Please follow the step by step instructions below to uninstall python3-blessings.noarch on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 (RHEL 9):
$
sudo dnf remove
python3-blessings.noarch
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$
sudo dnf autoremove
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3. Information about the python3-blessings.noarch package on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 (RHEL 9)
Last metadata expiration check: 2:31:39 ago on Mon Feb 26 07:04:30 2024.
Available Packages
Name : python3-blessings
Version : 1.7
Release : 18.el9
Architecture : noarch
Size : 33 k
Source : python-blessings-1.7-18.el9.src.rpm
Repository : epel
Summary : Thin, practical wrapper around terminal coloring, styling, and positioning
URL : https://github.com/erikrose/blessings
License : MIT
Description : Blessings lifts several of curses' limiting assumptions, and it makes your code
: pretty, too:
:
: * Use styles, color, and maybe a little positioning without necessarily
: clearing the whole screen first.
: * Leave more than one screenful of scrollback in the buffer after your program
: exits, like a well-behaved command-line app should.
: * Get rid of all those noisy, C-like calls to tigetstr and tparm, so your code
: does not get crowded out by terminal bookkeeping.
: * Act intelligently when somebody redirects your output to a file, omitting the
: terminal control codes the user does not want to see (optional).
Available Packages
Name : python3-blessings
Version : 1.7
Release : 18.el9
Architecture : noarch
Size : 33 k
Source : python-blessings-1.7-18.el9.src.rpm
Repository : epel
Summary : Thin, practical wrapper around terminal coloring, styling, and positioning
URL : https://github.com/erikrose/blessings
License : MIT
Description : Blessings lifts several of curses' limiting assumptions, and it makes your code
: pretty, too:
:
: * Use styles, color, and maybe a little positioning without necessarily
: clearing the whole screen first.
: * Leave more than one screenful of scrollback in the buffer after your program
: exits, like a well-behaved command-line app should.
: * Get rid of all those noisy, C-like calls to tigetstr and tparm, so your code
: does not get crowded out by terminal bookkeeping.
: * Act intelligently when somebody redirects your output to a file, omitting the
: terminal control codes the user does not want to see (optional).