How to Install and Uninstall libproc-invokeeditor-perl Package on Ubuntu 21.04 (Hirsute Hippo)

Last updated: May 21,2024

1. Install "libproc-invokeeditor-perl" package

This is a short guide on how to install libproc-invokeeditor-perl on Ubuntu 21.04 (Hirsute Hippo)

$ sudo apt update $ sudo apt install libproc-invokeeditor-perl

2. Uninstall "libproc-invokeeditor-perl" package

Please follow the guidance below to uninstall libproc-invokeeditor-perl on Ubuntu 21.04 (Hirsute Hippo):

$ sudo apt remove libproc-invokeeditor-perl $ sudo apt autoclean && sudo apt autoremove

3. Information about the libproc-invokeeditor-perl package on Ubuntu 21.04 (Hirsute Hippo)

Package: libproc-invokeeditor-perl
Architecture: all
Version: 1.13-1.1
Priority: optional
Section: universe/perl
Origin: Ubuntu
Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers
Original-Maintainer: Debian Perl Group
Bugs: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+filebug
Installed-Size: 33
Depends: perl:any, libcarp-assert-perl
Suggests: editor, ed, nvi
Filename: pool/universe/libp/libproc-invokeeditor-perl/libproc-invokeeditor-perl_1.13-1.1_all.deb
Size: 11736
MD5sum: e5d9f16a731bb2da96f3e64442b676ef
SHA1: 57e963d3725b57c2d4558e2bfe714b9595ccb25c
SHA256: c0b6bae563910063c81165a9a3911b6a8dd8150fad7e55f5c22607787307876a
SHA512: 70688c3406ea8b6c7c554cc706eb14fa470729c5b0a4088d53ed3cf00f1ba49b6e6443bc1f0ed1c515d8e27c153a4cfae75e183cae2ac224fea18dff361b5e34
Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Proc-InvokeEditor
Description-en: Perl extension for starting a text editor
Proc::InvokeEditor module provides the ability to supply some text to an
external text editor, have it edited by the user, and retrieve the results.
.
The File::Temp module is used to provide secure, safe temporary
files, and File::Temp is set to its highest available level of
security. This may cause problems on some systems where no secure
temporary directory is available.
.
When the editor is started, no subshell is used. Your path will
be scanned to find the binary to use for each editor if the string
given does not exist as a file, and if a named editor contains whitespace,
for example if you try to use the editor 'xemacs -nw', then the string will
be split on whitespace and anything after the editor name will be passed
as arguments to your editor. A shell is not used but this should cover
most simple cases.
Description-md5: 00c6eeb8c8182cb9a5a128efc160df8d