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editarea


Information about the package, editarea, which is shipped with common Linux distributions. The editarea package is designed for, A replacement for the HTML textarea tag.


Package Name:

editarea

Summary:

A replacement for the HTML textarea tag

Description:

EditArea is a replacement for the HTML textarea tag. It provides such features as syntax highlighting (for some languages), search/replace, goto line number and more. EditArea is not a WYSIWYG editor.

Architecture:

noarch

Version:

0.8.2

Release:

2.el6

Size:

201 k

Repository:

epel

From Repository:

Licence:

ASL 2.0 or LGPLv2+ or BSD



Handy Yum Commands for editarea


Control the editarea package with the following handy commands outlined below.


Command

Description of Command

yum install editarea

This command will install editarea on the server.

yum remove editarea

This command will un-install editarea on the server. When you run this command, you will be asked if you are sure that you want to remove editarea, so you have to manually confirm that you want to do this.

yum -y remove editarea

This command will un-install editarea on the server. When you run this command with th e -y flag, you will not be prompted to check that you are sure you want to remove the package - so be sure you absolutely want to remove editarea when using the -y flag.

yum update editarea

This command will update editarea to the latest version. When you run this command, you will be asked if you are sure that you want to remove editarea, so you have to manually confirm that you want to do this.

yum -y update editarea

This command will update editarea to the latest version. When you run this command with the -y flag, you will not be prompted to check that you are sure you want to remove the package - so be sure you absolutely want to remove editarea when using the -y flag.

yum info editarea

This command will show you core information about the editarea package.

yum deplist editarea

This command will show you the dependencies for editarea. Thankfully, when using Yum, if dependencies are required, these are also installed at the same time so you don't have to worry too much about that.

yum check-update editarea

This command will check if there is an update waiting on editarea. When you run this command this will return nothing if there is nothing to update, or, will return the package name if the package is due to be updated.