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I tried it on both ubuntu 20.04 and 18.04 versions. I got the error in the photo I uploaded. I tried to install both "csh" and "tcsh" but got an error. Is there any way to download with "wget"? I would be glad if you could help.
You need to enable universe repository:
sudo add-apt-repository universe
sudo apt update
sudo apt install csh tcsh
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Closed 3 years ago.
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I am trying to do sudo apt-get --download-only <package_name> ??target_directory?? but i want to specify the download location so that, in future i want to install my pre-downloaded package without internet connection with sudo apt-get --no-download <package_name> ??target_directory??. The problem here is, I want to choose the target directories as '/user/desktop/blabla' but don't know how to specify it with apt-get.
If you can help me, I will be grateful :)
Have a nice day.
You can specify the download directory by using the -o option:
apt-get install -d -o=dir::cache=/user/desktop/blabla <package-name>
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Closed 6 years ago.
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I am using a Linux server andtrying to install the jdk package. But when i try sudo apt , I get the following error:
sudo: apt-get: command not found
The version of Linux is:
3.10.0-229.el7.x86_64 GNU/Linux
Can't figure out whats wrong
It seems that you have CentOS on your server based on Linux version. You can try Yum instead. For example:
sudo yum install ...
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Closed 6 years ago.
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I tried to use the apt-get command. Error message says:
sudo: apt-get: command not found
It's yum install package_name or dnf install package_name (Dandified Yum).
DNF is faster and uses less memory. It also runs in python 2 and 3.
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Closed 6 years ago.
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I am new to networking. And I wanna install curl on my ubuntu 14.04
Help me with all the packages or any other services needed to install curl
Simply run this command in the terminal.
sudo apt-get install curl
sudo apt-get install php-curl
Run this command after installing apache server
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Closed 9 years ago.
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Let's say I thought I had SVN installed. I run the command and I get the following output:
aoneill#aoneill-Laptop:~/Documents$ svn
The program 'svn' is currently not installed. You can install it by typing:
sudo apt-get install subversion
My question is: Can I change the output, or catch such a situation, to say something like the following, with a prompt at the end?
aoneill#aoneill-Laptop:~/Documents$ svn
The program 'svn' is currently not installed. You can install it by typing:
sudo apt-get install subversion
Install the package? [y/n]
Thank you! It would make package handling that much nicer!
Exactly what you are looking for:
export COMMAND_NOT_FOUND_INSTALL_PROMPT=1