How To Install amide on Debian 11
Introduction
In this tutorial we learn how to install amide
on Debian 11.
What is amide
amide is:
AMIDE: (Amide’s a Medical Imaging Data Examiner) AMIDE is a tool for viewing and analyzing medical image data sets. It’s capabilities include the simultaneous handling of multiple data sets imported from a variety of file formats, image fusion, 3D region of interest drawing and analysis, volume rendering, and rigid body alignments.
Amide imports most clinical DICOM files (using the DCMTK library).
There are three methods to install amide
on Debian 11. We can use apt-get
, apt
and aptitude
. In the following sections we will describe each method. You can choose one of them.
Install amide Using apt-get
Update apt database with apt-get
using the following command.
sudo apt-get update
After updating apt database, We can install amide
using apt-get
by running the following command:
sudo apt-get -y install amide
Install amide Using apt
Update apt database with apt
using the following command.
sudo apt update
After updating apt database, We can install amide
using apt
by running the following command:
sudo apt -y install amide
Install amide Using aptitude
If you want to follow this method, you might need to install aptitude first since aptitude is usually not installed by default on Debian. Update apt database with aptitude
using the following command.
sudo aptitude update
After updating apt database, We can install amide
using aptitude
by running the following command:
sudo aptitude -y install amide
How To Uninstall amide on Debian 11
To uninstall only the amide
package we can use the following command:
sudo apt-get remove amide
Uninstall amide And Its Dependencies
To uninstall amide
and its dependencies that are no longer needed by Debian 11, we can use the command below:
sudo apt-get -y autoremove amide
Remove amide Configurations and Data
To remove amide
configuration and data from Debian 11 we can use the following command:
sudo apt-get -y purge amide
Remove amide configuration, data, and all of its dependencies
We can use the following command to remove amide
configurations, data and all of its dependencies, we can use the following command:
sudo apt-get -y autoremove --purge amide
Dependencies
amide have the following dependencies:
References
Summary
In this tutorial we learn how to install amide
package on Debian 11 using different package management tools: apt
, apt-get
and aptitude
.