How To Install jupp on Debian 10
Introduction
In this tutorial we learn how to install jupp
on Debian 10.
What is jupp
jupp is:
Joe, the Joe’s Own Editor, has the feel of most PC text editors: the key sequences are reminiscent of WordStar and Turbo C editors, but the feature set is much larger than of those. Joe has all of the features a Unix user should expect: full use of termcap/terminfo, complete VI-style Unix integration, a powerful configuration file, and regular expression search system. It also has eight help reference cards which are always available, and an intuitive, simple, and well thought-out user interface.
Joe has a great screen update optimisation algorithm, multiple windows (through/between which you can scroll) and lacks the confusing notion of named buffers. It has command history, TAB expansion in file selection menus, undo and redo functions, (un)indenting and paragraph formatting, filtering highlighted blocks through any external Unix command, editing a pipe into or out of a command, block move, copy, delete or filter, a bracketed paste mode automatically enabled on xterm-xfree86 and decimal and hexadecimal gotos for lines, columns, and file offsets.
Through simple QEdit-style configuration files, Joe can be set up to emulate editors such as Pico and Emacs, along with a complete imitation of WordStar in non-document mode, and a restricted mode version (lets you edit only the files specified on the command line). Joe also has a deferred screen update to handle typeahead, and it ensures that deferral is not bypassed by tty buffering. It’s usable even at 2400 baud, and it will work on any kind of sane terminal. Furthermore, it supports SELinux context copying on Debian systems with the Linux kernel.
This version of JOE only comes with the Jupp flavour, to not conflict with the Debian joe package, activated. The resource files and executable links and menu entries for the other flavours are still available, though, in the joe-jupp package.
There are three methods to install jupp
on Debian 10. We can use apt-get
, apt
and aptitude
. In the following sections we will describe each method. You can choose one of them.
Install jupp Using apt-get
Update apt database with apt-get
using the following command.
sudo apt-get update
After updating apt database, We can install jupp
using apt-get
by running the following command:
sudo apt-get -y install jupp
Install jupp Using apt
Update apt database with apt
using the following command.
sudo apt update
After updating apt database, We can install jupp
using apt
by running the following command:
sudo apt -y install jupp
Install jupp 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 jupp
using aptitude
by running the following command:
sudo aptitude -y install jupp
How To Uninstall jupp on Debian 10
To uninstall only the jupp
package we can use the following command:
sudo apt-get remove jupp
Uninstall jupp And Its Dependencies
To uninstall jupp
and its dependencies that are no longer needed by Debian 10, we can use the command below:
sudo apt-get -y autoremove jupp
Remove jupp Configurations and Data
To remove jupp
configuration and data from Debian 10 we can use the following command:
sudo apt-get -y purge jupp
Remove jupp configuration, data, and all of its dependencies
We can use the following command to remove jupp
configurations, data and all of its dependencies, we can use the following command:
sudo apt-get -y autoremove --purge jupp
Dependencies
jupp have the following dependencies:
References
Summary
In this tutorial we learn how to install jupp
package on Debian 10 using different package management tools: apt
, apt-get
and aptitude
.