To remove the Ubuntu PPA without affecting all installed packages, either open “Software & Updates” and remove relevant line from “Other Software” tab.
To do so, run command: sudo apt install ppa-purge & sudo ppa-purge ppa:ubuntuhandbook1/geany Option 2: Remove the Ubuntu PPA and/or Geany package: User may purge the Ubuntu PPA, which also downgrade all installed package (from that PPA) to the stock version in Ubuntu main repositories. You have two choices to get rid of the Geany packages from this Ubuntu PPA. Or, run command below in terminal to install/upgrade the package: sudo apt install geany geany-plugins Uninstall / Remove Geany:
If you already have an old version of the IDE package installed on your system, launch “Software Updater” (or Update Manager) to upgrade it: So, run command below to check updates manually: sudo apt update 3. However, old Ubuntu releases (18.04) and some based systems may not. Since Ubuntu 20.04, it does automatically update the package cache while adding PPA.
Add the PPAĬopy and paste ( Ctrl+Shift+V) the command below into terminal and hit run will add the PPA repository: sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntuhandbook1/geanyĪs sudo command, you have to type user password (no visual feedback) to authenticate. When it opens, run the commands below one by one. Or search for and open terminal from start menu if you’re not on Ubuntu.
And, Ubuntu includes fixed versions in its repositories which are always old. Geany does not provides official Linux packages. It supports many programming languages including C, C++, Java, PHP, HTML, LaTeX, Python, Perl, and more. Geany is a free open-source lightweight IDE for BSD, Linux, macOS, Solaris and Windows. Thank you for all answers.Merry Christmas to all my dear readers! In this tutorial I’m going to introduce the new Ubuntu PPA for Geany IDE. Having a built in console inside the Lazarus editor could be great because keep it in family. The default install of geany uses a X11 interface and so should be as similar as possible to other unix-based platforms if that is where you are coming from. I do it all the time in C using Geany text editor in both Windows and Linux. I mean, I compile/build a freepascal "*.pas" file and run it immediately capturing the writeLn out put in the stdout. I am editing my question to add I forgot to mention that what I want is to capture the stand stdout/stderr from a compiled pascal code. Does exist any way I can embed a terminal emulator in my Lazarus copy like a debug facility? I am using Lazarus 2.020 (jan, 2022). Works, but is boring and inefficient because I need close the pop-up window all the time and is difficult to copy the displayed text. Lazarus for windows display a pop-up native teminal. Linux lazarus have a built in teminal emulator.
I make lots of terminal programming and I need run the compiled pascal code and get an "writeLn" print. But there is a thing I have in my Linux box I have not in lazarus for windows. In set-ups where PHP/Xdebug and your IDE all run on the same host, this is all you need to configure on the PHP and Xdebug side.
Please refer to Configure PHP in the documentation to find out which PHP ini file to modify. I wold like to use lazarus like my freepascal ide in windows. In your php.ini, 99-xdebug.ini, or other distribution specific PHP ini file, change (or set) the xdebug.mode setting to debug.