2 libopencv-ml3.2 libopencv-video3.2 libproj12 libqhull7 libsdl-ttf2.0-0 libsocket++1 Libntlm0 libogdi3.2 libopencv-core3.2 libopencv- imgproc3. Libgeotiff2 libgsasl7 libhdf4-0-alt libhdf5-100 libieee1284-3:i386 libkmlbase1 libkmldom1 libkmlengine1 libkyotocabinet16v5 libminizip1 libnetcdf13 Gdal-data libaec0 libaio1 libarmadillo8 libarpack2 libcharls1 libdap25 libdapclient6v5 libepsilon1 libfreexl1 libfyba0 libgeos-3.6.2 libgeos-c1v5 Usually the list of stuff, that you're asked confirmation for when running "apt-get install", only includes stuff to be installed, upgraded and left untouched, never removed, so I'm used to responding "Yes" almost automatically. I can't see a reason why the installation of a package would require the removal of another, unless it is to replace it with something that supersedes it. NEVER before, in my entire life, have I ever seen an instance where "apt-get INSTALL" would REMOVE packages without at the same time replacing them with some more recent version or something, and even that is rare. * and NO SUITABLE REPLACEMENT will be installed *Īre you REALLY sure you wish to continue? * The following packages will be REMOVED * If an INSTALL command is going to UNINSTALL something that huge (not just a library that had been installed automatically and is no longer required, but an entire application that I installed manually!), you must give a very specific and explicit prompt (defaulting to No rather than Yes) with a gigantic warning, something like: Technically it asked me for confirmation, but it was in the middle of a bunch of other much more trivial stuff, and you can't just put "REMOVE" in caps and expect me to notice it. I didn't notice the part that said that some apparently unrelated packages, one of which I had installed manually (Virtual Box) would be removed. The following NEW packages will be installed:Ģ upgraded, 1 newly installed, 3 to remove and 6 not upgraded. The following additional packages will be installed: Use 'sudo apt autoremove' to remove them. The following packages were automatically installed and are no longer required: Since apt itself doesn't give me a clue what to do and there doesn't seem to be a guide anywhere, I'm blindly trying stuff) (by the way I don't even know what that is, but it is one of a few packages being "held back" by apt and that prevents me from upgrading from 18.04 to 20.04.
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