Risultati di ricerca
Scoop downloads and manages packages in a portable way, keeping them neatly isolated in ~\\scoop. It won't install files outside its home, and you can place a Scoop installation wherever you like. For terminal applications, Scoop creates shims , a kind of command-line shortcuts, inside the ~\\scoop\\shims folder, which is accessible in the PATH.
- Scoop
Installs in seconds. Make sure PowerShell 5 (or later,...
- Scoop
- Scoop
- What does Scoop do?
- Installation
- Multi-connection downloads with aria2
- What sort of apps can Scoop install?
- Known application buckets
- Other application buckets
Features | Installation | Documentation
Scoop is a command-line installer for Windows.
Scoop installs programs from the command line with a minimal amount of friction. It:
•Eliminates permission popup windows
•Hides GUI wizard-style installers
•Prevents PATH pollution from installing lots of programs
•Avoids unexpected side-effects from installing and uninstalling programs
•Finds and installs dependencies automatically
Run the following command from a non-admin PowerShell to install scoop to its default location C:\Users\ \scoop.
Advanced installation instruction and full documentation of the installer are available in ScoopInstaller/Install. Please create new issues there if you have questions about the installation.
Scoop can utilize aria2 to use multi-connection downloads. Simply install aria2 through Scoop and it will be used for all downloads afterward.
By default, scoop displays a warning when running scoop install or scoop update while aria2 is enabled. This warning can be suppressed by running scoop config aria2-warning-enabled false.
You can tweak the following aria2 settings with the scoop config command:
•aria2-enabled (default: true)
•aria2-warning-enabled (default: true)
•aria2-retry-wait (default: 2)
The apps that install best with Scoop are commonly called "portable" apps: i.e. compressed program files that run stand-alone when extracted and don't have side-effects like changing the registry or putting files outside the program directory.
Since installers are common, Scoop supports them too (and their uninstallers).
The following buckets are known to scoop:
•main - Default bucket for the most common (mostly CLI) apps
•extras - Apps that don't fit the main bucket's criteria
•games - Open source/freeware games and game-related tools
•nerd-fonts - Nerd Fonts
•nirsoft - Almost all of the 250+ apps from Nirsoft
Many other application buckets hosted on Github can be found in the Scoop Directory or via other search engines.
23 ott 2018 · You'll see a list of commands with a brief summary of what each command does. For more detailed information on a command, run scoop help <command>, e.g. scoop help install (try it!). Now that you have a rough idea of how Scoop commands work, let's try installing something.
7 mag 2023 · A command-line installer for Windows. Contribute to ScoopInstaller/Scoop development by creating an account on GitHub.
17 mar 2022 · With Scoop, you can install programs and plugins for your terminal. Scoop is a great tool if you're a Linux user who has switched to Windows, as it lets you install programs using the terminal. Installing programs with Scoops removes the graphical interface and eliminates the permission pop-ups.
Typical Installation. Run this command from a non-admin PowerShell to install scoop with default configuration, scoop will be install to C:\Users\<YOUR USERNAME>\scoop. irm get.scoop.sh | iex. # You can use proxies if you have network trouble in accessing GitHub, e.g.