You can also download and install the Windows Package Manager from our GitHub releases page or just directly install the latest available version. The Windows Package Manager is distributed with the App Installer from the Microsoft Store. If you are running on any current Windows Insider build or you have signed up for the Windows Package Manager Insider group you may already have it. You can learn more about the commands and syntax from our documentation. With winget list you can see everything installed in Add / Remove Programs, and you can winget uninstall to remove it from your system. Are you setting up a new machine? Be sure to winget export packages.json on your current machine (and copy the file to your new machine) so you can winget import packages.json on the new machine. You can check for upgrades to packages with winget upgrade or you can just upgrade everything with winget upgrade -all. Installing something on your machine is as easy as winget install PowerToys. You can search for a package (search looks at the name, moniker, and tags) using winget search vscode. You can see the list of available commands used to manage packages and work with manifests. The image below displays winget executed in Windows Terminal via PowerShell. The winget client is the main tool you will use to manage packages on your machine. We are excited to announce the release of Windows Package Manager 1.0! Windows Package Manager 1.0 Client We released the project on GitHub as an open-source collaborative effort and the community engagement has been wonderful to experience! Here we are today at Microsoft Build 2021… We started a journey to build a native package manager for Windows 10 when we announced the Windows Package Manager preview at Microsoft Build 2020.
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