How i can download termux pc?
No android emulator
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@↳ ❝ [NotJUrii] ¡🎱! ❞
Termux
Termux on PC
There is no such thing as Termux on PC. However, there are ways to use normal Linux in your computer, so that you can get a Termux-like experience (without the Termux headache).
- Using virtualization software
Software such as QEMU (FOSS), VMware Workstation (paid), Parallels (paid, for macOS), VirtualBox (FOSS), or Hyper-V (included in professional and enterprise versions of Windows, but needs to be enabled) allows you to virtualize Windows, Linux, or another OS within Windows, macOS, and Linux. For beginners, we recommend VirtualBox, because it's easier to use and is completely FOSS.
- Dual-booting or installing Linux on a bare metal host
If you can't use virtualization, you can directly install Linux on your computer from removable media, like a USB flash drive. You can either dual boot to have Linux alongside Windows, or replace your installation entirely with Linux.
- Windows Subsystem for Linux
WSL is a Windows component that allows you to run Linux distros within Windows. The newest version of WSL, WSL2, uses the Hyper-V technology mentioned earlier to get a near-native Linux experience. WSL1 is also available, which is a system calls translation layer instead of a VM.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install
- Linux (beta)/Crostini
Although ChromeOS is Linux-based, you can't easily get a full Linux experience. Some Linux programs like Visual Studio Code and Android Studio are available on ChromeOS, but you can enable a Linux VM or install Crostini if your Chromebook supports them.
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#bots
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Solution
@↳ ❝ [NotJUrii] ¡🎱! ❞
Termux
Termux on PC
There is no such thing as Termux on PC. However, there are ways to use normal Linux in your computer, so that you can get a Termux-like experience (without the Termux headache).
- Using virtualization software
Software such as QEMU (FOSS), VMware Workstation (paid), Parallels (paid, for macOS), VirtualBox (FOSS), or Hyper-V (included in professional and enterprise versions of Windows, but needs to be enabled) allows you to virtualize Windows, Linux, or another OS within Windows, macOS, and Linux. For beginners, we recommend VirtualBox, because it's easier to use and is completely FOSS.
- Dual-booting or installing Linux on a bare metal host
If you can't use virtualization, you can directly install Linux on your computer from removable media, like a USB flash drive. You can either dual boot to have Linux alongside Windows, or replace your installation entirely with Linux.
- Windows Subsystem for Linux
WSL is a Windows component that allows you to run Linux distros within Windows. The newest version of WSL, WSL2, uses the Hyper-V technology mentioned earlier to get a near-native Linux experience. WSL1 is also available, which is a system calls translation layer instead of a VM.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install
- Linux (beta)/Crostini
Although ChromeOS is Linux-based, you can't easily get a full Linux experience. Some Linux programs like Visual Studio Code and Android Studio are available on ChromeOS, but you can enable a Linux VM or install Crostini if your Chromebook supports them.
Jump
#bots
Go install WSL2
I guess you're on windows, check this out, seems like that's what you want :
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install
Install WSL
Install Windows Subsystem for Linux with the command, wsl --install. Use a Bash terminal on your Windows machine run by your preferred Linux distribution - Ubuntu, Debian, SUSE, Kali, Fedora, Pengwin, Alpine, and more are available.