Result for 00D8D5F7D16B34DAA9C40313C47AF3560DCBD3E2

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/packages/ruby2.6-rubygem-loquacious/History.txt
FileSize67
MD53A3F942E3699BCC3E2C591774EC8049F
SHA-100D8D5F7D16B34DAA9C40313C47AF3560DCBD3E2
SHA-2563DDFE461159464B7D7842788307C05E68813CC6BC1E6141BCAE8BB949B83764B
SSDEEP3:gC63cZA21+rKyvgU6tn:dzmLvwt
TLSHT1FDA022A082B220222C0088082C3AEE0233880C0A330A3F08A2CC0E28080800A20CA08F
hashlookup:parent-total4
hashlookup:trust70

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 4)

The searched file hash is included in 4 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5AFF060D5FE369A66C7051EB7A2155586
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionDescriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms Kernel.load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-loquacious
PackageReleaselp152.2.8
PackageVersion1.9.1
SHA-1A81AF5866FB5B3ABFADDC7C002A76404006AFA74
SHA-256D9A6D9B3A4B398849A2B1EDF206C79C8A09264810CB45211C66EBCC05BDFEAF4
Key Value
MD5B70C9AC7673C192B1FE16A907A2D84BD
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionDescriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms Kernel.load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-loquacious
PackageReleaselp151.2.6
PackageVersion1.9.1
SHA-19E53C102EB866E44AD48BD7F9ECE5FDB9266E190
SHA-256CC1DBB3D9B07CD527DEFEA87013EBADD2F37F36B182D7C2204AE377B0BB93529
Key Value
MD554A7E46F4114482A59ACEBEA8E3944CD
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionDescriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms Kernel.load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-loquacious
PackageReleaselp153.2.3
PackageVersion1.9.1
SHA-138B8443C238000EAE3FBF3B1C47DA30C88DCDDAF
SHA-256CE1009D3FE78CCF2A353ED40B099C1356E6278A83794E78223D3135B26EE780F
Key Value
MD5A38EC07CFF057E78B1B56AD9CE810D81
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionDescriptive configuration files for Ruby written in Ruby. Loquacious provides a very open configuration system written in ruby and descriptions for each configuration attribute. The attributes and descriptions can be iterated over allowing for helpful information about those attributes to be displayed to the user. In the simple case we have a file something like Loquacious.configuration_for('app') { name 'value', :desc => "Defines the name" foo 'bar', :desc => "FooBar" id 42, :desc => "Ara T. Howard" } Which can be loaded via the standard Ruby loading mechanisms Kernel.load 'config/app.rb' The attributes and their descriptions can be printed by using a Help object help = Loquacious.help_for('app') help.show :values => true # show the values for the attributes, too Descriptions are optional, and configurations can be nested arbitrarily deep. Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') { desc "The outermost level" a { desc "One more level in" b { desc "Finally, a real value" c 'value' } } } config = Loquacious.configuration_for('nested') p config.a.b.c #=> "value" And as you can see, descriptions can either be given inline after the value or they can appear above the attribute and value on their own line.
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-loquacious
PackageReleaselp154.2.2
PackageVersion1.9.1
SHA-17FAAD60662D49C7B31A63BA8B5CFA383F1FB3FF3
SHA-256EEF3BEE3F548A671D6E5DAC34A7EC8AFEB9C26BF6FCEFC290ED3AB7140F2ECF0