Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | ./usr/share/man/man1/rtf2rtf.1.gz |
FileSize | 1445 |
MD5 | 85081B305B6FE029D30EF064F739B994 |
SHA-1 | 0B360500E1E58E24DF0EED1579AB6726D3F8BDAC |
SHA-256 | 6789CD8AA9CF4A81EA5813554AEF974ABAB9E08D72CF607453782F5F9FA3CF87 |
SSDEEP | 24:Xyd3tRsNLxbzw9v/xAOHUGMXsABQI/dYaO5U3PnEqmdaus+wAQ4a1QO4brX:XyZyNk9v/xPLMXsQZL6xd6+RQQFT |
TLSH | T134311B30846F71F581DC078DB0620097853D46908615B5706A1EBC9F25B3F73DC097EB |
hashlookup:parent-total | 1 |
hashlookup:trust | 55 |
The searched file hash is included in 1 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileSize | 361286 |
MD5 | DA74A74F77D87AF19756DD08F83C865A |
PackageDescription | convert LinuxDoc SGML source into other formats LinuxDoc sgml is a highly configurable text format for writing documentation, something like html only it's simpler and can be converted to various other formats, including html for websites. You write a LinuxDoc document using any text editor such as vim. Then you use linuxdoc-tools to convert it to html, rtf, plain-text (install linuxdoc-tools-text), info (install linuxdoc-tools-info), latex, dvi or postscript (install linuxdoc-tools-latex). The sgmltools-lite package can convert LinuxDoc to DocBook format. . LinuxDoc can automatically create a table of contents. It's easier to write and read than docbook since it allows one to omit most closing tags while paragraphs are separated by just blank lines. |
PackageMaintainer | Taketoshi Sano <sano@debian.org> |
PackageName | linuxdoc-tools |
PackageSection | text |
PackageVersion | 0.9.21-0.11 |
SHA-1 | E7208F62F5F56B3E1FB275507E6CBEF63462A9BF |
SHA-256 | 7F55CD56287341A5AA24A06BA82FB08F50BF2B1C0ADD739D35652B685E52794E |