Result for 0C5F7C9A83FE77AD5B5AC51F0B78C7B79D3A0498

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/man/man3/Specio::Coercion.3pm.gz
FileSize3375
MD5BA3112ACEEA27B66E46BF222D9FB5194
SHA-10C5F7C9A83FE77AD5B5AC51F0B78C7B79D3A0498
SHA-256DCA37C92C36AEEDE55BFE769DA85E69EEACD4F2F18803473EB2C17894731D295
SSDEEP96:1JvMAqzdzgeitiaghze/aiYh64ML58p+mctH:1JLWz8iGaW405nmcR
TLSHT17C617CFB358AE297C7D61C8ACC0D6701948C407B2270922766C215DD77E5F83212370F
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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Parents (Total: 1)

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
MD5764932C89588430011769EF42F35B1D6
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe 'Specio' distribution provides classes for representing type constraints and coercion, along with syntax sugar for declaring them. Note that this is not a proper type system for Perl. Nothing in this distribution will magically make the Perl interpreter start checking a value's type on assignment to a variable. In fact, there's no built-in way to apply a type to a variable at all. Instead, you can explicitly check a value against a type, and optionally coerce values to that type. My long-term goal is to replace Moose's built-in types and MooseX::Types with this module.
PackageNameperl-Specio
PackageRelease1.34
PackageVersion0.47
SHA-148187283BD82B3AF6C3B22F7B5EB4176C0AE3D19
SHA-256167BE5B10F16DA043D2C3B90B52D768FD122CD9CC9185777EE0627C55FAE411D