Result for 12F5D1873EDFE5D7AD0C23A361E4D7052ABF7732

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/python2.4/site-packages/pylint/checkers/classes.pyc
FileSize17562
MD54EEBF9A271AC7D6952E560B7D17CB460
SHA-112F5D1873EDFE5D7AD0C23A361E4D7052ABF7732
SHA-2560D25688E1808638E7619E0546FE5BBDDC4E1D39B1D66032ED8087AA19F760DFA
SSDEEP384:QEMrqTehl6VJVpeL5YZe+aarMlbdDI1EzwL6uXXJOmOS4snd:FMrqLNmYZDrMlbdM1EzwLRXXJOmO7sd
TLSHT1427274C527D14A7B846E82B940F5172F6D61F2BB5142AB45B87CE03E2BCA754C43F38A
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

Network graph view

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
MD5F3C64578C528FF7C3B62D8A07EA7D2D6
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionPylint is a python tool that checks if a module satisfy a coding standard. Pylint can be seen as another PyChecker since nearly all tests you can do with PyChecker can also be done with Pylint. But Pylint offers some more features, like checking line-code's length, checking if variable names are well-formed according to your coding standard, or checking if declared interfaces are truly implemented, and much more. The big advantage with Pylint is that it is highly configurable, customizable, and you can easily write a small plugin to add a personal feature.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepylint
PackageRelease3.el5
PackageVersion0.21.1
SHA-1E9A7AEBB5232696F2E7ED83D055C75EB5A3F812D
SHA-256E104B77938DCCC297A8CFB70721FEE11B1A19D285D84E3C206F5ABCDF66AA98F