Result for 139AEB292C4F27CB94A15CF2ECC35F34D8E12DF6

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/elpa-ess/refcard.pdf.gz
FileSize162411
MD59EE067F42343E88B7DD7723D08120686
SHA-1139AEB292C4F27CB94A15CF2ECC35F34D8E12DF6
SHA-256729AA7E253470BEE6F6FB97C2EFD4F6123389BE74075EAA1B27F71DAD0C07626
SSDEEP3072:9ujZTz5pCqd98MmyxXrJOn4WLeHVAPjsjMrHkI9p0h7mfnoY0zSq:sRzvn9Shn4W9oIrF9yhcBeX
TLSHT195F312189538C9263A140CE89E753BECB5C0E0C56184AFA75F1FECC64517683FA3DAC2
hashlookup:parent-total2
hashlookup:trust60

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Parents (Total: 2)

The searched file hash is included in 2 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize1277568
MD50C476775E39E746EC29C18252DC9BC14
PackageDescriptionEmacs mode for statistical programming and data analysis "Emacs Speaks Statistics" (ESS) is an add-on package for emacs text editors such as GNU Emacs and XEmacs. It is designed to support editing of scripts and interaction with various statistical analysis programs such as R, S-Plus, SAS, Stata and OpenBUGS/JAGS. Although all users of these statistical analysis programs are welcome to apply ESS, advanced users or professionals who regularly work with text-based statistical analysis scripts, with various statistical languages/programs, or with different operating systems might benefit from it the most. . The rationale for developing ESS is that most statistical analysis systems provide a more or less sophisticated graphical user interface (GUI). However, their full power is only available using their scripting language. Furthermore, complex statistical analysis projects require a high degree of automation and documentation which can only be handled by creating statistical analysis scripts. Unfortunately, many statistics packages provide only weak text editor functionality and show major differences between them. Without a unified text editor user interface additional effort is required from the user to cope with limited functionality and with text editor differences. . Therefore, emacs editors and the ESS package provide the following major features: - Support for various operating systems Examples: Linux, Unix, Mac OS X and MS Windows - Working environment based on emacs Examples: File Manager (Dired), File Transfer Client/Telnet Client (Tramp), Multiple Clipboards (registers), Bookmarks, Abbreviations, and many others - Support for various statistical analysis languages Examples: R, S-Plus, SAS, Stata and OpenBUGS/JAGS Examples: Keybindings, Abbreviations, Syntax highlighting, Code formatting, Commenting, Submitting scripts, Displaying results and Searching documentation . ESS is freely available under the GNU General Public License (GPL). For further technical and legal information please refer to the ESS Manual.
PackageMaintainerDirk Eddelbuettel <edd@debian.org>
PackageNameelpa-ess
PackageSectiongnu-r
PackageVersion18.10.2-1
SHA-135F09F12BD032289216FA7098683F93C4C54FF46
SHA-25671755BC62A75C846D1D69423CE356360F9FC49241F5B758F01325E44F311BA98
Key Value
FileSize1216764
MD51466C74AC768AF3A563DCDBABCFFA0BA
PackageDescriptionEmacs mode for statistical programming and data analysis "Emacs Speaks Statistics" (ESS) is an add-on package for emacs text editors such as GNU Emacs and XEmacs. It is designed to support editing of scripts and interaction with various statistical analysis programs such as R, S-Plus, SAS, Stata and OpenBUGS/JAGS. Although all users of these statistical analysis programs are welcome to apply ESS, advanced users or professionals who regularly work with text-based statistical analysis scripts, with various statistical languages/programs, or with different operating systems might benefit from it the most. . The rationale for developing ESS is that most statistical analysis systems provide a more or less sophisticated graphical user interface (GUI). However, their full power is only available using their scripting language. Furthermore, complex statistical analysis projects require a high degree of automation and documentation which can only be handled by creating statistical analysis scripts. Unfortunately, many statistics packages provide only weak text editor functionality and show major differences between them. Without a unified text editor user interface additional effort is required from the user to cope with limited functionality and with text editor differences. . Therefore, emacs editors and the ESS package provide the following major features: - Support for various operating systems Examples: Linux, Unix, Mac OS X and MS Windows - Working environment based on emacs Examples: File Manager (Dired), File Transfer Client/Telnet Client (Tramp), Multiple Clipboards (registers), Bookmarks, Abbreviations, and many others - Support for various statistical analysis languages Examples: R, S-Plus, SAS, Stata and OpenBUGS/JAGS Examples: Keybindings, Abbreviations, Syntax highlighting, Code formatting, Commenting, Submitting scripts, Displaying results and Searching documentation . ESS is freely available under the GNU General Public License (GPL). For further technical and legal information please refer to the ESS Manual.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameelpa-ess
PackageSectiongnu-r
PackageVersion18.10.2-1
SHA-1D330BEB695457620916DB4E57E019281B5F07FF5
SHA-256D72BEFADECCD2D9BCE18A2016FC37691365F68CDC32269949D6EAF695AB4ADB7