| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| FileName | ./usr/share/man/man3/List::MapList.3pm.gz |
| FileSize | 2156 |
| MD5 | A5FA2DBEC3EC9CF4BFCA348689D07C1A |
| SHA-1 | 162326FEAA32D7FB4CA21CDEED7796D029DD3AF1 |
| SHA-256 | B7A0D977E5503C94AAEC736FA6F49AC335E8287DB5B51EC06813A8F1C5F6ACE7 |
| SSDEEP | 48:XssWSduVirlTaT0PaYNj1bv/NtH/IFJXWvrdnMQnKWAhQygB:csPIV09aT+RJH29on3ACygB |
| TLSH | T145411A19F1E319DBEB880EBFE4907FB84504002FED95A6958F18912D291306F91349EA |
| 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 |
|---|---|
| MD5 | 2810E7D28511BF61D656290F4E199E8C |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | List::MapList provides methods to map a list through a list of transformations, instead of just one. The transformations are not chained together on each element; only one is used, alternating sequentially. Here's a contrived example: given the transformations '{ $_ = 0 }' and '{ $_ = 1 }', the list '(1, 2, 3, "Good morning", undef)' would become '(0, 1, 0, 1, 0)' or, without cycling, '(0, 1)'.; (I use this code to process a part number in which each digit maps to a set of product attributes.) |
| PackageName | perl-List-MapList |
| PackageRelease | 5.48 |
| PackageVersion | 1.123 |
| SHA-1 | 230DEF54FF83BD7414FB5B346842E70B3AF8E0A8 |
| SHA-256 | 0168D17094FD9665468F127E1B3A1BE0047A1B4B25DAA3ADC7A275C39A5804ED |