Result for 22486F0077C972E9E50DF7415FA6B6A9EB30B92B

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/python-fudge-doc/html/api/fudge.inspector.html
FileSize4482
MD5A200B26E219698FE2F22478504892127
SHA-122486F0077C972E9E50DF7415FA6B6A9EB30B92B
SHA-256B940E5845416D795EFB72E91DB68030A05609376024CDFE3E7C690B1F7051D5B
SSDEEP96:M8SDmbr8QPD96nlQv7gyL8JrPDZnpQv7M:Mer7Z6nle7LL6rdnpe7M
TLSHT1BE9113560CF0A9638053C6E6E6F4B215BD92C357D6062E0C74FC555EBF82F488E0BB4A
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
FileSize31872
MD53A8814D907EC961081AFF778CBF9DEB0
PackageDescriptionPython module for using fake objects for tests, documentation package Fudge is a Python module for using fake objects (mocks and stubs) to test real ones. . In readable Python code, you declare what methods are available on your fake and how they should be called. Then you inject that into your application and start testing. This declarative approach means you don’t have to record and playback actions and you don’t have to inspect your fakes after running code. If the fake object was used incorrectly then you’ll see an informative exception message with a traceback that points to the culprit. . Fudge was inspired by Mocha which is a simpler version of jMock. But unlike Mocha, Fudge does not automatically hijack real objects; you explicitly patch them in your test. And unlike jMock, Fudge is only as strict about expectations as you want it to be. If the type of arguments sent to the fake method aren’t important then you don’t have to declare an expectation for them. . This is the documentation of python-fudge.
PackageMaintainerDebian Python Modules Team <python-modules-team@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamepython-fudge-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion1.1.0-2
SHA-1F808B42B57C15A726DBC543E12C010B1CA9A74E2
SHA-256EFA92E8CC35A0BEBF9580F191D014D923C292C038CC1E6974286B07B1F3BFFCD
Key Value
FileSize31912
MD5072BE819CDAB7C486DDDFCE728DB0DCF
PackageDescriptionPython module for using fake objects for tests, documentation package Fudge is a Python module for using fake objects (mocks and stubs) to test real ones. . In readable Python code, you declare what methods are available on your fake and how they should be called. Then you inject that into your application and start testing. This declarative approach means you don’t have to record and playback actions and you don’t have to inspect your fakes after running code. If the fake object was used incorrectly then you’ll see an informative exception message with a traceback that points to the culprit. . Fudge was inspired by Mocha which is a simpler version of jMock. But unlike Mocha, Fudge does not automatically hijack real objects; you explicitly patch them in your test. And unlike jMock, Fudge is only as strict about expectations as you want it to be. If the type of arguments sent to the fake method aren’t important then you don’t have to declare an expectation for them. . This is the documentation of python-fudge.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython-fudge-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion1.1.0-2
SHA-1696EA7C2EC08EE6EAE1724A279C693E7E17D8F67
SHA-25609E1A767E64472BFD15EEEAF9EC43A67B253CE5B9628B026CB7E96C59BD8129A