Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | ./usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/astor/rtrip.pyc |
FileSize | 5751 |
MD5 | 4DD4E7B2AF3D26DCA89A25BF52EC0680 |
SHA-1 | 285B9FE3C70C5BCCF774E278FD5F3279D3DD5FFA |
SHA-256 | 234B7E922647AE4D98ACD2DA3EF8F30A8B34AECC7ECAE7DF9E06A112E360C290 |
SSDEEP | 96:wSf1MLtowLdxVLC1/fxMrl2VvU8zCftrxlKRikKhcLdLwyMq6d6gVDx:ALtowLdLczG8zCCLOrLd6oDx |
TLSH | T1B4C171C5A7A842BB95A50274B0750343DE61E2F7A5427B8436FCE0B52FD93B1C6B32D2 |
hashlookup:parent-total | 3 |
hashlookup:trust | 65 |
The searched file hash is included in 3 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 5BAAA72AD8AD84F699C05E91C0B858D0 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | astor is designed to allow easy manipulation of Python source via the AST. There are some other similar libraries, but astor focuses on the following areas: - Round-trip an AST back to Python: - Modified AST doesn't need linenumbers, ctx, etc. or otherwise be directly compileable for the round-trip to work. - Easy to read generated code as, well, code - Can round-trip two different source trees to compare for functional differences, using the astor.rtrip tool (for example, after PEP8 edits). - Dump pretty-printing of AST - Harder to read than round-tripped code, but more accurate to figure out what is going on. - Easier to read than dump from built-in AST module - Non-recursive treewalk - Sometimes you want a recursive treewalk (and astor supports that, starting at any node on the tree), but sometimes you don't need to do that. astor doesn't require you to explicitly visit sub-nodes unless you want to: - You can add code that executes before a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes after a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes and keeps the node's children from being visited (and optionally visit them yourself via a recursive call) - Write functions to access the tree based on object names and/or attribute names - Enjoy easy access to parent node(s) for tree rewriting |
PackageMaintainer | https://bugs.opensuse.org |
PackageName | python2-astor |
PackageRelease | lp152.3.1 |
PackageVersion | 0.8.1 |
SHA-1 | ED47280350503931EA7613B79F954ECFE2721384 |
SHA-256 | 42B24EC0556E7D2DAB2DA4051FD581AD40A8831E2D91D4C0BB4E12945E81EA23 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 22ECA57F5C9357748499FBDC6016834A |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | astor is designed to allow easy manipulation of Python source via the AST. There are some other similar libraries, but astor focuses on the following areas: - Round-trip an AST back to Python: - Modified AST doesn't need linenumbers, ctx, etc. or otherwise be directly compileable for the round-trip to work. - Easy to read generated code as, well, code - Can round-trip two different source trees to compare for functional differences, using the astor.rtrip tool (for example, after PEP8 edits). - Dump pretty-printing of AST - Harder to read than round-tripped code, but more accurate to figure out what is going on. - Easier to read than dump from built-in AST module - Non-recursive treewalk - Sometimes you want a recursive treewalk (and astor supports that, starting at any node on the tree), but sometimes you don't need to do that. astor doesn't require you to explicitly visit sub-nodes unless you want to: - You can add code that executes before a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes after a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes and keeps the node's children from being visited (and optionally visit them yourself via a recursive call) - Write functions to access the tree based on object names and/or attribute names - Enjoy easy access to parent node(s) for tree rewriting |
PackageName | python2-astor |
PackageRelease | 4.1 |
PackageVersion | 0.8.1 |
SHA-1 | AF9F65F64ECDEC243A7323296A77AB9F4DEBE78F |
SHA-256 | 3B038D84074E9279676CB167D25861DC7449FA8AFBD66622457A881D564D47F0 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 6F75D8FE08265B699C4969B65E25596B |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | astor is designed to allow easy manipulation of Python source via the AST. There are some other similar libraries, but astor focuses on the following areas: - Round-trip an AST back to Python: - Modified AST doesn't need linenumbers, ctx, etc. or otherwise be directly compileable for the round-trip to work. - Easy to read generated code as, well, code - Can round-trip two different source trees to compare for functional differences, using the astor.rtrip tool (for example, after PEP8 edits). - Dump pretty-printing of AST - Harder to read than round-tripped code, but more accurate to figure out what is going on. - Easier to read than dump from built-in AST module - Non-recursive treewalk - Sometimes you want a recursive treewalk (and astor supports that, starting at any node on the tree), but sometimes you don't need to do that. astor doesn't require you to explicitly visit sub-nodes unless you want to: - You can add code that executes before a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes after a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes and keeps the node's children from being visited (and optionally visit them yourself via a recursive call) - Write functions to access the tree based on object names and/or attribute names - Enjoy easy access to parent node(s) for tree rewriting |
PackageMaintainer | https://bugs.opensuse.org |
PackageName | python2-astor |
PackageRelease | bp153.1.18 |
PackageVersion | 0.8.1 |
SHA-1 | 9832F19AFBADE310CD071649FD4CDE940F51A903 |
SHA-256 | 8C243DAEAEB37E4D5A51A30D26FF3ADB15893097E54AA2D9883EB8D39974E37A |