Result for 2911F26C7AC7395C2CC7D3046FAD7F5CE471C78D

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/man/man3/Test::Number::Delta.3pm.gz
FileSize3691
MD5D26A964852D75CCA35A2FDEA9058D8A7
SHA-12911F26C7AC7395C2CC7D3046FAD7F5CE471C78D
SHA-2563F8AF2524A22F0FEE98B3DC18C3392DFCE0A7265958D06C47EB740613CB0D1EF
SSDEEP96:w+4FhcMDN67WfsEdOrO/iktNpTvFFHIvuilXkon:wNFhchkwrwiGNdNFHaupon
TLSHT15D719E65CA622F790E3DF9D10E19516B21C709EB170312760411C3E38D5C71AE6919D7
hashlookup:parent-total5
hashlookup:trust75

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 5)

The searched file hash is included in 5 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD593D92B929CADA8B5FBF988054B26BA88
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAt some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests).
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-Test-Number-Delta
PackageRelease1.20
PackageVersion1.060000
SHA-1929FB20A44155FF33C077D818BB8B13234D04452
SHA-256538F748DA8DD0D0C20E5A0A6DA029D099C04BECCB0CDE91092360AE98AA8C3A3
Key Value
MD574032AFCE28AF063DC212A2BE5FCDDE4
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAt some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests).
PackageNameperl-Test-Number-Delta
PackageRelease2.23
PackageVersion1.060000
SHA-14591ADB57F48A89F56D53930E9BA97B45DB1F754
SHA-25647EF528BD4573F72EC6FC0564F593317A6FD8A4160DCE691E964AEE15EF23381
Key Value
MD589E73BA4000BBE0EFB2DCDD04435C4BB
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAt some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests).
PackageNameperl-Test-Number-Delta
PackageRelease2.16
PackageVersion1.060000
SHA-1D09E8C2BF11856E14DD1869195293C3031C1B26F
SHA-2561BAA50A4586F9D88E0BCF86C709B84B0A6B4ED70839868D4AE31B722F88F4A5F
Key Value
MD5C9DEF03A0B6D910162E755162ED60F48
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAt some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests).
PackageNameperl-Test-Number-Delta
PackageRelease2.22
PackageVersion1.060000
SHA-152B3DEAB5B11AB00ACCE7018F5FB0116D25A5F6F
SHA-2568E26ED0496EE662B162698CE812345253E4C860FFF8ABD657EA3B6D73010F009
Key Value
MD5686E662BE2BCB8542206DE42E1EA35E2
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAt some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests).
PackageNameperl-Test-Number-Delta
PackageRelease32.56
PackageVersion1.060000
SHA-1932027D3C77568AA4B6C989527DF450186F63CE6
SHA-2562715F70CAC7ED1CFE65A862691140A42C96076B551B4C675398FC88F2491B571