Result for 2BC8547A6B23AFF717AAF3A8CD6039F8F07D06E6

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/scspell/_corpus.pyo
FileSize27076
MD5D6C9B7C32A799C3D243B967EE8F01C27
SHA-12BC8547A6B23AFF717AAF3A8CD6039F8F07D06E6
SHA-256BDEAAC9D5733F7845E156C45E91036842525F2ECD2284FBDF49DE26F2C361928
SSDEEP768:n6jaYQlgHIDZDherhcOPwRZfW+iqlz6pC15kaUES:n4MhZDheKOPwnfWolzckS
TLSHT1ADC24E80B3F94ADBC65106B184F41617DA36F5BB52037B8136ECE53A7E89769C43B381
hashlookup:parent-total4
hashlookup:trust70

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Parents (Total: 4)

The searched file hash is included in 4 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5CA405AA1145D3B8711CC25731F54E860
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionScspell is a spell checker for source code. This is an unofficial fork (of https://launchpad.net/scspell) that runs on both Python 2 and 3. Scspell does not try to be particularly smart--rather, it does the simplest thing that can possibly work: 1. All alphanumeric strings (strings of letters, numbers, and underscores) are spell-checked tokens. 2. Each token is split into one or more subtokens. Underscores and digits always divide tokens, and capital letters will begin new subtokens. In other words, ``some_variable`` and ``someVariable`` will both generate the subtoken list {``some``, ``variable``}. 3. All subtokens longer than three characters are matched against a set of dictionaries, and a match failure prompts the user for action. When matching against the included English dictionary, *prefix matching* is employed; this choice permits the use of truncated words like ``dict`` as valid subtokens. When applied to code written in most popular programming languages while using typical naming conventions, this algorithm will usually catch many errors without an annoying false positive rate. In an effort to catch more spelling errors, Scspell is able to check each file against a set of dictionary words selected *specifically for that file*. Up to three different sub-dictionaries may be searched for any given file: 1. A natural language dictionary. (Scspell provides an American English dictionary as the default.) 2. A programming language-specific dictionary, intended to contain oddly-spelled keywords and APIs associated with that language. (Scspell provides small default dictionaries for a number of popular programming languages.) 3. A file-specific dictionary, intended to contain uncommon strings which are not likely to be found in more than a handful of unique files.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamepython2-scspell3k
PackageReleaselp151.1.1
PackageVersion2.2
SHA-137D72C38648449E81D43F0320429CE1B007D4A9C
SHA-2560052218026AF5516EAAE9FA2B65331DFC1777ECA18643C83E3746257818E042C
Key Value
MD54D066F6F67DC5DA530EBE884F8C3509F
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionScspell is a spell checker for source code. This is an unofficial fork (of https://launchpad.net/scspell) that runs on both Python 2 and 3. Scspell does not try to be particularly smart--rather, it does the simplest thing that can possibly work: 1. All alphanumeric strings (strings of letters, numbers, and underscores) are spell-checked tokens. 2. Each token is split into one or more subtokens. Underscores and digits always divide tokens, and capital letters will begin new subtokens. In other words, ``some_variable`` and ``someVariable`` will both generate the subtoken list {``some``, ``variable``}. 3. All subtokens longer than three characters are matched against a set of dictionaries, and a match failure prompts the user for action. When matching against the included English dictionary, *prefix matching* is employed; this choice permits the use of truncated words like ``dict`` as valid subtokens. When applied to code written in most popular programming languages while using typical naming conventions, this algorithm will usually catch many errors without an annoying false positive rate. In an effort to catch more spelling errors, Scspell is able to check each file against a set of dictionary words selected *specifically for that file*. Up to three different sub-dictionaries may be searched for any given file: 1. A natural language dictionary. (Scspell provides an American English dictionary as the default.) 2. A programming language-specific dictionary, intended to contain oddly-spelled keywords and APIs associated with that language. (Scspell provides small default dictionaries for a number of popular programming languages.) 3. A file-specific dictionary, intended to contain uncommon strings which are not likely to be found in more than a handful of unique files.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamepython2-scspell3k
PackageReleaselp152.2.2
PackageVersion2.2
SHA-1D8196E94DBF30BAD3244EC7DC2D72D87C055826B
SHA-256299164C12ED7D0FDCC5899AABBB5F226DBCBAD199A13C02C7E6D6F0B80EDD83F
Key Value
MD5F93AB8A94B310B2BA3209851B2962F34
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionScspell is a spell checker for source code. This is an unofficial fork (of https://launchpad.net/scspell) that runs on both Python 2 and 3. Scspell does not try to be particularly smart--rather, it does the simplest thing that can possibly work: 1. All alphanumeric strings (strings of letters, numbers, and underscores) are spell-checked tokens. 2. Each token is split into one or more subtokens. Underscores and digits always divide tokens, and capital letters will begin new subtokens. In other words, ``some_variable`` and ``someVariable`` will both generate the subtoken list {``some``, ``variable``}. 3. All subtokens longer than three characters are matched against a set of dictionaries, and a match failure prompts the user for action. When matching against the included English dictionary, *prefix matching* is employed; this choice permits the use of truncated words like ``dict`` as valid subtokens. When applied to code written in most popular programming languages while using typical naming conventions, this algorithm will usually catch many errors without an annoying false positive rate. In an effort to catch more spelling errors, Scspell is able to check each file against a set of dictionary words selected *specifically for that file*. Up to three different sub-dictionaries may be searched for any given file: 1. A natural language dictionary. (Scspell provides an American English dictionary as the default.) 2. A programming language-specific dictionary, intended to contain oddly-spelled keywords and APIs associated with that language. (Scspell provides small default dictionaries for a number of popular programming languages.) 3. A file-specific dictionary, intended to contain uncommon strings which are not likely to be found in more than a handful of unique files.
PackageNamepython2-scspell3k
PackageReleaselp150.2.1
PackageVersion2.2
SHA-14AA6C5DB12E52EC0BFCE9D532C7C339C85F68D20
SHA-256F091C5C59C100BFDF1C25B303DB7543DCEBA386CBD5A54B420C11018E9EC0B2B
Key Value
MD517368EE29DD579D498A10D2D2CADEE78
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionScspell is a spell checker for source code. This is an unofficial fork (of https://launchpad.net/scspell) that runs on both Python 2 and 3. Scspell does not try to be particularly smart--rather, it does the simplest thing that can possibly work: 1. All alphanumeric strings (strings of letters, numbers, and underscores) are spell-checked tokens. 2. Each token is split into one or more subtokens. Underscores and digits always divide tokens, and capital letters will begin new subtokens. In other words, ``some_variable`` and ``someVariable`` will both generate the subtoken list {``some``, ``variable``}. 3. All subtokens longer than three characters are matched against a set of dictionaries, and a match failure prompts the user for action. When matching against the included English dictionary, *prefix matching* is employed; this choice permits the use of truncated words like ``dict`` as valid subtokens. When applied to code written in most popular programming languages while using typical naming conventions, this algorithm will usually catch many errors without an annoying false positive rate. In an effort to catch more spelling errors, Scspell is able to check each file against a set of dictionary words selected *specifically for that file*. Up to three different sub-dictionaries may be searched for any given file: 1. A natural language dictionary. (Scspell provides an American English dictionary as the default.) 2. A programming language-specific dictionary, intended to contain oddly-spelled keywords and APIs associated with that language. (Scspell provides small default dictionaries for a number of popular programming languages.) 3. A file-specific dictionary, intended to contain uncommon strings which are not likely to be found in more than a handful of unique files.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamepython2-scspell3k
PackageReleasebp153.1.15
PackageVersion2.2
SHA-1A195FB920E2839C00C271DE56B9EED11058796FA
SHA-2569CE3CB136489868FCE914BEFEB08004EC2876F78BF174C07AB1C49240EECAC10