Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | ./usr/share/man/man3/HTML::Tree::AboutTrees.3pm.gz |
FileSize | 21004 |
MD5 | A405A116978DA8B3BA44EBEB2F7738AF |
SHA-1 | 3222ADADD2188CA59FE29C0809CC48BA915EFAB6 |
SHA-256 | FD59423ECF8EF6594770619BF3B449BDF440BCC7A093B7624B17278E67EAFBCD |
SSDEEP | 384:r72ZSxvZPHPVZi/OJiT21pI2XmJlsmT81QU5+wlkA/+tn2sS0GDbkPFxktp4N0Hs:r72ZS1JdnJ6QOuN3lVA40PPLktp4N |
TLSH | T18292E103D94944C2F8CA994F1E875B46AC1AB16533B577D5807ECA5FC4B6DB3C0E3125 |
hashlookup:parent-total | 13 |
hashlookup:trust | 100 |
The searched file hash is included in 13 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 2DC52B3C03A6435397495C3D96EBA511 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageMaintainer | https://bugs.opensuse.org |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | lp150.1.5 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | 72417378DDA31942BAB518CE3657922160BC59C7 |
SHA-256 | DA0D7A1CF11A206B9FA7F005B6EF41C5AD37CE32CBA26C315FFDBEAC13384A34 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | DF6B660BA47A3014409AFF85B07B5071 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | 149.1 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | 9C94C0E0E54AC8ADED7970D13ADCAB008F067394 |
SHA-256 | A8E0F9B080AC0906B0E359CA68415EA6FFCB85E4037D51506B1498342213F1BA |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 45BBF73ADF19B953B1005AB2E5995F20 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | 149.2 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | AAD19A1C2B7AC42044DEA5D20BE513DC42B29E3A |
SHA-256 | D07B16AEFA0D8B4FBE8FBBFC9D1330AFE649279AA07A0C6B913A70DFF6C326F8 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 98F95EF0474F1A5B86C186AE7708BCD3 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | 149.20 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | 300435016B7A3EDB1E06B1130B90C247A66D00EE |
SHA-256 | 76B00D6F97DC5DA887CF040DE59F7C90DA5FE181D8588281EF4404B6C13E1942 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 3A16D9E0F8AED9ECF897E4E3695FBBD1 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | lp153.149.12 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | FE429A24824DDB940F51A0E676D440778B0530E0 |
SHA-256 | FA20AE4282BD037D2AC5AB2AB9552A137B09D773102B02D5FBB0FE2B67F77699 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 949F7C28134A51A321C2269372C2B58D |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | lp152.149.1 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | 5F4F3B275C00337E650184EB0671AD9A7647CF00 |
SHA-256 | F2D3EF3E4F2CDD3E3898823C5B17BEC3B03A1011A92B0B109BBD984BCB41290C |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 155ABF8D778ABA1690F122C4847FDE32 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | lp150.149.2 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | D01C12088B74CB5D96807C15712C980FFF1B98DA |
SHA-256 | C43C1C04DBDBBC111B0AA7AB24513D956B020823E0B8A40071FAECED697527D9 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | E7B5456E79F54D89D579F62AC8419656 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | 149.4 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | 9EE3C1C394C17922A91BBFA75C247D9A3AAFE1E7 |
SHA-256 | 63BFA17997FCC9158E79C758FFF9B9184EE1203FC400B90408F977DB9594881F |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 0B45084C9CD8B18B01383A84CC139936 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageMaintainer | https://www.suse.com/ |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | 1.20 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | 5D5F34B1F79B96D0DE2E7A1E7795CE021588E9B9 |
SHA-256 | 0AE166A92870B93305C9646ED931C1C267A4A7F2973FDB4B81594DAFE6B6C8D1 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 770053954E2C4F8AD84498C9FB6F0FE2 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageMaintainer | https://bugs.opensuse.org |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | lp152.3.3 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | 9625AD0DB679FF801B2BA120C83E1674F2A12FFE |
SHA-256 | 1A1120080553DA27D0C35442994529950E4050358E932AE7D913D4767D2638FB |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | D3C74ED9B6A2C217AA78AD71796A7968 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageMaintainer | https://bugs.opensuse.org |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | lp151.2.1 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | 66056EC9F4DB3F100847A66361DA7017265D0E2A |
SHA-256 | ECCD4DEC3B25A46C5F0EDFC1A8AFF28BCC85E225AF19280A159CFC76279A25C9 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | EC3E196F915782A911036A94F7DBE372 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | lp151.149.1 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | 2403BB1394D5048B73DAC985BAF6AC92BB178268 |
SHA-256 | 612BED513B2E1E04563E372C33F4DC776FC5DBF532C2DFF1FFBC525725F1AC8E |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 25B0D0448EE7BF9C54206B92E90FC5E0 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | HTML-Tree is a suite of Perl modules for making parse trees out of HTML source. It consists of mainly two modules, whose documentation you should refer to: HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element. HTML::TreeBuilder is the module that builds the parse trees. (It uses HTML::Parser to do the work of breaking the HTML up into tokens.) The tree that TreeBuilder builds for you is made up of objects of the class HTML::Element. If you find that you do not properly understand the documentation for HTML::TreeBuilder and HTML::Element, it may be because you are unfamiliar with tree-shaped data structures, or with object-oriented modules in general. Sean Burke has written some articles for _The Perl Journal_ ('www.tpj.com') that seek to provide that background. The full text of those articles is contained in this distribution, as: * HTML::Tree::AboutObjects "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" from TPJ17. * HTML::Tree::AboutTrees "Trees" from TPJ18 * HTML::Tree::Scanning "Scanning HTML" from TPJ19 Readers already familiar with object-oriented modules and tree-shaped data structures should read just the last article. Readers without that background should read the first, then the second, and then the third. |
PackageName | perl-HTML-Tree |
PackageRelease | 149.5 |
PackageVersion | 5.07 |
SHA-1 | FC6DEEDEB64C59876D663BCDF6B2508DB7815E0E |
SHA-256 | 03757CBCE47938A18AC8A16807B20450671D6D2CD4957053F346971C755E61B3 |