Result for 347BC2D4DE5A8485305ECD9A3DFDAF49FAAE833F

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/python-fudge-doc/html/_static/comment.png
FileSize3445
MD5CF3728A8BFF1AFAEA3A0C41D2A2F6365
SHA-1347BC2D4DE5A8485305ECD9A3DFDAF49FAAE833F
SHA-2565931FB20FBB674AFFDABDEBD49445A61E166D87F81997B68762C32170A485D6D
SSDEEP96:kZ/I09Da01l+gmkyTt6Hk8nT+SFsriVkhzHc:kS0tKg9E05T+SQiVkJc
TLSHT10D619FEE97A0909FF99E72120D9C0282D358121C6D5B2F78C9D1D0CE106ED46FB635F8
hashlookup:parent-total2
hashlookup:trust60

Network graph view

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
FileSize45640
MD5203FFD078EC5604FDDCAAF4192B621EC
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
PackageVersion1.1.0-1
SHA-1B56BA13B821DA3E5E336ECABFFEDF0365832F7B6
SHA-25602F77C93476805D721E39D47A45C11792DFD6355B217D09CC1EC22911BC26843
Key Value
FileSize45828
MD545B1585C4297BC45904D47191014E4C7
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
PackageVersion1.1.0-1
SHA-197B1DBC8B151D99BDD8C91031F1343E054890CA9
SHA-25600B92CC4A413CF8501D5A4BCCA15C48EC59361F67EF2046507194B51853B4C06