Result for 38DB0DC46F4D4D684A42AB3A6FDFF8E19BC1FA15

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.26.1/x86_64-linux-thread-multi/auto/Class/XSAccessor/XSAccessor.so
FileSize55864
MD5742CE6A6EE452246DFD9FF5CED374896
SHA-138DB0DC46F4D4D684A42AB3A6FDFF8E19BC1FA15
SHA-25605D6147B7E05DDA56390000CDD6910C901ED59B7E26E19BB092F01D2A2095038
SSDEEP768:tsZSbdcNbVpkiwpRZ1W/WacrqAIrqZhRpY74vJjKqQC4m:tsZ4iEZk/WaXMJupZm
TLSHT157431997B15208FFC11683740BEAC962A9717D90D321323B0446F7BD1EA3E7D9B17A62
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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The searched file hash is included in 1 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5DBA2624ABED04F819AC5CE918930CB55
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionClass::XSAccessor implements fast read, write and read/write accessors in XS. Additionally, it can provide predicates such as 'has_foo()' for testing whether the attribute 'foo' exists in the object (which is different from "is defined within the object"). It only works with objects that are implemented as ordinary hashes. the Class::XSAccessor::Array manpage implements the same interface for objects that use arrays for their internal representation. Since version 0.10, the module can also generate simple constructors (implemented in XS). Simply supply the 'constructor => 'constructor_name'' option or the 'constructors => ['new', 'create', 'spawn']' option. These constructors do the equivalent of the following Perl code: sub new { my $class = shift; return bless { @_ }, ref($class)||$class; } That means they can be called on objects and classes but will not clone objects entirely. Parameters to 'new()' are added to the object. The XS accessor methods are between 3 and 4 times faster than typical pure-Perl accessors in some simple benchmarking. The lower factor applies to the potentially slightly obscure 'sub set_foo_pp {$_[0]->{foo} = $_[1]}', so if you usually write clear code, a factor of 3.5 speed-up is a good estimate. If in doubt, do your own benchmarking! The method names may be fully qualified. The example in the synopsis could have been written as 'MyClass::get_foo' instead of 'get_foo'. This way, methods can be installed in classes other than the current class. See also: the 'class' option below. By default, the setters return the new value that was set, and the accessors (mutators) do the same. This behaviour can be changed with the 'chained' option - see below. The predicates return a boolean. Since version 1.01, 'Class::XSAccessor' can generate extremely simple methods which just return true or false (and always do so). If that seems like a really superfluous thing to you, then consider a large class hierarchy with interfaces such as the PPI manpage. These methods are provided by the 'true' and 'false' options - see the synopsis. 'defined_predicates' check whether a given object attribute is defined. 'predicates' is an alias for 'defined_predicates' for compatibility with older versions of 'Class::XSAccessor'. 'exists_predicates' checks whether the given attribute exists in the object using 'exists'.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-Class-XSAccessor
PackageReleaselp152.3.2
PackageVersion1.19
SHA-164EA75BBF5D99DE56D9FEEC7F48FE965834E8C17
SHA-2562532D6FB304A96299B25938E03F92D8558B5D71E7B30C823DE5B5AB12155B3D1