Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | ./usr/lib64/python3.4/site-packages/numexpr/__pycache__/expressions.cpython-34.pyo |
FileSize | 15744 |
MD5 | 3FAE3CF23521A002D573341BDCCAEE4C |
SHA-1 | 624638C60046CECF2496A304F290BCF9F3998689 |
SHA-256 | ADFAEDFAB277998F9FC2110F36F3B1177D88A88B3CFE20CD2EF5EB2DF52A2E71 |
SSDEEP | 384:8n64Bjkj4QsuaMOsElvmjY/ACDaFuunxwi2P:8n6mjk0QsuJOHh/ACDaounGi2P |
TLSH | T153623F887BC6895FFA99F2F590705215BFBBF7A27B81A3362675C47E2DC47980D24080 |
hashlookup:parent-total | 1 |
hashlookup:trust | 55 |
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 |
---|---|
MD5 | 6391B20663032B8A54F8690A6A6B68EF |
PackageArch | s390x |
PackageDescription | The numexpr package evaluates multiple-operator array expressions many times faster than NumPy can. It accepts the expression as a string, analyzes it, rewrites it more efficiently, and compiles it to faster Python code on the fly. It’s the next best thing to writing the expression in C and compiling it with a specialized just-in-time (JIT) compiler, i.e. it does not require a compiler at runtime. This is the version for Python 3. |
PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project |
PackageName | python3-numexpr |
PackageRelease | 4.fc21 |
PackageVersion | 2.3 |
SHA-1 | 6815DA318B1048F892BFD9EB12800D78910CF218 |
SHA-256 | 933CF05BD538BCD3B0C21615B87CE70B3FD1D39099B07FA10601927024DC7C70 |