| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| FileName | ./usr/share/doc/python-natsort-doc/html/objects.inv |
| FileSize | 768 |
| MD5 | 242E40FFB2D3D7F3417D196F19DFE825 |
| SHA-1 | 6A82CEB6C3940C3AC0494256F754C09F750BFA1D |
| SHA-256 | EFB8428864831481CC989DD5C233A801215715F1A1956DE2CB4B35C16C57117C |
| SSDEEP | 12:gCO/I2xcvm2mzTHj+Wg1cloPXnjHJEGL2CUt/c+abb7+orkvn:hMTxcvGzHtgvPXjpvyC2U+Qb7On |
| TLSH | T17601709D510E9D857B4171DA313984F8EB0297FCB5EB23ACEB3F816CD9240032225113 |
| hashlookup:parent-total | 2 |
| hashlookup:trust | 60 |
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 |
|---|---|
| FileSize | 102796 |
| MD5 | F85815AC2203F1E036ABAF6BEDACC85F |
| PackageDescription | Natural sorting for Python (doc) natsort lets you apply natural sorting to your sequences easily, for example: . >>> from natsort import natsorted >>> a = ['a2', 'a9', 'a1', 'a4', 'a10'] >>> data = [['a1', 'a5'], ['a1', 'a40'], ['a10', 'a1'], ['a2', 'a5']] >>> natsorted(a) ['a1', 'a2', 'a4', 'a9', 'a10' >>> natsorted(data) [['a1', 'a5'], ['a1', 'a40'], ['a2', 'a5'], ['a10', 'a1']] . natsort identifies the numbers and sorts them separately from strings. . natsort comes with a shell script to use natural sorting in shell scripts. You can also execute natsort from the command line with Python -m natsort. . There exists another natural sorting package for Python called python-naturalsort. You may prefer that package if you wish to only sort version numbers. . This package contains API documentation and examples. |
| PackageMaintainer | Ubuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com> |
| PackageName | python-natsort-doc |
| PackageSection | doc |
| PackageVersion | 7.1.0-1 |
| SHA-1 | 23095B5C03A8C1A07B34A8D503940AD5A86D0307 |
| SHA-256 | 1B34654417A33C15F4FAFEE61A29389A19822558695A684127F5608BD554C38E |
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| FileSize | 110816 |
| MD5 | 962D67C6F16D6BA02D72A6A98D653B83 |
| PackageDescription | Natural sorting for Python (doc) natsort lets you apply natural sorting to your sequences easily, for example: . >>> from natsort import natsorted >>> a = ['a2', 'a9', 'a1', 'a4', 'a10'] >>> data = [['a1', 'a5'], ['a1', 'a40'], ['a10', 'a1'], ['a2', 'a5']] >>> natsorted(a) ['a1', 'a2', 'a4', 'a9', 'a10' >>> natsorted(data) [['a1', 'a5'], ['a1', 'a40'], ['a2', 'a5'], ['a10', 'a1']] . natsort identifies the numbers and sorts them separately from strings. . natsort comes with a shell script to use natural sorting in shell scripts. You can also execute natsort from the command line with Python -m natsort. . There exists another natural sorting package for Python called python-naturalsort. You may prefer that package if you wish to only sort version numbers. . This package contains API documentation and examples. |
| PackageMaintainer | Debian Python Team <team+python@tracker.debian.org> |
| PackageName | python-natsort-doc |
| PackageSection | doc |
| PackageVersion | 7.1.0-1 |
| SHA-1 | 60C84E6C226193CA2B1E5196DFBEF8212A4F6636 |
| SHA-256 | 969B56607A776227EABACE32A76CF8C55E190EF8DBA55AC0C200318C460BA6E6 |