Result for B3F51B14AE237BD1138F123844E9FFABE6F6A0FA

Query result

Key Value
FileNamegfs-porson-fonts.spec
FileSize4751
MD50345E0AAFAF86400D58A3A1C8F7C6232
SHA-1B3F51B14AE237BD1138F123844E9FFABE6F6A0FA
SHA-256D9F817CF50D8D26B68E663DA4F4688C423F1752F9C7FD7972C4DF3A69064C836
SSDEEP96:JRC4F6MiH4RFi8rOLOuPKDfOt8IzEDM+y6OTxwENtOBXq0275k5iqe0Avy8o2O8E:J8BMtQLO7zOt8IzEDA/1tNtOBXq0275q
TLSHT16EA1B7376104043B73E92F97B0155778ECB986BFE6A6644CB0ED1398374A879723224F
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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Parents (Total: 1)

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
MD5B7299F352072DA56FFE5D9263530650D
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionIn England, during the 1790’s, Cambridge University Press decided to procure a new set of Greek types. The university’s great scholar of Classics, Richard Porson was asked to produce a typeface based on his handsome handwriting and Richard Austin was commissioned to cut the types. The type was completed in 1808, after the untimely death of Porson the previous year. Its success was immediate and since then the classical editions in Great Britain and the U.S.A. use it, almost invariably. In 1913, Monotype released the typeface with some corrections, notably replacing the upright capitals suggested by Porson with inclined ones. In Greece the typeface was used under the name Pelasgika type. GFS Porson is based on the Monotype version, though using upright capitals, as in the original.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-porson-fonts
PackageRelease20.fc23
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-15749C4CA1753E674DC6FECE16E3FBC09C7DCA13F
SHA-2565B10BA32BD4E022E0384497119B1EC38DE3A41FD213FE5EEA8685A15E814D712