Result for E5D93CAF3CD419C35C7E7FBD203EE14C61C5EB07

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/python3-pretty-yaml/copyright
FileSize644
MD5981FA657EFD3E0C168B01AB022DEB69C
RDS:package_id293699
SHA-1E5D93CAF3CD419C35C7E7FBD203EE14C61C5EB07
SHA-256427CE1EB0EDC482D7023FD7B281A9FF7E08F45EA57F069BD2448333314FE81EA
SSDEEP12:mpeJ8Jq4KUc+n2msQov0aPiy5jVj6EAoTGs2O9TbEiY7L+67LU:gttSJM0iy5jlAoTt2O905xw
TLSHT1D0F0D3F23A4842B973C917CAEAA7D487730641C273267D5A701E65880755B49229931F
insert-timestamp1678949302.7510226
sourceRDS.db
hashlookup:parent-total10
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 10)

The searched file hash is included in 10 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize17092
MD56D70EFDF1DBC4855106540564AD17AED
PackageDescriptionmodule to produce pretty and readable YAML-serialized data (Python 3) YAML is generally nice and easy format to read if it was written by humans. PyYAML can a do fairly decent job of making stuff readable. pyaml tries to improve on that a bit, with the following tweaks: . - Most human-friendly representation options in PyYAML get picked as defaults. - Does not dump "null" values, if possible, replacing these with just empty strings, which have the same meaning but reduce visual clutter and are easier to edit. - Dicts, sets, OrderedDicts, defaultdicts, namedtuples, etc are representable and get sorted on output (OrderedDicts and namedtuples keep their ordering), so that output would be as diff-friendly as possible, and not arbitrarily depend on Python internals. - It appears that at least recent PyYAML versions also do such sorting for Python dicts. - List items get indented, as they should be. - bytestrings that can't be auto-converted to unicode raise error, as yaml has no "binary bytes" (i.e. unix strings) type. - Attempt is made to pick more readable string representation styles, depending on the value. - "force_embed" option to avoid having &id stuff scattered all over the output (which might be beneficial in some cases, hence the option). - "&id" anchors, if used, get labels from the keys they get attached to, not just use meaningless enumerators. - "string_val_style" option to only apply to strings that are values, not keys. - Has an option to add vertical spacing (empty lines) between keys on different depths, to make output much more seekable. . This package installs the Python 3 version.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython3-pretty-yaml
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion19.12.0-1
SHA-18CB8A553148350489A172AE49784793D1FC3CE62
SHA-2562871403197CE82E8CE01EAD3ED6F578AF8DAB52C240C3A9210251556EA4966BC
Key Value
FileSize16064
MD5D6EF47741FB08AF830C955A400ADBD6D
PackageDescriptionmodule to produce pretty and readable YAML-serialized data (Python 2) YAML is generally nice and easy format to read if it was written by humans. PyYAML can a do fairly decent job of making stuff readable. pyaml tries to improve on that a bit, with the following tweaks: . - Most human-friendly representation options in PyYAML get picked as defaults. - Does not dump "null" values, if possible, replacing these with just empty strings, which have the same meaning but reduce visual clutter and are easier to edit. - Dicts, sets, OrderedDicts, defaultdicts, namedtuples, etc are representable and get sorted on output (OrderedDicts and namedtuples keep their ordering), so that output would be as diff-friendly as possible, and not arbitrarily depend on Python internals. - It appears that at least recent PyYAML versions also do such sorting for Python dicts. - List items get indented, as they should be. - bytestrings that can't be auto-converted to unicode raise error, as yaml has no "binary bytes" (i.e. unix strings) type. - Attempt is made to pick more readable string representation styles, depending on the value. - "force_embed" option to avoid having &id stuff scattered all over the output (which might be beneficial in some cases, hence the option). - "&id" anchors, if used, get labels from the keys they get attached to, not just use meaningless enumerators. - "string_val_style" option to only apply to strings that are values, not keys. - Has an option to add vertical spacing (empty lines) between keys on different depths, to make output much more seekable. . This package installs the Python 2 version.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython-pretty-yaml
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion17.12.1-1
SHA-176E930329F2BE7DAA42CF219A31893E871992C81
SHA-2561A6D42E3396CC62F40A1FB98C883B83FC9CBB9D542461634D15DAFDBFB0940B4
Key Value
FileSize16128
MD5A0BC35D5549F245CF133B18AC6AF491A
PackageDescriptionmodule to produce pretty and readable YAML-serialized data (Python 3) YAML is generally nice and easy format to read if it was written by humans. PyYAML can a do fairly decent job of making stuff readable. pyaml tries to improve on that a bit, with the following tweaks: . - Most human-friendly representation options in PyYAML get picked as defaults. - Does not dump "null" values, if possible, replacing these with just empty strings, which have the same meaning but reduce visual clutter and are easier to edit. - Dicts, sets, OrderedDicts, defaultdicts, namedtuples, etc are representable and get sorted on output (OrderedDicts and namedtuples keep their ordering), so that output would be as diff-friendly as possible, and not arbitrarily depend on Python internals. - It appears that at least recent PyYAML versions also do such sorting for Python dicts. - List items get indented, as they should be. - bytestrings that can't be auto-converted to unicode raise error, as yaml has no "binary bytes" (i.e. unix strings) type. - Attempt is made to pick more readable string representation styles, depending on the value. - "force_embed" option to avoid having &id stuff scattered all over the output (which might be beneficial in some cases, hence the option). - "&id" anchors, if used, get labels from the keys they get attached to, not just use meaningless enumerators. - "string_val_style" option to only apply to strings that are values, not keys. - Has an option to add vertical spacing (empty lines) between keys on different depths, to make output much more seekable. . This package installs the Python 3 version.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython3-pretty-yaml
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion17.12.1-1
SHA-15E35103680F1ED498E4718E40F01DEC3D89CEFF0
SHA-256DA3DFF1BB8A7C20D40DBD9A5157F998E74A9E692476AF9D5AF0EAE20FA2ECE86
Key Value
FileSize15580
MD5CECD8851CE7ADCEDA37EB6950777DB21
PackageDescriptionmodule to produce pretty and readable YAML-serialized data (Python 3) YAML is generally nice and easy format to read if it was written by humans. PyYAML can a do fairly decent job of making stuff readable. pyaml tries to improve on that a bit, with the following tweaks: . - Most human-friendly representation options in PyYAML get picked as defaults. - Does not dump "null" values, if possible, replacing these with just empty strings, which have the same meaning but reduce visual clutter and are easier to edit. - Dicts, sets, OrderedDicts, defaultdicts, namedtuples, etc are representable and get sorted on output (OrderedDicts and namedtuples keep their ordering), so that output would be as diff-friendly as possible, and not arbitrarily depend on Python internals. - It appears that at least recent PyYAML versions also do such sorting for Python dicts. - List items get indented, as they should be. - bytestrings that can't be auto-converted to unicode raise error, as yaml has no "binary bytes" (i.e. unix strings) type. - Attempt is made to pick more readable string representation styles, depending on the value. - "force_embed" option to avoid having &id stuff scattered all over the output (which might be beneficial in some cases, hence the option). - "&id" anchors, if used, get labels from the keys they get attached to, not just use meaningless enumerators. - "string_val_style" option to only apply to strings that are values, not keys. - Has an option to add vertical spacing (empty lines) between keys on different depths, to make output much more seekable. . This package installs the Python 3 version.
PackageMaintainerSascha Steinbiss <satta@debian.org>
PackageNamepython3-pretty-yaml
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion16.12.2-1
SHA-197E9F8C102C2265113032197C374A579D52D6977
SHA-2564666B38A5D0854EC5C35DF3232F2DE8F18CFF8076BBE23AFFEA521787795F223
Key Value
FileSize17332
MD5AAF4B65C765E6E75BEEEDF9380CBA19D
PackageDescriptionmodule to produce pretty and readable YAML-serialized data (Python 3) YAML is generally nice and easy format to read if it was written by humans. PyYAML can a do fairly decent job of making stuff readable. pyaml tries to improve on that a bit, with the following tweaks: . - Most human-friendly representation options in PyYAML get picked as defaults. - Does not dump "null" values, if possible, replacing these with just empty strings, which have the same meaning but reduce visual clutter and are easier to edit. - Dicts, sets, OrderedDicts, defaultdicts, namedtuples, etc are representable and get sorted on output (OrderedDicts and namedtuples keep their ordering), so that output would be as diff-friendly as possible, and not arbitrarily depend on Python internals. - It appears that at least recent PyYAML versions also do such sorting for Python dicts. - List items get indented, as they should be. - bytestrings that can't be auto-converted to unicode raise error, as yaml has no "binary bytes" (i.e. unix strings) type. - Attempt is made to pick more readable string representation styles, depending on the value. - "force_embed" option to avoid having &id stuff scattered all over the output (which might be beneficial in some cases, hence the option). - "&id" anchors, if used, get labels from the keys they get attached to, not just use meaningless enumerators. - "string_val_style" option to only apply to strings that are values, not keys. - Has an option to add vertical spacing (empty lines) between keys on different depths, to make output much more seekable. . This package installs the Python 3 version.
PackageMaintainerSascha Steinbiss <satta@debian.org>
PackageNamepython3-pretty-yaml
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion21.8.3-2
SHA-1B04DA81BE1F9AC3B4B4BDB85797A6EA702E6489E
SHA-256740374FE0510829653F747F08A38124C406F3A93ECE4E2F571FCE30309A4A8EA
Key Value
FileSize16304
MD5027E9FFA8C0E223703DE772857B71C7C
PackageDescriptionmodule to produce pretty and readable YAML-serialized data (Python 3) YAML is generally nice and easy format to read if it was written by humans. PyYAML can a do fairly decent job of making stuff readable. pyaml tries to improve on that a bit, with the following tweaks: . - Most human-friendly representation options in PyYAML get picked as defaults. - Does not dump "null" values, if possible, replacing these with just empty strings, which have the same meaning but reduce visual clutter and are easier to edit. - Dicts, sets, OrderedDicts, defaultdicts, namedtuples, etc are representable and get sorted on output (OrderedDicts and namedtuples keep their ordering), so that output would be as diff-friendly as possible, and not arbitrarily depend on Python internals. - It appears that at least recent PyYAML versions also do such sorting for Python dicts. - List items get indented, as they should be. - bytestrings that can't be auto-converted to unicode raise error, as yaml has no "binary bytes" (i.e. unix strings) type. - Attempt is made to pick more readable string representation styles, depending on the value. - "force_embed" option to avoid having &id stuff scattered all over the output (which might be beneficial in some cases, hence the option). - "&id" anchors, if used, get labels from the keys they get attached to, not just use meaningless enumerators. - "string_val_style" option to only apply to strings that are values, not keys. - Has an option to add vertical spacing (empty lines) between keys on different depths, to make output much more seekable. . This package installs the Python 3 version.
PackageMaintainerSascha Steinbiss <satta@debian.org>
PackageNamepython3-pretty-yaml
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion18.11.0-1
SHA-1C18DD59A60083082268801B2C47F54D751980825
SHA-256B54A80685E2959607C03DE41B13BA6D6BBF470A5A5D5521E6309760040C6D8B5
Key Value
FileSize17196
MD5410ABA4BA0E09008B28347FAC47FCAFE
PackageDescriptionmodule to produce pretty and readable YAML-serialized data (Python 3) YAML is generally nice and easy format to read if it was written by humans. PyYAML can a do fairly decent job of making stuff readable. pyaml tries to improve on that a bit, with the following tweaks: . - Most human-friendly representation options in PyYAML get picked as defaults. - Does not dump "null" values, if possible, replacing these with just empty strings, which have the same meaning but reduce visual clutter and are easier to edit. - Dicts, sets, OrderedDicts, defaultdicts, namedtuples, etc are representable and get sorted on output (OrderedDicts and namedtuples keep their ordering), so that output would be as diff-friendly as possible, and not arbitrarily depend on Python internals. - It appears that at least recent PyYAML versions also do such sorting for Python dicts. - List items get indented, as they should be. - bytestrings that can't be auto-converted to unicode raise error, as yaml has no "binary bytes" (i.e. unix strings) type. - Attempt is made to pick more readable string representation styles, depending on the value. - "force_embed" option to avoid having &id stuff scattered all over the output (which might be beneficial in some cases, hence the option). - "&id" anchors, if used, get labels from the keys they get attached to, not just use meaningless enumerators. - "string_val_style" option to only apply to strings that are values, not keys. - Has an option to add vertical spacing (empty lines) between keys on different depths, to make output much more seekable. . This package installs the Python 3 version.
PackageMaintainerSascha Steinbiss <satta@debian.org>
PackageNamepython3-pretty-yaml
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion20.4.0-1
SHA-148831E8D6F144EEE6C699C4A3602E5524FD87F8F
SHA-256524D93A265CB50484F3DA2D2CD3D1871D143A802789A35254184A6334C08F982
Key Value
FileSize15512
MD59D95929A03626B22C22A447206FBD10A
PackageDescriptionmodule to produce pretty and readable YAML-serialized data (Python 2) YAML is generally nice and easy format to read if it was written by humans. PyYAML can a do fairly decent job of making stuff readable. pyaml tries to improve on that a bit, with the following tweaks: . - Most human-friendly representation options in PyYAML get picked as defaults. - Does not dump "null" values, if possible, replacing these with just empty strings, which have the same meaning but reduce visual clutter and are easier to edit. - Dicts, sets, OrderedDicts, defaultdicts, namedtuples, etc are representable and get sorted on output (OrderedDicts and namedtuples keep their ordering), so that output would be as diff-friendly as possible, and not arbitrarily depend on Python internals. - It appears that at least recent PyYAML versions also do such sorting for Python dicts. - List items get indented, as they should be. - bytestrings that can't be auto-converted to unicode raise error, as yaml has no "binary bytes" (i.e. unix strings) type. - Attempt is made to pick more readable string representation styles, depending on the value. - "force_embed" option to avoid having &id stuff scattered all over the output (which might be beneficial in some cases, hence the option). - "&id" anchors, if used, get labels from the keys they get attached to, not just use meaningless enumerators. - "string_val_style" option to only apply to strings that are values, not keys. - Has an option to add vertical spacing (empty lines) between keys on different depths, to make output much more seekable. . This package installs the Python 2 version.
PackageMaintainerSascha Steinbiss <satta@debian.org>
PackageNamepython-pretty-yaml
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion16.12.2-1
SHA-14AA29270F6F9C09DB4EC56FE26914CE533AD4E90
SHA-2561D3DE33F49C5141082782E599F70B4BE14472FF8C07A89E828FA75537525FBDB
Key Value
FileSize16228
MD5CAB6956A36EFC7B6BD8412D9DFEB8E07
PackageDescriptionmodule to produce pretty and readable YAML-serialized data (Python 2) YAML is generally nice and easy format to read if it was written by humans. PyYAML can a do fairly decent job of making stuff readable. pyaml tries to improve on that a bit, with the following tweaks: . - Most human-friendly representation options in PyYAML get picked as defaults. - Does not dump "null" values, if possible, replacing these with just empty strings, which have the same meaning but reduce visual clutter and are easier to edit. - Dicts, sets, OrderedDicts, defaultdicts, namedtuples, etc are representable and get sorted on output (OrderedDicts and namedtuples keep their ordering), so that output would be as diff-friendly as possible, and not arbitrarily depend on Python internals. - It appears that at least recent PyYAML versions also do such sorting for Python dicts. - List items get indented, as they should be. - bytestrings that can't be auto-converted to unicode raise error, as yaml has no "binary bytes" (i.e. unix strings) type. - Attempt is made to pick more readable string representation styles, depending on the value. - "force_embed" option to avoid having &id stuff scattered all over the output (which might be beneficial in some cases, hence the option). - "&id" anchors, if used, get labels from the keys they get attached to, not just use meaningless enumerators. - "string_val_style" option to only apply to strings that are values, not keys. - Has an option to add vertical spacing (empty lines) between keys on different depths, to make output much more seekable. . This package installs the Python 2 version.
PackageMaintainerSascha Steinbiss <satta@debian.org>
PackageNamepython-pretty-yaml
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion18.11.0-1
SHA-188049ADEB8F13628A5CBA22374A032B8A89BAF4A
SHA-25616C486DFB2A4159765460A4DBE7AC709749D65BB169D131890A8095C82943234
Key Value
FileSize17208
MD51697ADA7E73E8F7D04B830FF00A6D48D
PackageDescriptionmodule to produce pretty and readable YAML-serialized data (Python 3) YAML is generally nice and easy format to read if it was written by humans. PyYAML can a do fairly decent job of making stuff readable. pyaml tries to improve on that a bit, with the following tweaks: . - Most human-friendly representation options in PyYAML get picked as defaults. - Does not dump "null" values, if possible, replacing these with just empty strings, which have the same meaning but reduce visual clutter and are easier to edit. - Dicts, sets, OrderedDicts, defaultdicts, namedtuples, etc are representable and get sorted on output (OrderedDicts and namedtuples keep their ordering), so that output would be as diff-friendly as possible, and not arbitrarily depend on Python internals. - It appears that at least recent PyYAML versions also do such sorting for Python dicts. - List items get indented, as they should be. - bytestrings that can't be auto-converted to unicode raise error, as yaml has no "binary bytes" (i.e. unix strings) type. - Attempt is made to pick more readable string representation styles, depending on the value. - "force_embed" option to avoid having &id stuff scattered all over the output (which might be beneficial in some cases, hence the option). - "&id" anchors, if used, get labels from the keys they get attached to, not just use meaningless enumerators. - "string_val_style" option to only apply to strings that are values, not keys. - Has an option to add vertical spacing (empty lines) between keys on different depths, to make output much more seekable. . This package installs the Python 3 version.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython3-pretty-yaml
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion20.4.0-1
SHA-17B6FAB685252E900481B3E010B32EF8CE9028816
SHA-256AA88E725A031A0275CA91E574E4D172C7E5A2488F2C8B9B76720060857B9B327