| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| FileName | ./usr/share/man/man3/Test::Number::Delta.3pm.gz |
| FileSize | 3663 |
| MD5 | 416A5CB010F88F86772371CDCD758700 |
| SHA-1 | F4D1B5C25BD78251A54BD96C6466BE2BE5C7A2A1 |
| SHA-256 | FEE8D3F7C82D5D9D982179C7282DE2639D1630A3BCF48B444A666F2181552E42 |
| SSDEEP | 96:4uJDBiGz9X3HIjvSGunaWAmJYCKLT+Juq:4uJTzdHIGT2LT+Mq |
| TLSH | T1F0718F9B11095AD30059A931CFFDF6AF4AB87C8498CD294C961A526096497DF3D81C7C |
| hashlookup:parent-total | 20 |
| hashlookup:trust | 100 |
The searched file hash is included in 20 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| MD5 | 11B6A607E629E867B9B085F9999DB9EA |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | At some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests). |
| PackageName | perl-Test-Number-Delta |
| PackageRelease | lp152.2.1 |
| PackageVersion | 1.060000 |
| SHA-1 | 028AE521A86ABED198D4123BFD56279274AD24AB |
| SHA-256 | 7A529E1BA5146D94F2E05D22A8E947D199C7937DA4D7608C28B33A972E444B30 |
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| MD5 | 7CF1BA969C15C85CAA97101F54FD907F |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | At some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests). |
| PackageName | perl-Test-Number-Delta |
| PackageRelease | 32.1 |
| PackageVersion | 1.060000 |
| SHA-1 | 055F0D32C4164330C7B89E5129A3F518ED92BB5F |
| SHA-256 | C081AA82A526FE21BE068F0118D2081F715CF9A93CD5F33A0C080B68963A0903 |
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| MD5 | 88F1862CD0EEC500B6B2FE0261445F9F |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | At some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests). |
| PackageMaintainer | https://bugs.opensuse.org |
| PackageName | perl-Test-Number-Delta |
| PackageRelease | bp156.3.1 |
| PackageVersion | 1.060000 |
| SHA-1 | 070F734EEB7CD2B67978CDACA0B526EB37CE001F |
| SHA-256 | 289904CEC78611958A6416625E2C1FECBCEFB1D50024BF786CB6BEA69A5FEF0E |
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| MD5 | 71E1A5364DFB34AED6B09D4869EC345E |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | At some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests). |
| PackageName | perl-Test-Number-Delta |
| PackageRelease | lp153.32.10 |
| PackageVersion | 1.060000 |
| SHA-1 | 1EE46FF73B70EC70EABFFF54486308056700EDAC |
| SHA-256 | D3DBA768C1C1EF6CD206914B5299CB8A203C064A127A778F7E6EBDB67ABDE6D5 |
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| MD5 | 9F584C2E06DEF22AE04E665CA486C5A4 |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | At some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests). |
| PackageName | perl-Test-Number-Delta |
| PackageRelease | lp150.32.2 |
| PackageVersion | 1.060000 |
| SHA-1 | 1FC0DEA8AEB0BB64BE49EF0BF26FC37E3FD0F5E2 |
| SHA-256 | DD57F960AB478F1B8B0EE7DB9A16FA80D5A0977DF3FC7E1166B37C4D1D3B6B1D |
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| MD5 | D77855B27F2243C622E5B3C9CE048E7C |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | At some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests). |
| PackageMaintainer | https://bugs.opensuse.org |
| PackageName | perl-Test-Number-Delta |
| PackageRelease | bp154.1.23 |
| PackageVersion | 1.060000 |
| SHA-1 | 35E209C91AA9858D4217D095E01D4C42ED4675F4 |
| SHA-256 | 6114851E5CA2A6A6F63083A656A4ACE319EE334BDCC42471071F7D28B45C5B18 |
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| MD5 | 14187C92847C5BEB89983BAEE198D045 |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | At some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests). |
| PackageMaintainer | https://bugs.opensuse.org |
| PackageName | perl-Test-Number-Delta |
| PackageRelease | bp155.2.10 |
| PackageVersion | 1.060000 |
| SHA-1 | 4278573EF92E9ADD1F00CE88E183787A039DC438 |
| SHA-256 | A98A9F925D48D288D656FD58AE555CA5328081CB8CD4FF7D44CE8A841307E897 |
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| MD5 | FD59E96DEA9365A50D6965DF260E2BB8 |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | At some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests). |
| PackageName | perl-Test-Number-Delta |
| PackageRelease | 32.1 |
| PackageVersion | 1.060000 |
| SHA-1 | 4C51C02CB5BCA0EEA6021D044DF9B1DA4D491A97 |
| SHA-256 | 702D5F80A53109027459E7532DF49C5DC7FD2DC4EB55E973A347E6A7583ADF66 |
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| MD5 | CFC65F3E18DE40C466D256D878B195C3 |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | At some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests). |
| PackageName | perl-Test-Number-Delta |
| PackageRelease | 32.2 |
| PackageVersion | 1.060000 |
| SHA-1 | 74E7F89542558C31FC32CD54337D0382F3FF2BD3 |
| SHA-256 | 6ABA18FB6E8AC5FCA26F436B9EEC1E9BCC386D8D750603E5757FD3E07EF5945E |
| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| MD5 | 2E231CADAABF04E8659EA5C2E8E96E29 |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | At some point or another, most programmers find they need to compare floating-point numbers for equality. The typical idiom is to test if the absolute value of the difference of the numbers is within a desired tolerance, usually called epsilon. This module provides such a function for use with the Test::More manpage. Usage is similar to other test functions described in the Test::More manpage. Semantically, the 'delta_within' function replaces this kind of construct: ok ( abs($p - $q) < $epsilon, '$p is equal to $q' ) or diag "$p is not equal to $q to within $epsilon"; While there's nothing wrong with that construct, it's painful to type it repeatedly in a test script. This module does the same thing with a single function call. The 'delta_ok' function is similar, but either uses a global default value for epsilon or else calculates a 'relative' epsilon on the fly so that epsilon is scaled automatically to the size of the arguments to 'delta_ok'. Both functions are exported automatically. Because checking floating-point equality is not always reliable, it is not possible to check the 'equal to' boundary of 'less than or equal to epsilon'. Therefore, Test::Number::Delta only compares if the absolute value of the difference is *less than* epsilon (for equality tests) or *greater than* epsilon (for inequality tests). |
| PackageName | perl-Test-Number-Delta |
| PackageRelease | 32.1 |
| PackageVersion | 1.060000 |
| SHA-1 | A7FD1EF05D93A852B3CC90BDA4FA1870CFE8FD49 |
| SHA-256 | 6C47E78E3C336B48FD82EEE14EF5F24ED64F3697A037132CB941D60C121FF00C |