Result for 19E36949325B28766844BC17F168D8368D15AF40

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/libghc-enumerator-prof/copyright
FileSize1296
MD5291DB0584EBE38FBD969DD420C7702B5
SHA-119E36949325B28766844BC17F168D8368D15AF40
SHA-256A990CDD7481937CD52F0CCA334D932DCA3F598584F6781F9830FAB4EC9DB50CA
SSDEEP24:0pXW2kHwB4J5X30yP1gtOHw1Gg9QH+sUu8Ok4F+dxoBoqMSPz:n/QiJ5HlP1E9ICQH+szIt6BoE7
TLSHT19421982D769447712C5A43A175746CD6F27FB16BB99BA3C4346DE348532B01CE4FB810
hashlookup:parent-total5
hashlookup:trust75

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Parents (Total: 5)

The searched file hash is included in 5 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize214682
MD5B5348B73CBD0146138AF92E128232685
PackageDescriptionhigh-performance left-fold enumerators Typical buffer–based incremental I/O is based around a single loop, which reads data from some source (such as a socket or file), transforms it, and generates one or more outputs (such as a line count, HTTP responses, or modified file). Although efficient and safe, these loops are all single–purpose; it is difficult or impossible to compose buffer–based processing loops. . Haskell's concept of "lazy I/O" allows pure code to operate on data from an external source. However, lazy I/O has several shortcomings. Most notably, resources such as memory and file handles can be retained for arbitrarily long periods of time, causing unpredictable performance and error conditions. . Enumerators are an efficient, predictable, and safe alternative to lazy I/O. Discovered by Oleg Kiselyov, they allow large datasets to be processed in near–constant space by pure code. Although somewhat more complex to write, using enumerators instead of lazy I/O produces more correct programs. . This library contains an enumerator implementation for Haskell, designed to be both simple and efficient. Three core types are defined, along with numerous helper functions: . Iteratee: Data sinks, analogous to left folds. Iteratees consume a sequence of input values, and generate a single output value. Many iteratees are designed to perform side effects (such as printing to stdout), so they can also be used as monad transformers. . Enumerator: Data sources, which generate input sequences. Typical enumerators read from a file handle, socket, random number generator, or other external stream. To operate, enumerators are passed an iteratee, and provide that iteratee with input until either the iteratee has completed its computation, or EOF. . Enumeratee: Data transformers, which operate as both enumerators and iteratees. Enumeratees read from an outer enumerator, and provide the transformed data to an inner iteratee. . This package provides a library for the Haskell programming language. See http://www.haskell.org/ for more information on Haskell.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamelibghc-enumerator-dev
PackageSectionhaskell
PackageVersion0.4.20-4build1
SHA-13C5623976392D61133859001FB9D7A90097B493A
SHA-256E79381F9644CC6D52B71426823F7E1D447FCEB18B9DCB927F7FB2BBC67080C83
Key Value
FileSize187074
MD5D5A3772C7ED906E320723093484D5517
PackageDescriptionhigh-performance left-fold enumerators; profiling libraries Typical buffer–based incremental I/O is based around a single loop, which reads data from some source (such as a socket or file), transforms it, and generates one or more outputs (such as a line count, HTTP responses, or modified file). Although efficient and safe, these loops are all single–purpose; it is difficult or impossible to compose buffer–based processing loops. . Haskell's concept of "lazy I/O" allows pure code to operate on data from an external source. However, lazy I/O has several shortcomings. Most notably, resources such as memory and file handles can be retained for arbitrarily long periods of time, causing unpredictable performance and error conditions. . Enumerators are an efficient, predictable, and safe alternative to lazy I/O. Discovered by Oleg Kiselyov, they allow large datasets to be processed in near–constant space by pure code. Although somewhat more complex to write, using enumerators instead of lazy I/O produces more correct programs. . This library contains an enumerator implementation for Haskell, designed to be both simple and efficient. Three core types are defined, along with numerous helper functions: . Iteratee: Data sinks, analogous to left folds. Iteratees consume a sequence of input values, and generate a single output value. Many iteratees are designed to perform side effects (such as printing to stdout), so they can also be used as monad transformers. . Enumerator: Data sources, which generate input sequences. Typical enumerators read from a file handle, socket, random number generator, or other external stream. To operate, enumerators are passed an iteratee, and provide that iteratee with input until either the iteratee has completed its computation, or EOF. . Enumeratee: Data transformers, which operate as both enumerators and iteratees. Enumeratees read from an outer enumerator, and provide the transformed data to an inner iteratee. . This package provides a library for the Haskell programming language, compiled for profiling. See http://www.haskell.org/ for more information on Haskell.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamelibghc-enumerator-prof
PackageSectionhaskell
PackageVersion0.4.20-4build1
SHA-17BDA09C5BDAAD3980F58D4A6E4E6EE7B93AE980E
SHA-25674B8E9B46D343C001CD21E2FED7F3264E8DF3ED739E7F00E2E30B5C5885BEDC0
Key Value
FileSize210218
MD5330568FAAB44B03DF9C4FDCC7F7C4827
PackageDescriptionhigh-performance left-fold enumerators Typical buffer–based incremental I/O is based around a single loop, which reads data from some source (such as a socket or file), transforms it, and generates one or more outputs (such as a line count, HTTP responses, or modified file). Although efficient and safe, these loops are all single–purpose; it is difficult or impossible to compose buffer–based processing loops. . Haskell's concept of "lazy I/O" allows pure code to operate on data from an external source. However, lazy I/O has several shortcomings. Most notably, resources such as memory and file handles can be retained for arbitrarily long periods of time, causing unpredictable performance and error conditions. . Enumerators are an efficient, predictable, and safe alternative to lazy I/O. Discovered by Oleg Kiselyov, they allow large datasets to be processed in near–constant space by pure code. Although somewhat more complex to write, using enumerators instead of lazy I/O produces more correct programs. . This library contains an enumerator implementation for Haskell, designed to be both simple and efficient. Three core types are defined, along with numerous helper functions: . Iteratee: Data sinks, analogous to left folds. Iteratees consume a sequence of input values, and generate a single output value. Many iteratees are designed to perform side effects (such as printing to stdout), so they can also be used as monad transformers. . Enumerator: Data sources, which generate input sequences. Typical enumerators read from a file handle, socket, random number generator, or other external stream. To operate, enumerators are passed an iteratee, and provide that iteratee with input until either the iteratee has completed its computation, or EOF. . Enumeratee: Data transformers, which operate as both enumerators and iteratees. Enumeratees read from an outer enumerator, and provide the transformed data to an inner iteratee. . This package provides a library for the Haskell programming language. See http://www.haskell.org/ for more information on Haskell.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamelibghc-enumerator-dev
PackageSectionhaskell
PackageVersion0.4.20-4build1
SHA-131E14C9F7DB1376844A7791E9418A27C2A3EC59F
SHA-25650B20B51145FB7EA667044541604985800DD34A616CC5B6A08CA53BE90269DBF
Key Value
FileSize194596
MD592B3D5C0441D9118EA1E6FE930AA9F10
PackageDescriptionhigh-performance left-fold enumerators; profiling libraries Typical buffer–based incremental I/O is based around a single loop, which reads data from some source (such as a socket or file), transforms it, and generates one or more outputs (such as a line count, HTTP responses, or modified file). Although efficient and safe, these loops are all single–purpose; it is difficult or impossible to compose buffer–based processing loops. . Haskell's concept of "lazy I/O" allows pure code to operate on data from an external source. However, lazy I/O has several shortcomings. Most notably, resources such as memory and file handles can be retained for arbitrarily long periods of time, causing unpredictable performance and error conditions. . Enumerators are an efficient, predictable, and safe alternative to lazy I/O. Discovered by Oleg Kiselyov, they allow large datasets to be processed in near–constant space by pure code. Although somewhat more complex to write, using enumerators instead of lazy I/O produces more correct programs. . This library contains an enumerator implementation for Haskell, designed to be both simple and efficient. Three core types are defined, along with numerous helper functions: . Iteratee: Data sinks, analogous to left folds. Iteratees consume a sequence of input values, and generate a single output value. Many iteratees are designed to perform side effects (such as printing to stdout), so they can also be used as monad transformers. . Enumerator: Data sources, which generate input sequences. Typical enumerators read from a file handle, socket, random number generator, or other external stream. To operate, enumerators are passed an iteratee, and provide that iteratee with input until either the iteratee has completed its computation, or EOF. . Enumeratee: Data transformers, which operate as both enumerators and iteratees. Enumeratees read from an outer enumerator, and provide the transformed data to an inner iteratee. . This package provides a library for the Haskell programming language, compiled for profiling. See http://www.haskell.org/ for more information on Haskell.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamelibghc-enumerator-prof
PackageSectionhaskell
PackageVersion0.4.20-4build1
SHA-13C9CF5EBDF1167F096BD491EAAE370662C9A815F
SHA-256AF173787893A9C33C511FFDE998DBD9FBA7DC7A63523CC5353AAAD9DFB8F38D0
Key Value
FileSize87508
MD52B2695A77ABAEC2C835EC8D435B2E4EE
PackageDescriptionhigh-performance left-fold enumerators; documentation Typical buffer–based incremental I/O is based around a single loop, which reads data from some source (such as a socket or file), transforms it, and generates one or more outputs (such as a line count, HTTP responses, or modified file). Although efficient and safe, these loops are all single–purpose; it is difficult or impossible to compose buffer–based processing loops. . Haskell's concept of "lazy I/O" allows pure code to operate on data from an external source. However, lazy I/O has several shortcomings. Most notably, resources such as memory and file handles can be retained for arbitrarily long periods of time, causing unpredictable performance and error conditions. . Enumerators are an efficient, predictable, and safe alternative to lazy I/O. Discovered by Oleg Kiselyov, they allow large datasets to be processed in near–constant space by pure code. Although somewhat more complex to write, using enumerators instead of lazy I/O produces more correct programs. . This library contains an enumerator implementation for Haskell, designed to be both simple and efficient. Three core types are defined, along with numerous helper functions: . Iteratee: Data sinks, analogous to left folds. Iteratees consume a sequence of input values, and generate a single output value. Many iteratees are designed to perform side effects (such as printing to stdout), so they can also be used as monad transformers. . Enumerator: Data sources, which generate input sequences. Typical enumerators read from a file handle, socket, random number generator, or other external stream. To operate, enumerators are passed an iteratee, and provide that iteratee with input until either the iteratee has completed its computation, or EOF. . Enumeratee: Data transformers, which operate as both enumerators and iteratees. Enumeratees read from an outer enumerator, and provide the transformed data to an inner iteratee. . This package provides the documentation for a library for the Haskell programming language. See http://www.haskell.org/ for more information on Haskell.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamelibghc-enumerator-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion0.4.20-4build1
SHA-17896A159BF10A32C65E02236895E39F2030069A7
SHA-256473FB9C2D414FE8678BF940CB139AB2C77A14B84DC1C72A304FC6956126AC302