Result for 1CCA578D91B27B5DD9AF9FE08E4C36C1AB2233C6

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/pylint-0.18.1/quickstart.txt
FileSize7852
MD561E837DA991276B3C6133E2078872743
SHA-11CCA578D91B27B5DD9AF9FE08E4C36C1AB2233C6
SHA-256BB20F2E49A269B58D7E1E27D2E4AFC60D45A81E17B93546C1CA5C977E1DE180C
SSDEEP96:bmT1pMmRlk5XcK3VauPmSv99lSKSBBn3VzcBWQXcn2KytH2bV5Z0d+veVWeUFWpg:cHXkJ70ueSUR7CQLJ0WeUFWIk3SPF
TLSHT114F1E96BFD48573257A78263729C13E2DF5880B433E17855F46D82AC0B0EE2041FF2A9
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

Network graph view

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
MD55F897F45200280457A6312ABB3273318
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionPylint is a python tool that checks if a module satisfy a coding standard. Pylint can be seen as another PyChecker since nearly all tests you can do with PyChecker can also be done with Pylint. But Pylint offers some more features, like checking line-code's length, checking if variable names are well-formed according to your coding standard, or checking if declared interfaces are truly implemented, and much more. The big advantage with Pylint is that it is highly configurable, customizable, and you can easily write a small plugin to add a personal feature.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepylint
PackageRelease1.fc12
PackageVersion0.18.1
SHA-1F782A60F10526C23560A3D8DF650EEEE840F03AB
SHA-2563E1C8AD9EA8AA0A367F2C82BE90D5B758FC9F8886B372788192B13D9D820B3AA