Result for 4C173EB72B03C0F32C58321D59F864F70072FC5E

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/PyProtocols-1.0a0.dev0.egg-info/requires.txt
FileSize20
MD54022A7814368C36326B434868079FD49
SHA-14C173EB72B03C0F32C58321D59F864F70072FC5E
SHA-2567C73D534D2F54068FF896A6FB9723C1071B023B7DF4F441667321C7B61675ACC
SSDEEP3:8X4/u1n:d/A
TLSH
hashlookup:parent-total31
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 31)

The searched file hash is included in 31 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize33444
MD5DAE6AE263977B32049D6ED37D88E3580
PackageDescriptionOpen Protocols and Component Adaptation for Python Do you hate having to write lots of if-then logic to test what type something is? Wouldn't it be nice if you could just declare "I want this object to have this behavior" and magically convert whatever value you have, to the type you need? PyProtocols lets you do just that, cleanly, quickly, and robustly -- even with built-in types or other people's classes. . PyProtocols extends the PEP 246 adapt() function with a new "declaration API" that lets you easily define your own protocols and adapters, and declare what adapters should be used to adapt what types, objects, or protocols. In addition to its own Interface type, PyProtocols can also use Twisted and Zope's Interface types too. (Of course, since Twisted and Zope interfaces aren't as flexible, only a subset of the PyProtocols API works with them. Specific limitations are listed in the documentation.)
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython-protocols
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0a.svn20070625-8
SHA-1008F8B7664581C4F98528F2C6A7BEE2926ACDFD1
SHA-2566486205D554829BD62DC8A9FC2D7D139A86AD94CE655F3E449A403A0541E50EA
Key Value
FileSize38268
MD54579FE9F6CA454CFBE93FC61EB85F227
PackageDescriptionOpen Protocols and Component Adaptation for Python Do you hate having to write lots of if-then logic to test what type something is? Wouldn't it be nice if you could just declare "I want this object to have this behavior" and magically convert whatever value you have, to the type you need? PyProtocols lets you do just that, cleanly, quickly, and robustly -- even with built-in types or other people's classes. . PyProtocols extends the PEP 246 adapt() function with a new "declaration API" that lets you easily define your own protocols and adapters, and declare what adapters should be used to adapt what types, objects, or protocols. In addition to its own Interface type, PyProtocols can also use Twisted and Zope's Interface types too. (Of course, since Twisted and Zope interfaces aren't as flexible, only a subset of the PyProtocols API works with them. Specific limitations are listed in the documentation.)
PackageMaintainerDebian QA Group <packages@qa.debian.org>
PackageNamepython-protocols
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0a.svn20070625-7
SHA-112AF47963DFD5B9C1EA30F01CE3EFCDC88BC3BD7
SHA-2569C353C5F9AED6B6B1FF0A602686E480A01C5E5E40013081CD281D0A8FCCD6188
Key Value
FileSize35872
MD519F39B7C78E8CF109ED59C13EAD2083C
PackageDescriptionOpen Protocols and Component Adaptation for Python Do you hate having to write lots of if-then logic to test what type something is? Wouldn't it be nice if you could just declare "I want this object to have this behavior" and magically convert whatever value you have, to the type you need? PyProtocols lets you do just that, cleanly, quickly, and robustly -- even with built-in types or other people's classes. . PyProtocols extends the PEP 246 adapt() function with a new "declaration API" that lets you easily define your own protocols and adapters, and declare what adapters should be used to adapt what types, objects, or protocols. In addition to its own Interface type, PyProtocols can also use Twisted and Zope's Interface types too. (Of course, since Twisted and Zope interfaces aren't as flexible, only a subset of the PyProtocols API works with them. Specific limitations are listed in the documentation.)
PackageMaintainerDebian QA Group <packages@qa.debian.org>
PackageNamepython-protocols
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0a.svn20070625-8
SHA-114BEDF7BE80C16C72FC525690DB343DFB9666BB5
SHA-25695EEC7406AFCB32A0979CC1B9D440EEEE9B559AA3887050AF122F0805D5330E3
Key Value
FileSize37140
MD55D304C7E8FB3D00A191539C9A787D7FB
PackageDescriptionOpen Protocols and Component Adaptation for Python Do you hate having to write lots of if-then logic to test what type something is? Wouldn't it be nice if you could just declare "I want this object to have this behavior" and magically convert whatever value you have, to the type you need? PyProtocols lets you do just that, cleanly, quickly, and robustly -- even with built-in types or other people's classes. . PyProtocols extends the PEP 246 adapt() function with a new "declaration API" that lets you easily define your own protocols and adapters, and declare what adapters should be used to adapt what types, objects, or protocols. In addition to its own Interface type, PyProtocols can also use Twisted and Zope's Interface types too. (Of course, since Twisted and Zope interfaces aren't as flexible, only a subset of the PyProtocols API works with them. Specific limitations are listed in the documentation.)
PackageMaintainerDebian QA Group <packages@qa.debian.org>
PackageNamepython-protocols
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0a.svn20070625-8
SHA-1163D1E9C85FBD0DB21CA9C53D29C5E86E3329ED6
SHA-256E924F590AA6726E4B1FCDFC76A689425D61321F4E5F22D7F177F8D0514E998ED
Key Value
FileSize36496
MD525CE13AB8F86FCBB318D8F5D7A503744
PackageDescriptionOpen Protocols and Component Adaptation for Python Do you hate having to write lots of if-then logic to test what type something is? Wouldn't it be nice if you could just declare "I want this object to have this behavior" and magically convert whatever value you have, to the type you need? PyProtocols lets you do just that, cleanly, quickly, and robustly -- even with built-in types or other people's classes. . PyProtocols extends the PEP 246 adapt() function with a new "declaration API" that lets you easily define your own protocols and adapters, and declare what adapters should be used to adapt what types, objects, or protocols. In addition to its own Interface type, PyProtocols can also use Twisted and Zope's Interface types too. (Of course, since Twisted and Zope interfaces aren't as flexible, only a subset of the PyProtocols API works with them. Specific limitations are listed in the documentation.)
PackageMaintainerDebian QA Group <packages@qa.debian.org>
PackageNamepython-protocols
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0a.svn20070625-7
SHA-116A824EE2F3FD000A703FB0915CBBCCDB556717E
SHA-256BAB830CBC770B672742E0A8EFDE3AA6BEAFE45DC516E56BDC406245D1B376BAD
Key Value
MD5DD2FF831F0ACE9B093173CD44B44E6F1
PackageArchs390x
PackageDescriptionPyProtocols is an implementation of PEP 246 allowing Python programmers to define Interfaces and adapters between them, thereby reducing or eliminating fragile 'isinstance' if type() comparisons.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-protocols
PackageRelease0.22.a0dev_r2302.fc23
PackageVersion1.0
SHA-129278386AA1C902B2E25DCB61A7DF261DB9DF615
SHA-256CD0FB0693DCF95D7C92184911F5C697D13D0AAB8A99E8EAA02F211060330BA30
Key Value
FileSize36500
MD508E1315E7E7E2EE3F09C367F5015DC1B
PackageDescriptionOpen Protocols and Component Adaptation for Python Do you hate having to write lots of if-then logic to test what type something is? Wouldn't it be nice if you could just declare "I want this object to have this behavior" and magically convert whatever value you have, to the type you need? PyProtocols lets you do just that, cleanly, quickly, and robustly -- even with built-in types or other people's classes. . PyProtocols extends the PEP 246 adapt() function with a new "declaration API" that lets you easily define your own protocols and adapters, and declare what adapters should be used to adapt what types, objects, or protocols. In addition to its own Interface type, PyProtocols can also use Twisted and Zope's Interface types too. (Of course, since Twisted and Zope interfaces aren't as flexible, only a subset of the PyProtocols API works with them. Specific limitations are listed in the documentation.)
PackageMaintainerDebian QA Group <packages@qa.debian.org>
PackageNamepython-protocols
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0a.svn20070625-8
SHA-140BE83CF6A9393B9F2256F5B3872EE74891D4F92
SHA-256D1E8B4BF58EC59CAA6802412F84A852881B68296BFBCE1023ABDF88745AF5499
Key Value
FileSize33250
MD576C1CE71304A3F0B6CC5EE1789079205
PackageDescriptionOpen Protocols and Component Adaptation for Python Do you hate having to write lots of if-then logic to test what type something is? Wouldn't it be nice if you could just declare "I want this object to have this behavior" and magically convert whatever value you have, to the type you need? PyProtocols lets you do just that, cleanly, quickly, and robustly -- even with built-in types or other people's classes. . PyProtocols extends the PEP 246 adapt() function with a new "declaration API" that lets you easily define your own protocols and adapters, and declare what adapters should be used to adapt what types, objects, or protocols. In addition to its own Interface type, PyProtocols can also use Twisted and Zope's Interface types too. (Of course, since Twisted and Zope interfaces aren't as flexible, only a subset of the PyProtocols API works with them. Specific limitations are listed in the documentation.)
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython-protocols
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0a.svn20070625-7
SHA-14342C4021D2FA198B02E389CE154354ECE4F7BD6
SHA-2560152D35CF06D999C7CE7B5050635D75C7A42744A683B1A2025DFBF3937934859
Key Value
FileSize36818
MD589D0B41DBABC63E00CDF7E1C4506E9EB
PackageDescriptionOpen Protocols and Component Adaptation for Python Do you hate having to write lots of if-then logic to test what type something is? Wouldn't it be nice if you could just declare "I want this object to have this behavior" and magically convert whatever value you have, to the type you need? PyProtocols lets you do just that, cleanly, quickly, and robustly -- even with built-in types or other people's classes. . PyProtocols extends the PEP 246 adapt() function with a new "declaration API" that lets you easily define your own protocols and adapters, and declare what adapters should be used to adapt what types, objects, or protocols. In addition to its own Interface type, PyProtocols can also use Twisted and Zope's Interface types too. (Of course, since Twisted and Zope interfaces aren't as flexible, only a subset of the PyProtocols API works with them. Specific limitations are listed in the documentation.)
PackageMaintainerDebian QA Group <packages@qa.debian.org>
PackageNamepython-protocols
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0a.svn20070625-7
SHA-14DC1B992F0E755DD12C1D0167AF3CF7BD2EF237D
SHA-2563131D3A6DD402DB0FFCAA6110BB01E0F30634DD225DE3543854C0D3C9ACFC393
Key Value
FileSize35676
MD5DC6E028D3262C70CC6DFE7B19D08BC7B
PackageDescriptionOpen Protocols and Component Adaptation for Python Do you hate having to write lots of if-then logic to test what type something is? Wouldn't it be nice if you could just declare "I want this object to have this behavior" and magically convert whatever value you have, to the type you need? PyProtocols lets you do just that, cleanly, quickly, and robustly -- even with built-in types or other people's classes. . PyProtocols extends the PEP 246 adapt() function with a new "declaration API" that lets you easily define your own protocols and adapters, and declare what adapters should be used to adapt what types, objects, or protocols. In addition to its own Interface type, PyProtocols can also use Twisted and Zope's Interface types too. (Of course, since Twisted and Zope interfaces aren't as flexible, only a subset of the PyProtocols API works with them. Specific limitations are listed in the documentation.)
PackageMaintainerDebian QA Group <packages@qa.debian.org>
PackageNamepython-protocols
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0a.svn20070625-8
SHA-1514BDCA5955AA52314897F261172CBE4BBAB7388
SHA-25668EE1823EE4A26263A71F49E3B378B6FB9CE68F23442060806EF757E87F200C9