Result for 4EADDF5A3E5FD35FE1477EDB13A4A9C1B43F2D5C

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/frown/changelog.Debian.gz
FileSize1634
MD525FD2A14D8C8E5F6C8F96C21EC966C0A
SHA-14EADDF5A3E5FD35FE1477EDB13A4A9C1B43F2D5C
SHA-2561BF24C2D31472E347F1EA0349CB6A7025A2E4430CB2BD8FA57F0A4AABDF5DDB2
SSDEEP24:XWxlSVS83+cpr4HMFhhZ1HVMNtw/jO9x5lXp2pZFAreq8WjDfCt9wXKYQGhnZdXC:XokPbqtw/jO994pAC5WjfdZ5QNKov
TLSHT153315CEFD4B7CA003B54D810567D14E49B354417634A8EB5126E8CCC693B70BD06C78A
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
FileSize1462496
MD55F34EEFC1FD08D72F3CCABCDB4E0044A
PackageDescriptionLALR(k) parser generator for Haskell 98 Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.6.1-12
SHA-1F6E76AD3C2DC7B2039D8DB48965EA8C04D0D8390
SHA-256134F397BD9287FBAD49CB9E9965CB094A8F8828097371E91272D4A7585326255
Key Value
FileSize553664
MD54A93705BBD41F4F280DDA1FEB3FFD71F
PackageDescriptionLALR(k) parser generator for Haskell 98 Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.6.1-12
SHA-1868B25D88B24C64279FA3B0D478704963AD54231
SHA-2567F4FBBC0274BB20352B769326A3E04CE9555034A094C5FD3725A7E71244477F2
Key Value
FileSize592536
MD56A11C2E99E0B80CA6E83569A6EFBC730
PackageDescriptionLALR(k) parser generator for Haskell 98 Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.6.1-12
SHA-1CECED3E9CE06C8200EA0C31F5231758C8DA72AC5
SHA-256181800DFFA5CFE4C973A5D2025877BB943363CBF8FFF58F6EAB4345106243A49
Key Value
FileSize572848
MD57C7BD427DBBB26340EC91C0DE25FA0D2
PackageDescriptionLALR(k) parser generator for Haskell 98 Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.6.1-12
SHA-1A1C4B57CC28FCE4BF7468BF85F61CB543D2A4030
SHA-256B0469AF5805C9FC98962B61D76C18CB49C5299E5E7D155A5D798CF4506F33C11
Key Value
FileSize1463000
MD5F0A050E57DC142D5C4C7242AAFA1C4A7
PackageDescriptionLALR(k) parser generator for Haskell 98 Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.6.1-12
SHA-1260A3D213381C5D5675C8627E7FBE03DEB58FEB7
SHA-256C323D4BE0250D19643600BB9B2E067DAFBDF45E10FEE96D93100F2D864F49CA7