Result for 614166902AC1A9BE79E80D79915DB01BFA47E343

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.26.1/x86_64-linux-thread-multi/auto/String/Approx/Approx.so
FileSize45344
MD58EA7FBBF4DCCB7D14CA74878E38A743A
SHA-1614166902AC1A9BE79E80D79915DB01BFA47E343
SHA-256E32D5EEE1464D99FCD74C9764403D5CC9CAFB520F8FA35B0141849F99D30802D
SSDEEP768:iK+g8fqJQ81WfnKRQVcW+KjghOhZglgchEmXvXz4P7kyl2TLSuBbO0q0:iEzDw8kf3eDXvXEvqV
TLSHT172130A06FA7684BFC8D6EA304EE74AB6793475C5533A463F6108473D2A46E1D0E23E27
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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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
MD5D9FEFCBD3D63E70CF2D08E40DEF94080
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionString::Approx lets you match and substitute strings approximately. With this you can emulate errors: typing errorrs, speling errors, closely related vocabularies (colour color), genetic mutations (GAG ACT), abbreviations (McScot, MacScot). NOTE: String::Approx suits the task of *string matching*, not *string comparison*, and it works for *strings*, not for *text*. If you want to compare strings for similarity, you probably just want the Levenshtein edit distance (explained below), the Text::Levenshtein and Text::LevenshteinXS modules in CPAN. See also Text::WagnerFischer and Text::PhraseDistance. (There are functions for this in String::Approx, e.g. adist(), but their results sometimes differ from the bare Levenshtein et al.) If you want to compare things like text or source code, consisting of *words* or *tokens* and *phrases* and *sentences*, or *expressions* and *statements*, you should probably use some other tool than String::Approx, like for example the standard UNIX diff(1) tool, or the Algorithm::Diff module from CPAN. The measure of *approximateness* is the _Levenshtein edit distance_. It is the total number of "edits": insertions, word world deletions, monkey money and substitutions sun fun required to transform a string to another string. For example, to transform _"lead"_ into _"gold"_, you need three edits: lead gead goad gold The edit distance of "lead" and "gold" is therefore three, or 75%. *String::Approx* uses the Levenshtein edit distance as its measure, but String::Approx is not well-suited for comparing strings of different length, in other words, if you want a "fuzzy eq", see above. String::Approx is more like regular expressions or index(), it finds substrings that are close matches.>
PackageNameperl-String-Approx
PackageRelease19.1
PackageVersion3.28
SHA-13DFAD8D18C21F7AA8B623155361BBBD70EB46D3B
SHA-256FF3F2C2E8B6656AAFDF8BE8A6B0CB04F11A91C404335B9CE1CA084140075F2E8