Result for 6F729DF4A1A6FA9A76281CA082A09579CBD8F07E

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/fudge/tests/test_inspector.py
FileSize7762
MD56C3011984AC977854DCFB6AA8034098D
SHA-16F729DF4A1A6FA9A76281CA082A09579CBD8F07E
SHA-25630E21CA75D3F425DEA8ADAAF78B08FACF8736465D635D1FCA5BB410ECDF9FFCA
SSDEEP192:g7Uz5kmzdqOql3CXJ0eeBU8VeNGH0UwXDG:g7U1nFqyXmNBsGH0UwXq
TLSHT169F1917493236DA9E38FD0748822E5022F19F55788881D7CF6FC90D4DFA8634CA996AD
hashlookup:parent-total2
hashlookup:trust60

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Parents (Total: 2)

The searched file hash is included in 2 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize30488
MD59956A22A243A9DFDDA6C77E9091E90EF
PackageDescriptionPython module for using fake objects for tests, documentation package Fudge is a Python module for using fake objects (mocks and stubs) to test real ones. . In readable Python code, you declare what methods are available on your fake and how they should be called. Then you inject that into your application and start testing. This declarative approach means you don’t have to record and playback actions and you don’t have to inspect your fakes after running code. If the fake object was used incorrectly then you’ll see an informative exception message with a traceback that points to the culprit. . Fudge was inspired by Mocha which is a simpler version of jMock. But unlike Mocha, Fudge does not automatically hijack real objects; you explicitly patch them in your test. And unlike jMock, Fudge is only as strict about expectations as you want it to be. If the type of arguments sent to the fake method aren’t important then you don’t have to declare an expectation for them. . This is the Python3 version of the package.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython3-fudge
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.3-3
SHA-1822965EAD391CC947D313BD0DF2F074165EAAD5C
SHA-2567BB7D9322D3FE551233BA0403F02DC4C146BCAA98A1157DC95199DA47029AE92
Key Value
FileSize30348
MD5C04C741D0A9F97EFF05C706488102B86
PackageDescriptionPython module for using fake objects for tests, documentation package Fudge is a Python module for using fake objects (mocks and stubs) to test real ones. . In readable Python code, you declare what methods are available on your fake and how they should be called. Then you inject that into your application and start testing. This declarative approach means you don’t have to record and playback actions and you don’t have to inspect your fakes after running code. If the fake object was used incorrectly then you’ll see an informative exception message with a traceback that points to the culprit. . Fudge was inspired by Mocha which is a simpler version of jMock. But unlike Mocha, Fudge does not automatically hijack real objects; you explicitly patch them in your test. And unlike jMock, Fudge is only as strict about expectations as you want it to be. If the type of arguments sent to the fake method aren’t important then you don’t have to declare an expectation for them. . This is the Python3 version of the package.
PackageMaintainerDebian Python Modules Team <python-modules-team@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamepython3-fudge
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.3-3
SHA-1CC1839655AE7A1D5ED4358C37F0E85020DC92232
SHA-256D60716DCD3A66C7120E266E8F3A44F8B76F7E61E427B2139220D581C0C1888BA