ply 3.4-3 source package in Ubuntu
Changelog
ply (3.4-3) unstable; urgency=low * debian/control: bump Standards-Version to 3.9.3. No changes needed. * Add debian/source/options to ignore changes in egg-info/* to prevent FTBFS if built twice. Closes: #671248. * debian/copyright: switch to version 1.0 of machine-readable format. -- Arnaud Fontaine <email address hidden> Mon, 14 May 2012 11:58:48 +0900
Upload details
- Uploaded by:
- Arnaud Fontaine
- Uploaded to:
- Sid
- Original maintainer:
- Arnaud Fontaine
- Architectures:
- all
- Section:
- python
- Urgency:
- Low Urgency
See full publishing history Publishing
Series | Published | Component | Section |
---|
Downloads
File | Size | SHA-256 Checksum |
---|---|---|
ply_3.4-3.dsc | 1.5 KiB | d95ed5c81c9330711db43b5797a7fa0478b3c41bb3b590edd24e764c81462361 |
ply_3.4.orig.tar.gz | 135.1 KiB | af435f11b7bdd69da5ffbc3fecb8d70a7073ec952e101764c88720cdefb2546b |
ply_3.4-3.debian.tar.gz | 6.4 KiB | 19f5fde41d2def2f40ffad3c8ae9639bd6dfba82b8e8a0cdb270084c94078e94 |
Available diffs
No changes file available.
Binary packages built by this source
- python-ply: Lex and Yacc implementation for Python2
PLY is yet another implementation of lex and yacc for
Python. Although several other parsing tools are available for
Python, there are several reasons why you might want to take a look
at PLY:
* It's implemented entirely in Python.
* It uses LR-parsing which is reasonably efficient and well suited
for larger grammars.
* PLY provides most of the standard lex/yacc features including
support for empty productions, precedence rules, error recovery,
and support for ambiguous grammars.
* PLY is extremely easy to use and provides very extensive error
checking.
- python-ply-doc: No summary available for python-ply-doc in ubuntu saucy.
No description available for python-ply-doc in ubuntu saucy.
- python3-ply: Lex and Yacc implementation for Python3
PLY is yet another implementation of lex and yacc for
Python. Although several other parsing tools are available for
Python, there are several reasons why you might want to take a look
at PLY:
* It's implemented entirely in Python.
* It uses LR-parsing which is reasonably efficient and well suited
for larger grammars.
* PLY provides most of the standard lex/yacc features including
support for empty productions, precedence rules, error recovery,
and support for ambiguous grammars.
* PLY is extremely easy to use and provides very extensive error
checking.