ply 3.9-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

ply (3.9-1) unstable; urgency=medium

  [ Ondřej Nový ]
  * Fixed VCS URL (https).

  [ Arnaud Fontaine ]
  * New upstream release. Closes: #833428.
  * d/control:
    + Bump debhelper compat level to 10 (5 is deprecated).
    + Bump Standards-Version to 3.9.8. No change needed.

 -- Arnaud Fontaine <email address hidden>  Fri, 18 Nov 2016 15:32:37 +0900

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Arnaud Fontaine
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Arnaud Fontaine
Architectures:
all
Section:
python
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Builds

Zesty: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
ply_3.9-1.dsc 2.1 KiB c4a5f4cfe122fc8dd82078d30ba4b5ea537b19ad1da5ee2dcab524d568bda948
ply_3.9.orig.tar.gz 147.2 KiB 0d7e2940b9c57151392fceaa62b0865c45e06ce1e36687fd8d03f011a907f43e
ply_3.9-1.debian.tar.xz 6.8 KiB 9b99eb3d938cb567049b2fedc964c075e714c3f6b32df24765d156d835477e6b

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 zesty.

No description available for python-ply-doc in ubuntu zesty.

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.