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The search service can find package by either name (apache), provides(webserver), absolute file names (/usr/bin/apache), binaries (gprof) or shared libraries (libXm.so.2) in standard path. It does not support multiple arguments yet...
The System and Arch are optional added filters, for example System could be "redhat", "redhat-7.2", "mandrake" or "gnome", Arch could be "i386" or "src", etc. depending on your system.
Werkzeug started as simple collection of various utilities for WSGI applications and has become one of the most advanced WSGI utility modules. It includes a powerful debugger, full featured request and response objects, HTTP utilities to handle entity tags, cache control headers, HTTP dates, cookie handling, file uploads, a powerful URL routing system and a bunch of community contributed addon modules. Werkzeug is unicode aware and doesn't enforce a specific template engine, database adapter or anything else. It doesn't even enforce a specific way of handling requests and leaves all that up to the developer. It's most useful for end user applications which should work on as many server environments as possible (such as blogs, wikis, bulletin boards, etc.).
Package | Summary | Distribution | Download |
python313-Werkzeug-3.1.3-1.2.noarch.html | The Swiss Army knife of Python web development | OpenSuSE Tumbleweed for noarch | python313-Werkzeug-3.1.3-1.2.noarch.rpm |
The Swiss Army knife of Python web development | python313-Werkzeug-3.1.3-1.2.noarch.rpm | ||
python313-Werkzeug-3.1.3-1.2.noarch.html | The Swiss Army knife of Python web development | OpenSuSE Ports Tumbleweed for noarch | python313-Werkzeug-3.1.3-1.2.noarch.rpm |
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