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author | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 1998-04-04 06:35:41 (GMT) |
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committer | Fred Drake <fdrake@acm.org> | 1998-04-04 06:35:41 (GMT) |
commit | 81acc2e988c68997a0aabde3293ca039fd38c079 (patch) | |
tree | cf3573183e71627accef9e2e6e089e405530ee91 /Doc/libmd5.tex | |
parent | 61f45c7cb5bd0ec82f30270f88ec5efb3dc95f23 (diff) | |
download | cpython-81acc2e988c68997a0aabde3293ca039fd38c079.zip cpython-81acc2e988c68997a0aabde3293ca039fd38c079.tar.gz cpython-81acc2e988c68997a0aabde3293ca039fd38c079.tar.bz2 |
Remove obsolete \setindexsubitem macro.
Logical markup, methoddesc, etc.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/libmd5.tex')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/libmd5.tex | 35 |
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/libmd5.tex b/Doc/libmd5.tex index 946d00d..d1e7367 100644 --- a/Doc/libmd5.tex +++ b/Doc/libmd5.tex @@ -1,18 +1,20 @@ -\section{Built-in Module \sectcode{md5}} +\section{Built-in Module \module{md5}} \label{module-md5} \bimodindex{md5} This module implements the interface to RSA's MD5 message digest +\index{message digest, MD5} algorithm (see also Internet \rfc{1321}). Its use is quite -straightforward:\ use the \code{md5.new()} to create an md5 object. +straightforward:\ use the \function{new()} to create an md5 object. You can now feed this object with arbitrary strings using the -\code{update()} method, and at any point you can ask it for the +\method{update()} method, and at any point you can ask it for the \dfn{digest} (a strong kind of 128-bit checksum, a.k.a. ``fingerprint'') of the contatenation of the strings fed to it -so far using the \code{digest()} method. +so far using the \method{digest()} method. +\index{checksum!MD5} -For example, to obtain the digest of the string {\tt"Nobody inspects -the spammish repetition"}: +For example, to obtain the digest of the string \code{'Nobody inspects +the spammish repetition'}: \begin{verbatim} >>> import md5 @@ -22,15 +24,13 @@ the spammish repetition"}: >>> m.digest() '\273d\234\203\335\036\245\311\331\336\311\241\215\360\377\351' \end{verbatim} -% + More condensed: \begin{verbatim} >>> md5.new("Nobody inspects the spammish repetition").digest() '\273d\234\203\335\036\245\311\331\336\311\241\215\360\377\351' \end{verbatim} -% -\setindexsubitem{(in module md5)} \begin{funcdesc}{new}{\optional{arg}} Return a new md5 object. If \var{arg} is present, the method call @@ -39,27 +39,26 @@ Return a new md5 object. If \var{arg} is present, the method call \begin{funcdesc}{md5}{\optional{arg}} For backward compatibility reasons, this is an alternative name for the -\code{new()} function. +\function{new()} function. \end{funcdesc} An md5 object has the following methods: -\setindexsubitem{(md5 method)} -\begin{funcdesc}{update}{arg} +\begin{methoddesc}[md5]{update}{arg} Update the md5 object with the string \var{arg}. Repeated calls are equivalent to a single call with the concatenation of all the arguments, i.e.\ \code{m.update(a); m.update(b)} is equivalent to \code{m.update(a+b)}. -\end{funcdesc} +\end{methoddesc} -\begin{funcdesc}{digest}{} -Return the digest of the strings passed to the \code{update()} +\begin{methoddesc}[md5]{digest}{} +Return the digest of the strings passed to the \method{update()} method so far. This is an 16-byte string which may contain non-\ASCII{} characters, including null bytes. -\end{funcdesc} +\end{methoddesc} -\begin{funcdesc}{copy}{} +\begin{methoddesc}[md5]{copy}{} Return a copy (``clone'') of the md5 object. This can be used to efficiently compute the digests of strings that share a common initial substring. -\end{funcdesc} +\end{methoddesc} |