Result for 012966A58B34617F957050EF4093A282B14C0166

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/grads/changelog.Debian.gz
FileSize2198
MD5EADBAD8A3A582FCCD0690A1CCE72308E
SHA-1012966A58B34617F957050EF4093A282B14C0166
SHA-2561E3B33BA27EB80B44F3E1334600D2F64D036E18E17581D86BDB79E21D5C45198
SSDEEP48:X8BJplkYjz7GAXzSd363xnX2+44NLpWp0F8oRO7L6A3BelSzpXpvH:M3plke7GAy36BXZ9Wp0aoROfP3BBj
TLSHT14B410B34C55BFE1FAFC757600258C70A609D683D32E4DEA980049550B1E7B491EC2E1D
hashlookup:parent-total10
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 10)

The searched file hash is included in 10 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize4237992
MD5C21837BA295D111593578A7E2A4DC67D
PackageDescriptionGrid Analysis and Display System for earth science data The Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS) is an interactive desktop tool that is used for easy access, manipulation, and visualization of earth science data. The format of the data may be either binary, GRIB, NetCDF, or HDF-SDS (Scientific Data Sets). GrADS has been implemented worldwide on a variety of commonly used operating systems and is freely distributed over the Internet. . GrADS uses a 4-Dimensional data environment: longitude, latitude, vertical level, and time. Data sets are placed within the 4-D space by use of a data descriptor file. GrADS interprets station data as well as gridded data, and the grids may be regular, non-linearly spaced, gaussian, or of variable resolution. Data from different data sets may be graphically overlaid, with correct spatial and time registration. Operations are executed interactively by entering FORTRAN-like expressions at the command line. A rich set of built-in functions are provided, but users may also add their own functions as external routines written in any programming language. . Data may be displayed using a variety of graphical techniques: line and bar graphs, scatter plots, smoothed contours, shaded contours, streamlines, wind vectors, grid boxes, shaded grid boxes, and station model plots. Graphics may be output in PostScript or image formats. GrADS provides geophysically intuitive defaults, but the user has the option to control all aspects of graphics output. . GrADS has a programmable interface (scripting language) that allows for sophisticated analysis and display applications. Use scripts to display buttons and dropmenus as well as graphics, and then take action based on user point-and-clicks. GrADS can be run in batch mode, and the scripting language facilitates using GrADS to do long overnight batch jobs.
PackageMaintainerAlastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org>
PackageNamegrads
PackageSectionscience
PackageVersion3:2.1.0-2
SHA-11E21A993CF4B10FBC780EE9E6258EC89623AF8B6
SHA-256CC3A5342881A7EF20B682D78BC6852A6903720EC335848B784B0DD5B278AD22F
Key Value
FileSize4098514
MD57AE20438B990FDBD306E7B2FB31C19B5
PackageDescriptionGrid Analysis and Display System for earth science data The Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS) is an interactive desktop tool that is used for easy access, manipulation, and visualization of earth science data. The format of the data may be either binary, GRIB, NetCDF, or HDF-SDS (Scientific Data Sets). GrADS has been implemented worldwide on a variety of commonly used operating systems and is freely distributed over the Internet. . GrADS uses a 4-Dimensional data environment: longitude, latitude, vertical level, and time. Data sets are placed within the 4-D space by use of a data descriptor file. GrADS interprets station data as well as gridded data, and the grids may be regular, non-linearly spaced, gaussian, or of variable resolution. Data from different data sets may be graphically overlaid, with correct spatial and time registration. Operations are executed interactively by entering FORTRAN-like expressions at the command line. A rich set of built-in functions are provided, but users may also add their own functions as external routines written in any programming language. . Data may be displayed using a variety of graphical techniques: line and bar graphs, scatter plots, smoothed contours, shaded contours, streamlines, wind vectors, grid boxes, shaded grid boxes, and station model plots. Graphics may be output in PostScript or image formats. GrADS provides geophysically intuitive defaults, but the user has the option to control all aspects of graphics output. . GrADS has a programmable interface (scripting language) that allows for sophisticated analysis and display applications. Use scripts to display buttons and dropmenus as well as graphics, and then take action based on user point-and-clicks. GrADS can be run in batch mode, and the scripting language facilitates using GrADS to do long overnight batch jobs.
PackageMaintainerAlastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org>
PackageNamegrads
PackageSectionscience
PackageVersion3:2.1.0-2
SHA-10C6391F28941C9E466C4C9B8C151EC0DBECC7F20
SHA-256C2B9D7931546401E5A2787EC78B1C51084E8861CEF50330EAAE33ECE65BC72A9
Key Value
FileSize4238308
MD530433177F1F3AEC39F2B8865924942B6
PackageDescriptionGrid Analysis and Display System for earth science data The Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS) is an interactive desktop tool that is used for easy access, manipulation, and visualization of earth science data. The format of the data may be either binary, GRIB, NetCDF, or HDF-SDS (Scientific Data Sets). GrADS has been implemented worldwide on a variety of commonly used operating systems and is freely distributed over the Internet. . GrADS uses a 4-Dimensional data environment: longitude, latitude, vertical level, and time. Data sets are placed within the 4-D space by use of a data descriptor file. GrADS interprets station data as well as gridded data, and the grids may be regular, non-linearly spaced, gaussian, or of variable resolution. Data from different data sets may be graphically overlaid, with correct spatial and time registration. Operations are executed interactively by entering FORTRAN-like expressions at the command line. A rich set of built-in functions are provided, but users may also add their own functions as external routines written in any programming language. . Data may be displayed using a variety of graphical techniques: line and bar graphs, scatter plots, smoothed contours, shaded contours, streamlines, wind vectors, grid boxes, shaded grid boxes, and station model plots. Graphics may be output in PostScript or image formats. GrADS provides geophysically intuitive defaults, but the user has the option to control all aspects of graphics output. . GrADS has a programmable interface (scripting language) that allows for sophisticated analysis and display applications. Use scripts to display buttons and dropmenus as well as graphics, and then take action based on user point-and-clicks. GrADS can be run in batch mode, and the scripting language facilitates using GrADS to do long overnight batch jobs.
PackageMaintainerAlastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org>
PackageNamegrads
PackageSectionscience
PackageVersion3:2.1.0-2
SHA-100824817BB34159A0FA3EEE73235CF7346ECA86E
SHA-2569B27B7CBC961A821915F1685E00C64CB98B3203F3852824730B756D9B50F1CA4
Key Value
FileSize4161936
MD5B205684B6BBF6538FA885F81885849C4
PackageDescriptionGrid Analysis and Display System for earth science data The Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS) is an interactive desktop tool that is used for easy access, manipulation, and visualization of earth science data. The format of the data may be either binary, GRIB, NetCDF, or HDF-SDS (Scientific Data Sets). GrADS has been implemented worldwide on a variety of commonly used operating systems and is freely distributed over the Internet. . GrADS uses a 4-Dimensional data environment: longitude, latitude, vertical level, and time. Data sets are placed within the 4-D space by use of a data descriptor file. GrADS interprets station data as well as gridded data, and the grids may be regular, non-linearly spaced, gaussian, or of variable resolution. Data from different data sets may be graphically overlaid, with correct spatial and time registration. Operations are executed interactively by entering FORTRAN-like expressions at the command line. A rich set of built-in functions are provided, but users may also add their own functions as external routines written in any programming language. . Data may be displayed using a variety of graphical techniques: line and bar graphs, scatter plots, smoothed contours, shaded contours, streamlines, wind vectors, grid boxes, shaded grid boxes, and station model plots. Graphics may be output in PostScript or image formats. GrADS provides geophysically intuitive defaults, but the user has the option to control all aspects of graphics output. . GrADS has a programmable interface (scripting language) that allows for sophisticated analysis and display applications. Use scripts to display buttons and dropmenus as well as graphics, and then take action based on user point-and-clicks. GrADS can be run in batch mode, and the scripting language facilitates using GrADS to do long overnight batch jobs.
PackageMaintainerAlastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org>
PackageNamegrads
PackageSectionscience
PackageVersion3:2.1.0-2
SHA-1B04B45DE1568E5EB250578E455BDE541B030F06C
SHA-256AFD6E07C696648EA9DB4CF32E4A38DD3F4F7CAEDBAE6216B308EA2AC314F9C65
Key Value
FileSize4146036
MD54CCF0214B6612A979DBD679BF9EC862B
PackageDescriptionGrid Analysis and Display System for earth science data The Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS) is an interactive desktop tool that is used for easy access, manipulation, and visualization of earth science data. The format of the data may be either binary, GRIB, NetCDF, or HDF-SDS (Scientific Data Sets). GrADS has been implemented worldwide on a variety of commonly used operating systems and is freely distributed over the Internet. . GrADS uses a 4-Dimensional data environment: longitude, latitude, vertical level, and time. Data sets are placed within the 4-D space by use of a data descriptor file. GrADS interprets station data as well as gridded data, and the grids may be regular, non-linearly spaced, gaussian, or of variable resolution. Data from different data sets may be graphically overlaid, with correct spatial and time registration. Operations are executed interactively by entering FORTRAN-like expressions at the command line. A rich set of built-in functions are provided, but users may also add their own functions as external routines written in any programming language. . Data may be displayed using a variety of graphical techniques: line and bar graphs, scatter plots, smoothed contours, shaded contours, streamlines, wind vectors, grid boxes, shaded grid boxes, and station model plots. Graphics may be output in PostScript or image formats. GrADS provides geophysically intuitive defaults, but the user has the option to control all aspects of graphics output. . GrADS has a programmable interface (scripting language) that allows for sophisticated analysis and display applications. Use scripts to display buttons and dropmenus as well as graphics, and then take action based on user point-and-clicks. GrADS can be run in batch mode, and the scripting language facilitates using GrADS to do long overnight batch jobs.
PackageMaintainerAlastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org>
PackageNamegrads
PackageSectionscience
PackageVersion3:2.1.0-2
SHA-14D8B95C584375D93F4EDA4CF4D9E6A4A9AAA73BC
SHA-2560C9D260B1CDC0A8F91C73AC86FAEF7259A6CE181BFC1A36BD9ACAEDE1187AFF9
Key Value
FileSize4137396
MD5C556425C15B6B1700632C93B9A203C5E
PackageDescriptionGrid Analysis and Display System for earth science data The Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS) is an interactive desktop tool that is used for easy access, manipulation, and visualization of earth science data. The format of the data may be either binary, GRIB, NetCDF, or HDF-SDS (Scientific Data Sets). GrADS has been implemented worldwide on a variety of commonly used operating systems and is freely distributed over the Internet. . GrADS uses a 4-Dimensional data environment: longitude, latitude, vertical level, and time. Data sets are placed within the 4-D space by use of a data descriptor file. GrADS interprets station data as well as gridded data, and the grids may be regular, non-linearly spaced, gaussian, or of variable resolution. Data from different data sets may be graphically overlaid, with correct spatial and time registration. Operations are executed interactively by entering FORTRAN-like expressions at the command line. A rich set of built-in functions are provided, but users may also add their own functions as external routines written in any programming language. . Data may be displayed using a variety of graphical techniques: line and bar graphs, scatter plots, smoothed contours, shaded contours, streamlines, wind vectors, grid boxes, shaded grid boxes, and station model plots. Graphics may be output in PostScript or image formats. GrADS provides geophysically intuitive defaults, but the user has the option to control all aspects of graphics output. . GrADS has a programmable interface (scripting language) that allows for sophisticated analysis and display applications. Use scripts to display buttons and dropmenus as well as graphics, and then take action based on user point-and-clicks. GrADS can be run in batch mode, and the scripting language facilitates using GrADS to do long overnight batch jobs.
PackageMaintainerAlastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org>
PackageNamegrads
PackageSectionscience
PackageVersion3:2.1.0-2
SHA-176487CE6D7F933390BBF47F439BEC41D9F33C126
SHA-25628A56D2780021395917D356C1011F1FEA4E69B8E45B09A48FD543E0C6B1F636C
Key Value
FileSize4168988
MD5E30C5E35C47B408A4BEAECCCACEDD202
PackageDescriptionGrid Analysis and Display System for earth science data The Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS) is an interactive desktop tool that is used for easy access, manipulation, and visualization of earth science data. The format of the data may be either binary, GRIB, NetCDF, or HDF-SDS (Scientific Data Sets). GrADS has been implemented worldwide on a variety of commonly used operating systems and is freely distributed over the Internet. . GrADS uses a 4-Dimensional data environment: longitude, latitude, vertical level, and time. Data sets are placed within the 4-D space by use of a data descriptor file. GrADS interprets station data as well as gridded data, and the grids may be regular, non-linearly spaced, gaussian, or of variable resolution. Data from different data sets may be graphically overlaid, with correct spatial and time registration. Operations are executed interactively by entering FORTRAN-like expressions at the command line. A rich set of built-in functions are provided, but users may also add their own functions as external routines written in any programming language. . Data may be displayed using a variety of graphical techniques: line and bar graphs, scatter plots, smoothed contours, shaded contours, streamlines, wind vectors, grid boxes, shaded grid boxes, and station model plots. Graphics may be output in PostScript or image formats. GrADS provides geophysically intuitive defaults, but the user has the option to control all aspects of graphics output. . GrADS has a programmable interface (scripting language) that allows for sophisticated analysis and display applications. Use scripts to display buttons and dropmenus as well as graphics, and then take action based on user point-and-clicks. GrADS can be run in batch mode, and the scripting language facilitates using GrADS to do long overnight batch jobs.
PackageMaintainerAlastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org>
PackageNamegrads
PackageSectionscience
PackageVersion3:2.1.0-2
SHA-1E9EB62D9097752D7148ADB391463A30F3EE575BF
SHA-256E95C11F4737E3B60009A83BC003B660649E51AB937912AE742D9AF7B5758D705
Key Value
FileSize4159260
MD5DDD1E719FA00D69511FEBBC65FCC1737
PackageDescriptionGrid Analysis and Display System for earth science data The Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS) is an interactive desktop tool that is used for easy access, manipulation, and visualization of earth science data. The format of the data may be either binary, GRIB, NetCDF, or HDF-SDS (Scientific Data Sets). GrADS has been implemented worldwide on a variety of commonly used operating systems and is freely distributed over the Internet. . GrADS uses a 4-Dimensional data environment: longitude, latitude, vertical level, and time. Data sets are placed within the 4-D space by use of a data descriptor file. GrADS interprets station data as well as gridded data, and the grids may be regular, non-linearly spaced, gaussian, or of variable resolution. Data from different data sets may be graphically overlaid, with correct spatial and time registration. Operations are executed interactively by entering FORTRAN-like expressions at the command line. A rich set of built-in functions are provided, but users may also add their own functions as external routines written in any programming language. . Data may be displayed using a variety of graphical techniques: line and bar graphs, scatter plots, smoothed contours, shaded contours, streamlines, wind vectors, grid boxes, shaded grid boxes, and station model plots. Graphics may be output in PostScript or image formats. GrADS provides geophysically intuitive defaults, but the user has the option to control all aspects of graphics output. . GrADS has a programmable interface (scripting language) that allows for sophisticated analysis and display applications. Use scripts to display buttons and dropmenus as well as graphics, and then take action based on user point-and-clicks. GrADS can be run in batch mode, and the scripting language facilitates using GrADS to do long overnight batch jobs.
PackageMaintainerAlastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org>
PackageNamegrads
PackageSectionscience
PackageVersion3:2.1.0-2
SHA-1CDA1A151F8998CAFA9C10D241A2FAD082FCFACC2
SHA-256BE8AFE9810312DBFEF31C7ADF7DC413B26F7A87B0103A41CBA9D0FCDD89F5F08
Key Value
FileSize4125104
MD5641CA7EB02C9BA1CC1B74D52A8442E46
PackageDescriptionGrid Analysis and Display System for earth science data The Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS) is an interactive desktop tool that is used for easy access, manipulation, and visualization of earth science data. The format of the data may be either binary, GRIB, NetCDF, or HDF-SDS (Scientific Data Sets). GrADS has been implemented worldwide on a variety of commonly used operating systems and is freely distributed over the Internet. . GrADS uses a 4-Dimensional data environment: longitude, latitude, vertical level, and time. Data sets are placed within the 4-D space by use of a data descriptor file. GrADS interprets station data as well as gridded data, and the grids may be regular, non-linearly spaced, gaussian, or of variable resolution. Data from different data sets may be graphically overlaid, with correct spatial and time registration. Operations are executed interactively by entering FORTRAN-like expressions at the command line. A rich set of built-in functions are provided, but users may also add their own functions as external routines written in any programming language. . Data may be displayed using a variety of graphical techniques: line and bar graphs, scatter plots, smoothed contours, shaded contours, streamlines, wind vectors, grid boxes, shaded grid boxes, and station model plots. Graphics may be output in PostScript or image formats. GrADS provides geophysically intuitive defaults, but the user has the option to control all aspects of graphics output. . GrADS has a programmable interface (scripting language) that allows for sophisticated analysis and display applications. Use scripts to display buttons and dropmenus as well as graphics, and then take action based on user point-and-clicks. GrADS can be run in batch mode, and the scripting language facilitates using GrADS to do long overnight batch jobs.
PackageMaintainerAlastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org>
PackageNamegrads
PackageSectionscience
PackageVersion3:2.1.0-2
SHA-16F28ED3BF908419E963F3B23D99F69C62B24F95A
SHA-256BB993E24A53438592BECD82567F087118E2381BBAD6DA8D51545616A529D65DA
Key Value
FileSize4139948
MD5DB9F4244038924E31618E6DFD8E71B8B
PackageDescriptionGrid Analysis and Display System for earth science data The Grid Analysis and Display System (GrADS) is an interactive desktop tool that is used for easy access, manipulation, and visualization of earth science data. The format of the data may be either binary, GRIB, NetCDF, or HDF-SDS (Scientific Data Sets). GrADS has been implemented worldwide on a variety of commonly used operating systems and is freely distributed over the Internet. . GrADS uses a 4-Dimensional data environment: longitude, latitude, vertical level, and time. Data sets are placed within the 4-D space by use of a data descriptor file. GrADS interprets station data as well as gridded data, and the grids may be regular, non-linearly spaced, gaussian, or of variable resolution. Data from different data sets may be graphically overlaid, with correct spatial and time registration. Operations are executed interactively by entering FORTRAN-like expressions at the command line. A rich set of built-in functions are provided, but users may also add their own functions as external routines written in any programming language. . Data may be displayed using a variety of graphical techniques: line and bar graphs, scatter plots, smoothed contours, shaded contours, streamlines, wind vectors, grid boxes, shaded grid boxes, and station model plots. Graphics may be output in PostScript or image formats. GrADS provides geophysically intuitive defaults, but the user has the option to control all aspects of graphics output. . GrADS has a programmable interface (scripting language) that allows for sophisticated analysis and display applications. Use scripts to display buttons and dropmenus as well as graphics, and then take action based on user point-and-clicks. GrADS can be run in batch mode, and the scripting language facilitates using GrADS to do long overnight batch jobs.
PackageMaintainerAlastair McKinstry <mckinstry@debian.org>
PackageNamegrads
PackageSectionscience
PackageVersion3:2.1.0-2
SHA-1B46381C997AE89313730905BEFB1DF598AD9CABE
SHA-2566C643F6F87399DFD22F68412C4AAB3DA6AF94D8D93B6979F86D5A9BB34185B15