Result for 01B76CBE373282386E6A23C0CEBBEA4E3E2B842B

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/python3-dartpy/changelog.Debian.gz
FileSize2453
MD597C6260330D68CA9E5439EC06C214DF2
SHA-101B76CBE373282386E6A23C0CEBBEA4E3E2B842B
SHA-2567E2129910389E3EE2A9F7788627E75A8851F9059493D4962A3634B54D4589F3B
SSDEEP48:XthXEsgxDxRoJbI6vNfcczCCnMCdzs3myyLlX7GpoaKaNtXcdjYCj7S/9SEH78:8s6voJJccLfd43mt9ipo0LXcJY82/9p8
TLSHT136512C00E2C84285D06C1BEF43BA368AF40C76E076DE5773EF4150B0E3ED455399911B
hashlookup:parent-total57
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 57)

The searched file hash is included in 57 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize34356
MD546360165E6AF3B6D8229E5EA1F2DB37B
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - odelcpsolver dev DART is a collaborative, cross-platform, open source library created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab and Humanoid Robotics Lab. The library provides data structures and algorithms for kinematic and dynamic applications in robotics and computer animation. DART is distinguished by it's accuracy and stability due to its use of generalized coordinates to represent articulated rigid body systems and computation of Lagrange's equations derived from D.Alembert's principle to describe the dynamics of motion. For developers, in contrast to many popular physics engines which view the simulator as a black box, DART gives full access to internal kinematic and dynamic quantities, such as the mass matrix, Coriolis and centrifugal forces, transformation matrices and their derivatives. DART also provides efficient computation of Jacobian matrices for arbitrary body points and coordinate frames. Contact and collision are handled using an implicit time-stepping, velocity-based LCP (linear-complementarity problem) to guarantee non-penetration, directional friction, and approximated Coulomb friction cone conditions. For collision detection, DART uses FCL developed by Willow Garage and the UNC Gamma Lab. DART has applications in robotics and computer animation because it features a multibody dynamic simulator and tools for control and motion planning. Multibody dynamic simulation in DART is an extension of RTQL8, an open source software created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab. This package contains odelcpsolver headers and other useful tools for development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-external-odelcpsolver-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-10
SHA-10002EA1E541AEA589604370EE08C211B44935DD8
SHA-2562730629A89AAC8462B7AE3073766C61023D6A9897B0F76F5F6EB002D621FA480
Key Value
FileSize24348
MD570664A09AD265F66871B2E6E109DC412
PackageDescriptionDynamic Animation and Robotics Toolkit - All Development Files DART is a collaborative, cross-platform, open source library created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab and Humanoid Robotics Lab. The library provides data structures and algorithms for kinematic and dynamic applications in robotics and computer animation. DART is distinguished by it's accuracy and stability due to its use of generalized coordinates to represent articulated rigid body systems and computation of Lagrange's equations derived from D.Alembert's principle to describe the dynamics of motion. For developers, in contrast to many popular physics engines which view the simulator as a black box, DART gives full access to internal kinematic and dynamic quantities, such as the mass matrix, Coriolis and centrifugal forces, transformation matrices and their derivatives. DART also provides efficient computation of Jacobian matrices for arbitrary body points and coordinate frames. Contact and collision are handled using an implicit time-stepping, velocity-based LCP (linear-complementarity problem) to guarantee non-penetration, directional friction, and approximated Coulomb friction cone conditions. For collision detection, DART uses FCL developed by Willow Garage and the UNC Gamma Lab. DART has applications in robotics and computer animation because it features a multibody dynamic simulator and tools for control and motion planning. Multibody dynamic simulation in DART is an extension of RTQL8, an open source software created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab. This package does not contain any file but install all development packages . Metapackage for all development files
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-all-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-10
SHA-101712BDF61CBE926CB9CC2AD03FED0980981799A
SHA-256FA78F9158BD2F05EDA38A7E1995CFAC929869BFC8FD65D495E541D59EB5D0596
Key Value
FileSize100764
MD53AD1F63F3F3DE309EE223EBBE44C28A9
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - gui library DART is a collaborative, cross-platform, open source library created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab and Humanoid Robotics Lab. The library provides data structures and algorithms for kinematic and dynamic applications in robotics and computer animation. DART is distinguished by it's accuracy and stability due to its use of generalized coordinates to represent articulated rigid body systems and computation of Lagrange's equations derived from D.Alembert's principle to describe the dynamics of motion. For developers, in contrast to many popular physics engines which view the simulator as a black box, DART gives full access to internal kinematic and dynamic quantities, such as the mass matrix, Coriolis and centrifugal forces, transformation matrices and their derivatives. DART also provides efficient computation of Jacobian matrices for arbitrary body points and coordinate frames. Contact and collision are handled using an implicit time-stepping, velocity-based LCP (linear-complementarity problem) to guarantee non-penetration, directional friction, and approximated Coulomb friction cone conditions. For collision detection, DART uses FCL developed by Willow Garage and the UNC Gamma Lab. DART has applications in robotics and computer animation because it features a multibody dynamic simulator and tools for control and motion planning. Multibody dynamic simulation in DART is an extension of RTQL8, an open source software created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab. This package contains the GUI library.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-gui6.12
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-10
SHA-10CCC3FE770FDD0620A18C4614881955208B0E848
SHA-25668FDF548CEE88E847CF2CA0D03B1BD8E8791AC74504F554629F458A72E0A4A8C
Key Value
FileSize35980
MD5F1EA83370008411816216851F900EABB
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - nlopt optimizer lib DART is a collaborative, cross-platform, open source library created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab and Humanoid Robotics Lab. The library provides data structures and algorithms for kinematic and dynamic applications in robotics and computer animation. DART is distinguished by it's accuracy and stability due to its use of generalized coordinates to represent articulated rigid body systems and computation of Lagrange's equations derived from D.Alembert's principle to describe the dynamics of motion. For developers, in contrast to many popular physics engines which view the simulator as a black box, DART gives full access to internal kinematic and dynamic quantities, such as the mass matrix, Coriolis and centrifugal forces, transformation matrices and their derivatives. DART also provides efficient computation of Jacobian matrices for arbitrary body points and coordinate frames. Contact and collision are handled using an implicit time-stepping, velocity-based LCP (linear-complementarity problem) to guarantee non-penetration, directional friction, and approximated Coulomb friction cone conditions. For collision detection, DART uses FCL developed by Willow Garage and the UNC Gamma Lab. DART has applications in robotics and computer animation because it features a multibody dynamic simulator and tools for control and motion planning. Multibody dynamic simulation in DART is an extension of RTQL8, an open source software created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab. This package contains the NLOPT optimizer library.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-optimizer-nlopt6.12
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-10
SHA-1119881427D3F387B6284B1A8728550FC84F8BB4B
SHA-2569457E23D9D17EC46654F88C309639DB11B1C5C34C3B246D6ED4E8665CD7F49FB
Key Value
FileSize28104
MD5B7551A9094FE8601EB698DE9D1B523CA
PackageDescriptionDynamic Animation and Robotics Toolkit - ODE Collision Dev DART is a collaborative, cross-platform, open source library created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab and Humanoid Robotics Lab. The library provides data structures and algorithms for kinematic and dynamic applications in robotics and computer animation. DART is distinguished by it's accuracy and stability due to its use of generalized coordinates to represent articulated rigid body systems and computation of Lagrange's equations derived from D.Alembert's principle to describe the dynamics of motion. For developers, in contrast to many popular physics engines which view the simulator as a black box, DART gives full access to internal kinematic and dynamic quantities, such as the mass matrix, Coriolis and centrifugal forces, transformation matrices and their derivatives. DART also provides efficient computation of Jacobian matrices for arbitrary body points and coordinate frames. Contact and collision are handled using an implicit time-stepping, velocity-based LCP (linear-complementarity problem) to guarantee non-penetration, directional friction, and approximated Coulomb friction cone conditions. For collision detection, DART uses FCL developed by Willow Garage and the UNC Gamma Lab. DART has applications in robotics and computer animation because it features a multibody dynamic simulator and tools for control and motion planning. Multibody dynamic simulation in DART is an extension of RTQL8, an open source software created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab. This package contains the collision ode headers and other tools for development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-collision-ode-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-10
SHA-1120A445ABA4DA271A0F3AFFE67AC0441BC89E064
SHA-2569C74EA47FC7C24FA3318D1082A79CDD81E12B2FD6AFC856B1B032730063610B2
Key Value
FileSize32028
MD522DA8AB3798B4283711B745D786885C8
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - convhull-3d DART is a collaborative, cross-platform, open source library created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab and Humanoid Robotics Lab. The library provides data structures and algorithms for kinematic and dynamic applications in robotics and computer animation. DART is distinguished by it's accuracy and stability due to its use of generalized coordinates to represent articulated rigid body systems and computation of Lagrange's equations derived from D.Alembert's principle to describe the dynamics of motion. For developers, in contrast to many popular physics engines which view the simulator as a black box, DART gives full access to internal kinematic and dynamic quantities, such as the mass matrix, Coriolis and centrifugal forces, transformation matrices and their derivatives. DART also provides efficient computation of Jacobian matrices for arbitrary body points and coordinate frames. Contact and collision are handled using an implicit time-stepping, velocity-based LCP (linear-complementarity problem) to guarantee non-penetration, directional friction, and approximated Coulomb friction cone conditions. For collision detection, DART uses FCL developed by Willow Garage and the UNC Gamma Lab. DART has applications in robotics and computer animation because it features a multibody dynamic simulator and tools for control and motion planning. Multibody dynamic simulation in DART is an extension of RTQL8, an open source software created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab. A header only C implementation of the 3-D quickhull algorithm
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-external-convhull-3d-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-10
SHA-112BFF50CFB726CBA33FC5DF78DC78A650FB5426B
SHA-2562E75C12F5C022B7A4A5D0FDF6E1B4A8109D1C40496695A9D6E90252F5AC13B53
Key Value
FileSize309948
MD5839FD3A0ACF632A3875ED71AFAD688D1
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - utils library DART is a collaborative, cross-platform, open source library created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab and Humanoid Robotics Lab. The library provides data structures and algorithms for kinematic and dynamic applications in robotics and computer animation. DART is distinguished by it's accuracy and stability due to its use of generalized coordinates to represent articulated rigid body systems and computation of Lagrange's equations derived from D.Alembert's principle to describe the dynamics of motion. For developers, in contrast to many popular physics engines which view the simulator as a black box, DART gives full access to internal kinematic and dynamic quantities, such as the mass matrix, Coriolis and centrifugal forces, transformation matrices and their derivatives. DART also provides efficient computation of Jacobian matrices for arbitrary body points and coordinate frames. Contact and collision are handled using an implicit time-stepping, velocity-based LCP (linear-complementarity problem) to guarantee non-penetration, directional friction, and approximated Coulomb friction cone conditions. For collision detection, DART uses FCL developed by Willow Garage and the UNC Gamma Lab. DART has applications in robotics and computer animation because it features a multibody dynamic simulator and tools for control and motion planning. Multibody dynamic simulation in DART is an extension of RTQL8, an open source software created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab. This package contains the DART utils library.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-utils6.12
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-10
SHA-1150E5EE0191F53CC7FB82BD56C3F68E2837F23CB
SHA-256F2EF87EC92480D29D9F94C2FC16C99662B218114A2A48720A317CB706E6E03ED
Key Value
FileSize35968
MD551C355A8FF44A6F533ADAA76FEBDD11C
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - nlopt optimizer lib DART is a collaborative, cross-platform, open source library created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab and Humanoid Robotics Lab. The library provides data structures and algorithms for kinematic and dynamic applications in robotics and computer animation. DART is distinguished by it's accuracy and stability due to its use of generalized coordinates to represent articulated rigid body systems and computation of Lagrange's equations derived from D.Alembert's principle to describe the dynamics of motion. For developers, in contrast to many popular physics engines which view the simulator as a black box, DART gives full access to internal kinematic and dynamic quantities, such as the mass matrix, Coriolis and centrifugal forces, transformation matrices and their derivatives. DART also provides efficient computation of Jacobian matrices for arbitrary body points and coordinate frames. Contact and collision are handled using an implicit time-stepping, velocity-based LCP (linear-complementarity problem) to guarantee non-penetration, directional friction, and approximated Coulomb friction cone conditions. For collision detection, DART uses FCL developed by Willow Garage and the UNC Gamma Lab. DART has applications in robotics and computer animation because it features a multibody dynamic simulator and tools for control and motion planning. Multibody dynamic simulation in DART is an extension of RTQL8, an open source software created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab. This package contains the NLOPT optimizer library.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-optimizer-nlopt6.12
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-10
SHA-1158C7FA18D8F87732ADDE00082CE6E649A951D88
SHA-256AC395AD60F70CB95531A004EC57DD1CB1B695CBE50A6D4BD460D1D80B43776C9
Key Value
FileSize9561068
MD5012E35260DFC7FC2A9C52EDD3F9C23B9
PackageDescriptionDynamic Animation and Robotics Toolkit - Documentation DART is a collaborative, cross-platform, open source library created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab and Humanoid Robotics Lab. The library provides data structures and algorithms for kinematic and dynamic applications in robotics and computer animation. DART is distinguished by it's accuracy and stability due to its use of generalized coordinates to represent articulated rigid body systems and computation of Lagrange's equations derived from D.Alembert's principle to describe the dynamics of motion. For developers, in contrast to many popular physics engines which view the simulator as a black box, DART gives full access to internal kinematic and dynamic quantities, such as the mass matrix, Coriolis and centrifugal forces, transformation matrices and their derivatives. DART also provides efficient computation of Jacobian matrices for arbitrary body points and coordinate frames. Contact and collision are handled using an implicit time-stepping, velocity-based LCP (linear-complementarity problem) to guarantee non-penetration, directional friction, and approximated Coulomb friction cone conditions. For collision detection, DART uses FCL developed by Willow Garage and the UNC Gamma Lab. DART has applications in robotics and computer animation because it features a multibody dynamic simulator and tools for control and motion planning. Multibody dynamic simulation in DART is an extension of RTQL8, an open source software created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab. . This package contains documentation, tutorials and examples
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamedart-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-10
SHA-117D5FA75B5464978C7EF6FA297A66FEEDF4FBC97
SHA-2560A3966AEA2A303AD44A28642E4D44DA3DD3B5C5D925921FABA9D9D4E684B7B2B
Key Value
FileSize28148
MD5B3F6D7F4CD43AFCFAEC0960928D58F23
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - ikfast dev DART is a collaborative, cross-platform, open source library created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab and Humanoid Robotics Lab. The library provides data structures and algorithms for kinematic and dynamic applications in robotics and computer animation. DART is distinguished by it's accuracy and stability due to its use of generalized coordinates to represent articulated rigid body systems and computation of Lagrange's equations derived from D.Alembert's principle to describe the dynamics of motion. For developers, in contrast to many popular physics engines which view the simulator as a black box, DART gives full access to internal kinematic and dynamic quantities, such as the mass matrix, Coriolis and centrifugal forces, transformation matrices and their derivatives. DART also provides efficient computation of Jacobian matrices for arbitrary body points and coordinate frames. Contact and collision are handled using an implicit time-stepping, velocity-based LCP (linear-complementarity problem) to guarantee non-penetration, directional friction, and approximated Coulomb friction cone conditions. For collision detection, DART uses FCL developed by Willow Garage and the UNC Gamma Lab. DART has applications in robotics and computer animation because it features a multibody dynamic simulator and tools for control and motion planning. Multibody dynamic simulation in DART is an extension of RTQL8, an open source software created by the Georgia Tech Graphics Lab. This package contains ikfast headers and other useful tools for development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-external-ikfast-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-10
SHA-118AA33483802BEBCEF60A9CAA6E46F4F8027D399
SHA-256CB2CD7E932610E14F013F0E61FBE37B11291A90505A7C916CAA43EF465263C75