Result for 04D6CF494E0B8F616389047C9F9AB77D567BDDF5

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/grads/html/gradcomdsetfont.html
FileSize4417
MD5EA0227118C6C9AC41871A28FC55BE5CD
SHA-104D6CF494E0B8F616389047C9F9AB77D567BDDF5
SHA-256EE8E9D3B0FFC5CDA0D493148155038538279AF1D8B9D9327B15F7276256CC602
SSDEEP96:HwybK4w4hF7jAoMPKnqh4VVWdbz2gVuEkq4Kwr4w2wOwZOB:HdbK4FhNkknYbz2AuElz24HVXB
TLSHT124918553468A13B2AB4385A6F35BA534730DB1EC9602F2DC64A2C21453CB82933F77CB
hashlookup:parent-total43
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 43)

The searched file hash is included in 43 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

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
FileSize3864400
MD5ED2873BF11066051A33C2FA0D8BCA64E
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
PackageSectionutils
PackageVersion3:2.2.1-4+b1
SHA-1055FDEFA0B1AC52C3F78C7C83B1114A9673D151D
SHA-25633C589F43F9B62B1337311BED98E5499210D9679E590B168DE598BB9F8FF6F3C
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
FileSize4141060
MD5FF0D84DB5FE908D29DCE6456F55A025B
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
PackageSectionutils
PackageVersion3:2.2.1-1+b1
SHA-10FE26F99E9218C7BF67C8ECF8E62265013ECD2D2
SHA-25649892726D63BB1B8322C5BC3684AAB18C6FD0B0822DC2C1819EF877145C060D3
Key Value
FileSize3888468
MD5AECF104B09BD8BC20C32328C7B663B02
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
PackageSectionutils
PackageVersion3:2.2.1-4+b1
SHA-110AF68C667C9D5EBFC5873BD4422897983792857
SHA-256C179F55CACAC0CDC35BD87E3237E88F1DBB26CEAD8DE1A6215F40ECAB8BFDFDA
Key Value
FileSize3947588
MD597D2A92898CB8D0DE2C67CEA8D47B5E6
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
PackageSectionutils
PackageVersion3:2.2.1-4
SHA-11478D308A772D9EF374F36413B77035DDDF4C178
SHA-256A7D5419BCFE5DE4577C70314CABE8943B09ACABBA7F742B1BB2EBF0FD86951CB
Key Value
FileSize3858816
MD579714348C64597D997259039D43E2931
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
PackageSectionutils
PackageVersion3:2.2.1-4+b1
SHA-11575538EB1C6147D373C8B2E0C108906BEB67D2F
SHA-256F64491879F9C7F7C095F99129CB919B2FB836CC6BA71FD409B870DA0F8646DF1
Key Value
FileSize4136512
MD5A2F17E707690D8DFEF9447D024868211
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
PackageSectionutils
PackageVersion3:2.2.1-1+b1
SHA-11B468E69024CA798AD64935C981AD219537DD3CD
SHA-2567D668B38F6D1E9D51F57963314A4D1CD89474D7FFA438005619B8FB255D47249
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
FileSize3899524
MD566F2A9CF1216E64A538D8FE7B5C4B2A9
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.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamegrads
PackageSectionutils
PackageVersion3:2.2.0-2
SHA-134BE125420CBB892CEE32C73EFF46DF7343A7716
SHA-256CA4B3F20EC94475C36E2452FB9DC593798A24523B49135F9660C8ADF797BD9F8