Result for 05F92DC0C52C5FF9E91BD8CBCC70340FC9A71C54

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/nyquist/jnyqide/jNyqIDE.jar
FileSize165101
MD55216F84FEF7B09E8B2743A51771FCF2F
SHA-105F92DC0C52C5FF9E91BD8CBCC70340FC9A71C54
SHA-2564A8DE383779C0E504903425BB0758357FBFC591AE7DE9E25CCC75D0D14007A2B
SSDEEP3072:qzbsAFtWoE/TPGdDoN2bPyBZhwNLOD+5aS7VWiM:q/sSREb2DoN2GBmOOXU
TLSHT15FF3F17B8D50A831F8C7E0B0B42DC125BD2B05E17459E07E09B16AD99F06EE98F169CF
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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Parents (Total: 1)

The searched file hash is included in 1 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize3666592
MD556928249A20E98B7570A64F46F61A972
PackageDescriptionlanguage for music composition and sound synthesis Unlike score languages that tend to deal only with events, or signal processing languages that tend to deal only with signals and synthesis, Nyquist handles both in a single integrated system. Nyquist is also flexible and easy to use because it is based on an interactive Lisp interpreter (XLISP). . With Nyquist, you can design instruments by combining functions (much as you would using the orchestra languages of Music V, cmusic, or Csound). You can call upon these instruments and generate a sound just by typing a simple expression. You can combine simple expressions into complex ones to create a whole composition.
PackageMaintainerSteve M. Robbins <smr@debian.org>
PackageNamenyquist
PackageSectionsound
PackageVersion3.05-2
SHA-16E97D00FD744BD0A2C4859D9632D0DCE0927131A
SHA-256098D1026C0057EC313130EAECF1CF6DCD90739BFA9E9F9BCD80D24D3D51BFBC5