Result for 087847333B9F454CC857B2E4D497650694818AFF

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/nyquist/ny
FileSize1033404
MD5E896500730722BF9794C21460308A65E
SHA-1087847333B9F454CC857B2E4D497650694818AFF
SHA-2565FBA15BE4FBFEF3507844D80CA2D74FD7207CCE9B68A41BE2280CB9586ADFC1E
SSDEEP12288:u0/aWGr54VGWVbcDtH4yJ9qYzWbO2F9Dq4rbABr85GLbVlmYSOyRqXo3O+XSdpgP:u0/aX5KlbcyXRbnDi/oeuSXgYXX
TLSHT1A2252C5BF4409F71CAC4263AB69E576873030BB5C1DA310389364B293FDBAEB153B586
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
FileSize5053580
MD596E5557061871F45D2CC5E78920BA225
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
PackageVersion3.12+ds-4
SHA-10FC3E5277847CA586C4A5CDC637D665A069CF421
SHA-256AC87FB99F2FC632F13B44B9C994833B8E721EB1B4227EBF18F83155330E70721