Result for 1ECEDD337B18645CFC1B27167E7A8ADFCD98D6E4

Query result

Key Value
FileNamesnap-hashlookup-import/usr/share/doc/libdart6.12/copyright
FileSize10760
MD5331DC1F0897E8B95FD55178BEAD338E1
SHA-11ECEDD337B18645CFC1B27167E7A8ADFCD98D6E4
SHA-256D970C43DA820453BFDF9E989ED92F60DBD66C135DB68F5ECC79CE981462B63DE
SHA-5124DA090212338D202C07ED64FCEB18BCFE86027594CA0DAC5B31242D15E13DFFA3A1CAA2006F84DB60A0AB2DFC025C98019129935B3EE8A29656B66DB384DEB68
SSDEEP192:TWWJisGgorsDirsJn3E3BhCBIYrs0rs1TF3J3bCBGSQHayiqQHFe+QH6PBfz4V:TWWM/rsDirsJ32Bqrs0rsxt5bq/y5AzE
TLSHT1EE22E71B378047B319D713E1B969ACC4F22AB12E362B564974FDE2882B3742ED2F7454
insert-timestamp1728228991.8290117
mimetypetext/plain
sourcesnap:v6uYHwANKFR0x49yy8sk473QCiV4fkpV_2
hashlookup:parent-total872
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 872)

The searched file hash is included in 872 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize45092
MD5C20054CB1A15F99004957953F8C2AFD1
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - gui-osg dev 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 contains GUI OpenSceneGraph headers and other useful tools for GUI OpenSceneGraph development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-gui-osg-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-11+b3
SHA-1000087DD817EF998B5B5FEA447B61C3624B79BE1
SHA-2564D74B21B19871719CF6B6E52C1DC66FA3C0A927BF98165CA985EC5C897F590AC
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
FileSize219220
MD59FA06A1DD4E1F5BC87034FBDC3C92185
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - 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 contains main headers and other tools for development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-12+b2
SHA-1000BD079A3859E4FBB42100273A450E6F6FFC88A
SHA-2562DE6FF10FC3291ACD6165686AB358F57C0C5E71E2769DE73109CECA2444A5847
Key Value
FileSize24264
MD52DC64FB2B7B1536236FEDBF40E6F1BFA
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+dfsg4-11+b1
SHA-1006EE7EF1A5AE57C44D2D91837AD367C8ABEFDD0
SHA-2563058A9731A274C7F03B6F3D8F2C5629177C665445C651C88AABFB8866EC2BCE1
Key Value
FileSize308804
MD59838832AE272FC43834E00AF6C2550CE
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+dfsg4-12+b1
SHA-101045AD2CFA998052505059FA22A0D3927363CCF
SHA-25643CD265EAEB396B32F57E603A4C0225467DD0D4ECCA4C78A7459D8F79BE13F58
Key Value
FileSize276656
MD5791E66E85C6A3CDAA125A7A88F636B65
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - imgui 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 imgui library.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-external-imgui6.12
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-11+b3
SHA-1012AE3BEAB3CD2BD90B2BB1232472F5E566CAEF1
SHA-256D2447D7329085937CC91135609D6EA002B490FF8A607964F042430262209E129
Key Value
FileSize28144
MD5EFD440490D2851E40748990295B704EA
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - ipopt optimizer 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 IPOPT optimizer headers and other useful tools for development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-optimizer-ipopt-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-12+b2
SHA-10146E2327D5108C9A7CE0607E0E0512548756802
SHA-256D400211BFCED864326EF3DD808A9DD57B801CCB7B003A9972CF861E49E1B21C2
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
FileSize80528
MD57C14BC7ABBB6911DF1C36D95214921A6
PackageDescriptionDynamic Animation and Robotics Toolkit - Utils URDF 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 Utils URDF library.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-utils-urdf6.12
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-11
SHA-10183413DDC0A9AFCBDA64B530BD74E00CF515FE6
SHA-256628BE9C2C406B784E07E3A108CE625E03923747D0AA5714FDDAD4A81560B69E7
Key Value
FileSize1373932
MD58A0D66F6C99920D16410AEAB5A105612
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - main 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 main library of DART.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart6.12
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.12.1+dfsg4-11+b3
SHA-1018833EAA0B085F1746254F1ED4D9CC9254A8D15
SHA-2565EF58EECC48119C1ECD7D80873E858654B57E947133E3E2E50570DBF43AF0200