Result for 9D03440474D05B03E42E6652B5A8FD59737ECB6F

Query result

Key Value
FileNamesnap-hashlookup-import/usr/share/dart/cmake/dart_external-odelcpsolverTargets.cmake
FileSize3308
MD563F29478DE10EACAE7E808B8C8778E56
SHA-19D03440474D05B03E42E6652B5A8FD59737ECB6F
SHA-256199E66A67F048B5E1B1365435DF93C9406C3DB13F6C94FA679AF6223EED5806D
SHA-512C8095C74ECC56F5A9295B49259A85724551AC2FD08EC99018C2EA5B080050C28326EA1829D5F2B629B2A00767DD572FFA6051335329877C62C5D817C6C5DE0B5
SSDEEP96:ZN+5a/U4EhLxmgKT3kak67hPT/L+XmNbUM:+aFrk67hPTy2P
TLSHT1DA6140672F1A0AE103D3C3916A94E116E02291F77F4751A9FC4A760826FC5584A8F26B
insert-timestamp1728229079.46216
mimetypetext/plain
sourcesnap:v6uYHwANKFR0x49yy8sk473QCiV4fkpV_2
hashlookup:parent-total11
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 11)

The searched file hash is included in 11 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize34412
MD55A5713E823E0C92B8D98126F94DEFF44
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+dfsg4-11
SHA-1CEBC7F2045CA577F9EE8AC6B1DCC5D6D047366FC
SHA-256E1645D4050F95666DFD089BC01AEBBD71D5E51080CBD4E8009FB3010181BB9D3
Key Value
FileSize34420
MD54E55F48472A2A1FBAD9D55095826B835
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+dfsg4-11
SHA-1B80617DAC412836099C11C8DFAEEBA14F90E1537
SHA-2569A65130E2065EC85D01151E2B7E58BEDB95159E425A755CB6D15D7CB07A902D8
Key Value
FileSize34360
MD50564C2AC9394DFC7FCB0AD0DC93F0D9A
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-1F664968841E2A7DADA2458FD94F9FE2CBD5DEC13
SHA-25656248E955903F484C40804B78D7392DAB3197F110222A3D77D0E308A35CFE5A3
Key Value
FileSize34408
MD5DF3AABF819D22F7B6A429285E2C8E805
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+dfsg4-11
SHA-160A91C865D4C96278987C84187142EBCE4B8879C
SHA-256E14BE7C493C6E2549C1570046B0FA0B2006CF24DD9C54689BDCCC700753AB4E0
Key Value
FileSize34404
MD5CFEA047F3D9919AB44FDD410717B5E7A
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+dfsg4-11
SHA-1B47DFBB06C286BBB03F3FE51E228F5CE6DD997CE
SHA-256605D3B29FF0CC2A1106C06522B079918470FD4F768609F5D0D74507E78F5BC51
Key Value
FileSize34412
MD59CF16C8F9CAC81EA9872822C3EEE6602
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+dfsg4-11
SHA-1EC36F474FC4BD83A1F0EDF6726A1E7B6C1C89E89
SHA-25675F0661B178F0090E5AEBEEC4AD7D0468F133D5DABD96043B097EDA6DC3D4769
Key Value
SHA-13995CCE49C521806FBD91E19F5A32AD62D28F247
snap-authoritycanonical
snap-filenamev6uYHwANKFR0x49yy8sk473QCiV4fkpV_2.snap
snap-idv6uYHwANKFR0x49yy8sk473QCiV4fkpV_2
snap-namerosbot-xl-nav
snap-publisher-idUfs04IfQtdm5ifrjDyBl0eaQevZLHaEX
snap-signkeyBWDEoaqyr25nF5SNCvEv2v7QnM9QsfCc0PBMYD_i2NGSQ32EF2d4D0hqUel3m8ul
snap-timestamp2023-09-01T11:33:49.414406Z
source-urlhttps://api.snapcraft.io/api/v1/snaps/download/v6uYHwANKFR0x49yy8sk473QCiV4fkpV_2.snap
Key Value
FileSize34416
MD5E0E828324808580263E0E25B6F3E790B
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+dfsg4-11
SHA-16F4B2AF25D394F175F8141E146CAA02CC1C040FC
SHA-2565903CFBE85EA2E85776CCBE2576D9596501B7C415B8C7E8018CAA75587F0A1DA
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
FileSize34404
MD5FF56C1B67E4A547BE227B8DB45AAF981
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+dfsg4-11
SHA-1555B67BCE8833BE493372210F341620E52B4B47F
SHA-2567CF17D9431B2FDD50A01447DAB85312F55E2DB322DFA3517DC7D3B0BB73B8F96
Key Value
FileSize34408
MD567F7E9EAE089E43B1BCC499BE6833377
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+dfsg4-11
SHA-161D70389B13B7282D526415221AA2AB2E9FE405E
SHA-2562C5EF79522970283AE16A573E3070ABF0E3B4B1CBC2319824409FF72C93667DD