Result for AB80C3A852AE0FDFAA1ABF344D55DE47E0E0D921

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/libdart6/changelog.Debian.gz
FileSize1044
MD555D30AD32DAC8BB9A2591BB5502B1413
SHA-1AB80C3A852AE0FDFAA1ABF344D55DE47E0E0D921
SHA-256EEA91120D199655FDC30B3E6AAA578FF2E937A26BE9629D73C20307ABC5E687F
SSDEEP24:Xks/sPU+QE5mcE8PpHEYTjai6fFA6VPt2j3yogmFs:XH/sPUhEQcJP2+apfFb4gmC
TLSHT1D1117547D0084BF7D747F7A4EE362017161480565D6C9EC4E4AC64072DC5825DF7A3E3
hashlookup:parent-total140
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 140)

The searched file hash is included in 140 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize232644
MD56091CA387C7E299EC77683DB87DDDD8B
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - ipopt optimizer 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>
PackageNamelibdart6-external-imgui
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.9.2-2+b1
SHA-100052D7549CE95CE497EA521FAC005DB09763003
SHA-2561BC6DA34B52CC4518F8E218F1DD5ADBAE1576FE1D5A3119A127761083AF40A09
Key Value
FileSize52120
MD5E2A9315669D3D44F82C33AFF3559DFB4
PackageDescriptionDynamic Animation and Robotics Toolkit - Utils Component Shared 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.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart6-collision-bullet
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.9.2-2+b1
SHA-1009FDEA2C6378F95A79F535032750DBB388F6C77
SHA-256D2D757D4FAFE8592587E1B9366E3FDA3A5EA15866BC003A04258C238A8081C10
Key Value
FileSize24204
MD564A2E5472B132B72B519BEEA9FE6F524
PackageDescriptionDynamic Animation and Robotics Toolkit - URDF Component 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 urdf utils headers and other useful tools for development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-utils-urdf-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.9.2-2+b1
SHA-1016170D0246F38D0171225265141F9B8C58DFB1B
SHA-25613CF0125324000A6A1DEEEBC45A9244B8F26F4D54DAE5982EEDF4116FEF0A0A0
Key Value
FileSize143776
MD59FBD48779EC319E7721D23B1DABB04AF
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 imgui headers and other useful tools for development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-external-imgui-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.9.2-2+b1
SHA-10424A14458A65701D30DDC2CEE913E3B8C85534D
SHA-256BD22B75FB0025E1B41A96F316563B68271F15D5984FA9E5BA11D436077A7F2B8
Key Value
FileSize41212
MD5CCB4DB5EEC83AC94E5975FD9C1E47652
PackageDescriptionDynamic Animation and Robotics Toolkit - Utils Component 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.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart6-collision-ode
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.9.2-2+b1
SHA-106FE80191D513BB159AC14B7017255FAF75C371D
SHA-256341510D9EF76F415687AB3BA5B7C92AFD74635C7ACD2F3EE3FDA89D6CDE45AA1
Key Value
FileSize24220
MD5DCA413C6DB4C31FBBE76ADBD3FF761D6
PackageDescriptionDynamic Animation and Robotics Toolkit - URDF Component 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 urdf utils headers and other useful tools for development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-utils-urdf-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.9.2-2+b1
SHA-1098A9AADBEE5314277480DF20FCDC75A2FCF77FF
SHA-2561F72058602427A5B57B48BEFD5DC0EEFC520C5F8FE7C55D111E0950F91E1EB9C
Key Value
FileSize36464
MD5F737D082038887195B019553D809900F
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - ipopt optimizer 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 odelcpsolver library.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart6-external-odelcpsolver
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.9.2-2+b1
SHA-10CB75DBB488729EDDE963110FA6146299A5F9B78
SHA-256DD804220492E5030888CC6EC16849DEE24D5F6F50B72BE972D5660F66C82A766
Key Value
FileSize205276
MD5926163BF43CAD2356C60BE3606D4A962
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
PackageVersion6.9.2-2+b1
SHA-10CE71742B8E7373680BB32F98F3E05FA706F88EC
SHA-256591CD3B8508D902A060FE71276144E7FFDDB1EAB560C74D54402F82210D70036
Key Value
FileSize23220
MD574ADC62A9296A95C5563A450EC7C96E4
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - optimizer 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 NLOPT optimizer headers and other useful tools for development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-optimizer-nlopt-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.9.2-2+b1
SHA-10DB48CCC6B7AD5C5A6A8EF0805436FA96747F140
SHA-2567B8FEFE6508FB4837DD10579526913BA57D0F538A93BAD94B20F3C5964D7F201
Key Value
FileSize23108
MD563FD06E21910F7A375BF5BA5759E6F6F
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
PackageVersion6.9.2-2+b1
SHA-10E5D49F3C0251414A385FD46C56A3990D4517185
SHA-2560C276FFDF8CFBA4BF2FAC7853BFD12848873EA69605B039831D49B1D9A651E53