Result for C3165D7945D18EF21A8D402864D8F79B2D8DDB91

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/libdart6/changelog.Debian.i386.gz
FileSize231
MD5B44263F7B800C3F8342EF992BE1AC478
SHA-1C3165D7945D18EF21A8D402864D8F79B2D8DDB91
SHA-256A1D2E0A7821C9EB63D7931889EEF9447825A0966D26B4EF75876D9B2758B7CF5
SSDEEP6:XtOZRCbdtcXQY1/ZnaWsM+0WDieU6B027Bn:XoMLUQYi0EQJ27B
TLSHT12BD097600045A02EC4251A7391B58069883E8293060E0C8F309C62CA80968202B88C3A
hashlookup:parent-total28
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 28)

The searched file hash is included in 28 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize29240
MD5743F032DB0D03314CD8C5ADBADE36847
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - planning 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 the planning headers and other tools for development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-planning-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.9.5-4+b2
SHA-10306F103832BFB50D50BC2310EAA71F570ACE1E7
SHA-256FD85E8AE5CA9B57D0DE4A23399B93E5BA5F5C535CB1CE8A5C1495F4E93690098
Key Value
FileSize31340
MD5D923C93873DBF2DDCC1413B6AAF4D164
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
PackageVersion6.9.5-4+b2
SHA-10CF0179D4E7C0DA6BCCB7135CCFA3D4267DB2BBB
SHA-256208F281349A6A4D1B6EA3FA71616E0D9CE2BABB983BA66E626EDEA3EE6277E2E
Key Value
FileSize25004
MD507C37586CCCAF0DF6F7F6FA120905093
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
PackageVersion6.9.5-4+b2
SHA-1137A46CFC1E9D9E0373ACEE8D77045CCCC9AC8FF
SHA-2562DF8336136217449B2260220860472718EBA54B549D5EE7B59C92D9C42748F64
Key Value
FileSize38968
MD57C3AC6E5BE48134E91A3A0079DBA688E
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - odelcpsolver 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>
PackageNamelibdart-external-odelcpsolver6
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.9.5-4+b2
SHA-11CEC888B3E3634707B436F5184EA767875622FE2
SHA-256B61E958F7B6B7A5DC0B0BB5A150AA95571A93E3E68E6D80A87D089FE4615B9F7
Key Value
FileSize139584
MD511814D21A818FF710022BE1905444870
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - planning 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 planning library.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-planning6
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.9.5-4+b2
SHA-1391B1C5186521FF101AEEC43B8DC8A6181470A5E
SHA-2566EA9047B8D580B7664780B6A777511A57CCE105B547052B0399BB8244A2A5181
Key Value
FileSize207764
MD58A71A39D9A7649D59FF3AF7E398BDAE4
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
PackageVersion6.9.5-4+b2
SHA-13D9B99B48C068BDC910111ADDA9042BA7F781C6B
SHA-2567E7CBE93FC6345BCF00ED21EE39048BE377AAEDCDEDC40214FF7DDFB52CD228D
Key Value
FileSize237144
MD54624F1CEE9C71C3FAC8432C92E5AB719
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - gui-osg 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 GUI OpenSceneGraph optimizer library.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-gui-osg6
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.9.5-4+b2
SHA-13F46F8921B5499EDDBAD5E5BB8E6DCA696E1E740
SHA-256477E5FADD5C82B0500668585482A4E51C9B845189232EB105B69DC4CB21C52DC
Key Value
FileSize27160
MD53EAE4C9A70DF09E0A14121ACD54C5F37
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - gui 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 headers and other useful tools for GUI development.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-gui-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion6.9.5-4+b2
SHA-1454F349500D2D6495B823C524095625886DBCE7E
SHA-2562FEF58E7043950B3D80D008E22E2ABD8FED721D56D5727FE7C70F07D3924BC71
Key Value
FileSize67316
MD56A2EE15EBCA4B937B229146B9911A749
PackageDescriptionKinematics Dynamics and Optimization Library - gui 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 GUI library.
PackageMaintainerDebian Science Maintainers <debian-science-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamelibdart-gui6
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion6.9.5-4+b2
SHA-1491E26F0BC2F6A42FA59CF5F40233B4B1B6707BF
SHA-256649F7436AD5A3383BEEB2EBE9BADD0A8166F543921B4DA31D0F8C15899AD6AB0
Key Value
FileSize25920
MD5EA9B8E33180EA9C74039C7D84ACE6F54
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
PackageVersion6.9.5-4+b2
SHA-14DECF370CD896FD50E650966C693A0B8BB216D21
SHA-256AC5FE6FB0BC0991816910441D4F73357B7BF801415BC8C3A915CFC9E446F70BB