charls 2.2.0+dfsg-3 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

charls (2.2.0+dfsg-3) unstable; urgency=medium

  [ Steffen Moeller ]
  * Fix watchfile to detect new versions on github (routine-update)

  [ Andreas Tille ]
  * Standards-Version: 4.6.0 (routine-update)

 -- Andreas Tille <email address hidden>  Fri, 24 Sep 2021 11:59:04 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Debian Med
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Med
Architectures:
any
Section:
libs
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
charls_2.2.0+dfsg-3.dsc 2.0 KiB c0d6c3813097ca552d6ae3a2a0c2b0b4cf59efd442ca24e0b94a8b1de8f6283b
charls_2.2.0+dfsg.orig.tar.xz 4.9 MiB 66eb06d4add73dfce56743d754474114de6af5a058f53f0caaf35229a49603ae
charls_2.2.0+dfsg-3.debian.tar.xz 5.8 KiB 970c076192893705f33caf8ac8740643b0339d5e175f9008f85a9ec74c59727e

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

libcharls-dev: Implementation of the JPEG-LS standard (development libraries)

 CharLS is an optimized implementation of the JPEG-LS standard for lossless and
 near-lossless image compression
 .
 JPEG-LS (ISO-14495-1/ITU-T.87) is a standard derived from the Hewlett Packard
 LOCO algorithm. JPEG LS has low complexity (meaning fast compression) and high
 compression ratios, similar to JPEG 2000. JPEG-LS is more similar to the old
 Lossless JPEG than to JPEG 2000, but interestingly the two different techniques
 result in vastly different performance characteristics.
 .
 This package contains the development files.

libcharls2: Implementation of the JPEG-LS standard

 CharLS is an optimized implementation of the JPEG-LS standard for lossless and
 near-lossless image compression
 .
 JPEG-LS (ISO-14495-1/ITU-T.87) is a standard derived from the Hewlett Packard
 LOCO algorithm. JPEG LS has low complexity (meaning fast compression) and high
 compression ratios, similar to JPEG 2000. JPEG-LS is more similar to the old
 Lossless JPEG than to JPEG 2000, but interestingly the two different techniques
 result in vastly different performance characteristics.

libcharls2-dbgsym: debug symbols for libcharls2