pdl 1:2.080-2 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

pdl (1:2.080-2) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Change to depend on libtext-balanced-perl

 -- Ed J <email address hidden>  Sun, 19 Jun 2022 17:45:05 +0100

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Uploaded by:
Debian Perl Group
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Perl Group
Architectures:
any
Section:
math
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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Series Pocket Published Component Section

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
pdl_2.080-2.dsc 2.4 KiB 14dbe94f9a9030391a6b46d7846d5dfa979c25e2e07c138f6eb49022b44ea8f4
pdl_2.080.orig.tar.gz 2.9 MiB e7f1b9e212e10f2c51876d51468cb8bd12eb5cc6c9a88ff01e5464674b5696cf
pdl_2.080-2.debian.tar.xz 29.2 KiB a5af2ce8ac9763c8b284bb964c9122e1404a77e97a938430e7e58154dce24a49

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

pdl: perl data language: Perl extensions for numerics

 PDL gives standard perl the ability to COMPACTLY
 store and SPEEDILY manipulate the large N-dimensional data arrays
 which are the bread and butter of scientific computing. The idea
 is to turn perl in to a free, array-oriented, numerical language
 in the same sense as commercial packages like IDL and MatLab. One
 can write simple perl expressions to manipulate entire numerical arrays
 all at once. For example, using PDL the perl variable $a can hold a
 1024x1024 floating point image, it only takes 4Mb of memory to store
 it and expressions like $a=sqrt($a)+2 would manipulate the whole image
 in a few seconds.
 .
 A simple interactive shell (perldl) is provided for command line use
 together with a module (PDL) for use in perl scripts.

pdl-dbgsym: debug symbols for pdl