dials 3.12.1+dfsg3-3 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

dials (3.12.1+dfsg3-3) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Restrict building to amd64 until fixes for the arm64 and ppc64el are
    ready.

 -- Roland Mas <email address hidden>  Wed, 18 Jan 2023 17:45:41 +0100

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Uploaded by:
Debian Science Team
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Science Team
Architectures:
any
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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dials_3.12.1+dfsg3-3.dsc 2.5 KiB f1dfec1cb599d57d80697f7b2c5aced8242d14daae07802df7175fc2e105c5ce
dials_3.12.1+dfsg3.orig.tar.xz 7.9 MiB 42ee202057f55669127c67f5297b30637c15179770011e3a6a88381ee596705c
dials_3.12.1+dfsg3-3.debian.tar.xz 11.3 KiB 88a9993c7b0b6a7ac9799f25acf6713a13ab9a3c9b2e8ee426a506ef2c283bc3

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Binary packages built by this source

dials: Diffraction Integration for Advanced Light Sources

 The DIALS software is developed in a fully open-source, collaborative
 environment. The main development teams are based at Diamond Light
 Source and CCP4, in the UK, and at Lawrence Berkeley National
 Laboratory, USA. However, in the spirit of the open source movement,
 we welcome collaboration from anyone who wishes to contribute to the
 project.
 .
 To avoid “reinventing the wheel” as much as possible, the DIALS
 project builds on knowledge accumulated over many decades in the
 field of crystallographic data processing. We benefit greatly from
 the altruism of experts who contribute their ideas and advice, either
 directly or via their detailed publications on existing algorithms
 and packages such as XDS [2] and MOSFLM [3]. At the heart of the
 DIALS framework lies a design philosophy of hardware abstraction and
 a generalised model of the experiment that is inspired directly by
 material published on the seminal workshops on position sensitive
 detector software [1]. Continuing in the spirit of these workshops we
 held our own series of meetings, with talks from invited speakers,
 and code camps in which specific problems are addressed by intensive
 effort across the collaboration. Summaries of these meetings and
 copies of slides given as presentations are available here.
 .
 DIALS is written using Python and C++, making heavy use of the cctbx
 [4] for core crystallographic calculations and much infrastructure
 including a complete build system. Seamless interaction between the
 C++ and Python components of this hybrid system is enabled by
 Boost.Python. Python provides a useful ground for rapid prototyping,
 after which core algorithms and data structures may be transferred
 over to C++ for speed. High level interfaces of the hybrid system
 remain in Python, facilitating further development and code reuse
 both within DIALS and by third parties.

python3-dials: Diffraction Integration for Advanced Light Sources - Python3

 The DIALS software is developed in a fully open-source, collaborative
 environment. The main development teams are based at Diamond Light
 Source and CCP4, in the UK, and at Lawrence Berkeley National
 Laboratory, USA. However, in the spirit of the open source movement,
 we welcome collaboration from anyone who wishes to contribute to the
 project.
 .
 To avoid “reinventing the wheel” as much as possible, the DIALS
 project builds on knowledge accumulated over many decades in the
 field of crystallographic data processing. We benefit greatly from
 the altruism of experts who contribute their ideas and advice, either
 directly or via their detailed publications on existing algorithms
 and packages such as XDS [2] and MOSFLM [3]. At the heart of the
 DIALS framework lies a design philosophy of hardware abstraction and
 a generalised model of the experiment that is inspired directly by
 material published on the seminal workshops on position sensitive
 detector software [1]. Continuing in the spirit of these workshops we
 held our own series of meetings, with talks from invited speakers,
 and code camps in which specific problems are addressed by intensive
 effort across the collaboration. Summaries of these meetings and
 copies of slides given as presentations are available here.
 .
 DIALS is written using Python and C++, making heavy use of the cctbx
 [4] for core crystallographic calculations and much infrastructure
 including a complete build system. Seamless interaction between the
 C++ and Python components of this hybrid system is enabled by
 Boost.Python. Python provides a useful ground for rapid prototyping,
 after which core algorithms and data structures may be transferred
 over to C++ for speed. High level interfaces of the hybrid system
 remain in Python, facilitating further development and code reuse
 both within DIALS and by third parties.
 .
 This is the Python 3 version of the package.

python3-dials-dbgsym: debug symbols for python3-dials