ginga 4.1.0-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

ginga (4.1.0-1) unstable; urgency=medium

  * New upstream version 4.1.0

 -- Ole Streicher <email address hidden>  Sat, 01 Jul 2023 18:56:41 +0200

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Uploaded by:
Debian Astronomy Maintainers
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Astronomy Maintainers
Architectures:
all
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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Series Pocket Published Component Section
Mantic release universe misc

Builds

Mantic: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
ginga_4.1.0-1.dsc 2.3 KiB 21c66b380196403b88d17f26b5e73ce4d42c66feb28f6fa8b8f28d1fc6635aec
ginga_4.1.0.orig.tar.gz 29.8 MiB 7d3b86ad05cf99547a288b544bbe4eecbcc1b29d161bff66d02f384508860a74
ginga_4.1.0-1.debian.tar.xz 6.0 KiB 7af1ed7a19b393e09ea0fa35ef9abc38614ff27fc71a26468d91f1d759eb9808

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

ginga: Astronomical image viewer

 Ginga is a toolkit designed for building viewers for scientific image
 data in Python, visualizing 2D pixel data in numpy arrays.
 It can view astronomical data such as contained in files based on the
 FITS (Flexible Image Transport System) file format. It is written and
 is maintained by software engineers at the Subaru Telescope, National
 Astronomical Observatory of Japan.
 .
 The Ginga toolkit centers around an image display object which supports
 zooming and panning, color and intensity mapping, a choice of several
 automatic cut levels algorithms and canvases for plotting scalable
 geometric forms. In addition to this widget, a general purpose
 "reference" FITS viewer is provided, based on a plugin framework.
 A fairly complete set of standard plugins are provided for features
 that is expected from a modern FITS viewer: panning and zooming windows,
 star catalog access, cuts, star pick/fwhm, thumbnails, etc.
 .
 This package contains the image viewer based on Python 3.

python3-ginga: Astronomical image toolkit for Python

 Ginga is a toolkit designed for building viewers for scientific image
 data in Python, visualizing 2D pixel data in numpy arrays.
 It can view astronomical data such as contained in files based on the
 FITS (Flexible Image Transport System) file format. It is written and
 is maintained by software engineers at the Subaru Telescope, National
 Astronomical Observatory of Japan.
 .
 The Ginga toolkit centers around an image display object which supports
 zooming and panning, color and intensity mapping, a choice of several
 automatic cut levels algorithms and canvases for plotting scalable
 geometric forms. In addition to this widget, a general purpose
 "reference" FITS viewer is provided, based on a plugin framework.
 A fairly complete set of standard plugins are provided for features
 that is expected from a modern FITS viewer: panning and zooming windows,
 star catalog access, cuts, star pick/fwhm, thumbnails, etc.