magic 7.5.241-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

magic (7.5.241-1) unstable; urgency=medium


  * New upstream release

 -- Roland Stigge <email address hidden>  Mon, 13 Oct 2014 11:11:14 +0200

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Uploaded by:
Roland Stigge
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Roland Stigge
Architectures:
any
Section:
electronics
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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Series Pocket Published Component Section

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
magic_7.5.241-1.dsc 1.7 KiB 63a66e5bb1817a8a8dc93adc70a4247cf2a32d6485fcbb28a26527c0b8b2b8f7
magic_7.5.241.orig.tar.gz 3.6 MiB 78123806eaf5679c200354b4677ca3884af8a2a843150643c425790399a6b6d5
magic_7.5.241-1.debian.tar.xz 5.0 KiB aad7f1f22ec0470d610dc38e00fa01851100b0be5a3176ea2d3a85daa52ecbef

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

magic: VLSI layout tool

 Magic is a venerable VLSI layout tool, written in the 1980's at Berkeley by
 John Ousterhout, now famous primarily for writing the scripting interpreter
 language Tcl. Due largely in part to its liberal Berkeley open-source license,
 magic has remained popular with universities and small companies. The
 open-source license has allowed VLSI engineers with a bent toward programming
 to implement clever ideas and help magic stay abreast of fabrication
 technology. However, it is the well thought-out core algorithms which lend to
 magic the greatest part of its popularity. Magic is widely cited as being the
 easiest tool to use for circuit layout, even for people who ultimately rely on
 commercial tools for their product design flow.

magic-dbgsym: debug symbols for package magic

 Magic is a venerable VLSI layout tool, written in the 1980's at Berkeley by
 John Ousterhout, now famous primarily for writing the scripting interpreter
 language Tcl. Due largely in part to its liberal Berkeley open-source license,
 magic has remained popular with universities and small companies. The
 open-source license has allowed VLSI engineers with a bent toward programming
 to implement clever ideas and help magic stay abreast of fabrication
 technology. However, it is the well thought-out core algorithms which lend to
 magic the greatest part of its popularity. Magic is widely cited as being the
 easiest tool to use for circuit layout, even for people who ultimately rely on
 commercial tools for their product design flow.