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Bug#560347: marked as done (RFP: ncl -- Nexus Class Library)



Your message dated Sat, 9 Jan 2010 12:23:03 +0000
with message-id <20100109122303.GB20934@master.debian.org>
and subject line itp+rfp=itp
has caused the Debian Bug report #560347,
regarding RFP: ncl -- Nexus Class Library
to be marked as done.

This means that you claim that the problem has been dealt with.
If this is not the case it is now your responsibility to reopen the
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-- 
560347: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=560347
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--- Begin Message ---
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist

* Package name    : ncl (Nexus Class Library)
  Version         : 2.1.08 (dated 2009-11-30)
  Upstream Author : Paul O. Lewis
* URL or Web page : http://hydrodictyon.eeb.uconn.edu/ncl/
* License         : GPL-2
  Description     : Nexus Class Library
   The NEXUS Class Library (NCL) is an integrated collection of C++ classes
   designed to allow the user to quickly write a program that reads
   NEXUS-formatted data files. It also allows easy extension of the NEXUS format
   to include new blocks of your own design.
   .
   The NEXUS data file format was specified in the publication cited
   below. Please read this paper for further information about the format
   specification itself; the documentation for the NCL does not attempt to
   explain the structure of a NEXUS data file.
   Maddison, D. R., D. L. Swofford, and Wayne P. Maddison. 1997. NEXUS: an
   extensible file format for systematic information. Systematic Biology 46(4):
   590-621.
   .
   The basic goal of the NCL is to provide a relatively easy way to endow a
   C++ program with the ability to read NEXUS data files. The steps necessary
   to use the NCL to create a bare-bones program that can read a NEXUS data
   file are simple and few, and it is hoped that the availability of this
   class library will encourage the use of the NEXUS format. This will in
   turn encourage consistency in how programs read NEXUS files and how
   programs respond to errors in data files.
   .
   There are a large number of special data file formats in use. This places
   an extra burden on the end user, who must deal with an increasing number
   of file formats all differing in a number of ways. To convert one's data
   file to another file format often involves manual manipulation of the
   data, an activity that is inherently dangerous and probably has resulted
   in the corruption of many data files. At the very least, the large number
   of formats in existance has led to a proliferation of data file
   variants. With many copies of a given data file on a hard disk, each
   formatted differently for various analysis programs, it becomes very easy
   to change one (say, correct a datum found to be in error) and then fail to
   correct the other versions. The NEXUS file format provides a means for
   keeping one master copy of the data and using it with several programs
   without modification. The NCL provides a means for encouraging programmers
   to use the NEXUS file format in future programs they write.


I could use that for some R packaging (of 'phylobase'), but as I don't use
this directly I don't really want to be / should be the maintainer.

Any biologists in the readership who would like to work on this?

Dirk

-- 
Three out of two people have difficulties with fractions.



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see 531982


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