Source: libminc Maintainer: Debian Med Packaging Team Uploaders: Steve M. Robbins , Andreas Tille Section: science Priority: optional Build-Depends: debhelper-compat (= 13), dh-exec, cmake, libnetcdf-dev, libnifti-dev, zlib1g-dev, libhdf5-dev Standards-Version: 4.6.1 Vcs-Browser: https://salsa.debian.org/med-team/libminc Vcs-Git: https://salsa.debian.org/med-team/libminc.git Homepage: https://github.com/BIC-MNI/libminc Rules-Requires-Root: no Package: libminc2-5.3.0 Architecture: any Multi-Arch: same Section: libs Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends} Pre-Depends: ${misc:Pre-Depends} Description: MNI medical image format library This package contains the libraries libminc2 and libminc_io. . The Minc file format is a highly flexible medical image file format. Minc version 1 is built on top of the NetCDF generalized data format. Minc version 2 is built on top of the HDF data format. This library handles both formats. In each case the format is simple, self-describing, extensible, portable and N-dimensional, with programming interfaces for both low-level data access and high-level volume manipulation. On top of the libraries is a suite of generic image-file manipulation tools. The format, libraries and tools are designed for use in a medical-imaging research environment : they are simple and powerful and make no attempt to provide a pretty interface to users. Package: libminc-dev Architecture: any Section: libdevel Depends: ${misc:Depends}, libminc2-5.3.0 (= ${binary:Version}), libnetcdf-dev, libhdf5-dev Conflicts: libminc0-dev Replaces: libminc0-dev Multi-Arch: same Description: MNI medical image format development environment This package contains the library and headers for libminc2 and libminc_io. . The Minc file format is a highly flexible medical image file format. Minc version 1 is built on top of the NetCDF generalized data format. Minc version 2 is built on top of the HDF data format. This library handles both formats. In each case the format is simple, self-describing, extensible, portable and N-dimensional, with programming interfaces for both low-level data access and high-level volume manipulation. On top of the libraries is a suite of generic image-file manipulation tools. The format, libraries and tools are designed for use in a medical-imaging research environment : they are simple and powerful and make no attempt to provide a pretty interface to users.