minizinc 2.4.2-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

minizinc (2.4.2-1) unstable; urgency=medium

  * New upstream release (Closes: #923525)

 -- Kari Pahula <email address hidden>  Fri, 10 Jan 2020 13:53:50 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Kari Pahula
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Kari Pahula
Architectures:
any
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
minizinc_2.4.2-1.dsc 1.8 KiB d02bdd46232a5c05ce77c017e2bdc8b82261ad10abc8acfee52989c847aa44e9
minizinc_2.4.2.orig.tar.gz 1.5 MiB 1295f2399cafed2c0287e630d8a03cdbbf071ed9d01e6110e26191852f5aff8a
minizinc_2.4.2-1.debian.tar.xz 8.5 KiB 59dcf2eae503c8df7aea42897cb336d28fb8863f163fab5f6c0efceea156257e

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

minizinc: constraint modelling language and tool chain

 MiniZinc is a medium-level constraint modelling language. It is
 high-level enough to express most constraint problems easily, but
 low-level enough that it can be mapped onto existing solvers easily
 and consistently. It is a subset of the higher-level language Zinc.
 .
 MiniZinc is designed to interface easily to different backend
 solvers. It does this by transforming an input MiniZinc model and
 data file into a FlatZinc model. FlatZinc models consist of variable
 declaration and constraint definitions as well as a definition of the
 objective function if the problem is an optimization problem. The
 translation from MiniZinc to FlatZinc is specializable to individual
 backend solvers, so they can control what form constraints end up
 in. In particular, MiniZinc allows the specification of global
 constraints by decomposition.

minizinc-dbgsym: debug symbols for minizinc