phyml 2:20110919-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

phyml (2:20110919-1) unstable; urgency=low

  * New upstream version.
  * Kept manual's old name with no date (debian/docs, debian/rules).
  * Do not compress PDFs (debian/rules).
 -- Ubuntu Archive Auto-Sync <email address hidden>   Fri,  16 Dec 2011 16:27:00 +0000

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Uploaded by:
Ubuntu Archive Auto-Sync
Uploaded to:
Precise
Original maintainer:
Debian Med
Architectures:
any
Section:
science
Urgency:
Low Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Precise release universe science

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File Size SHA-256 Checksum
phyml_20110919.orig.tar.gz 3.1 MiB 353f61ba01927f5ca9e2383aed67b2d302fcb7a981ea19e04d598447d35fd338
phyml_20110919-1.debian.tar.gz 9.3 KiB 99b6c488cfd66141e09cccb3862198021322a6211d0e0f0c8dc73a485d1e9e59
phyml_20110919-1.dsc 2.0 KiB 27854e89fe74ee7b279cc850e3cdc434462d0512a718d6f0b2478fcb0998cba3

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Binary packages built by this source

phyml: Phylogenetic estimation using Maximum Likelihood

 PhyML is a software that estimates maximum likelihood phylogenies from
 alignments of nucleotide or amino acid sequences. It provides a wide
 range of options that were designed to facilitate standard phylogenetic
 analyses. The main strengths of PhyML lies in the large number of
 substitution models coupled to various options to search the space of
 phylogenetic tree topologies, going from very fast and efficient methods
 to slower but generally more accurate approaches. It also implements
 two methods to evaluate branch supports in a sound statistical framework
 (the non-parametric bootstrap and the approximate likelihood ratio test).
 .
 PhyML was designed to process moderate to large data sets. In theory,
 alignments with up to 4,000 sequences 2,000,000 character-long can
 be analyzed. In practice however, the amount of memory required to process
 a data set is proportional of the product of the number of sequences by their
 length. Hence, a large number of sequences can only be processed provided
 that they are short. Also, PhyML can handle long sequences provided that
 they are not numerous. With most standard personal computers, the “comfort
 zone” for PhyML generally lies around 3 to 500 sequences less than 2,000
 character long.
 .
 This pakcage also includes PhyTime.