python-skyfield
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- Developed at devel:languages:python:numeric
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Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed |
---|---|---|
assay-master-256.23c18c2.tar.gz | 0000018328 17.9 KB | |
de405.bsp | 0065445888 62.4 MB | |
de421.bsp | 0016788480 16 MB | |
generate-hipparcos.sh | 0000000392 392 Bytes | |
hip_main.dat.gz | 0001257616 1.2 MB | |
moon_080317.tf | 0000021437 20.9 KB | |
moon_pa_de421_1900-2050.bpc | 0001770496 1.69 MB | |
pck00008.tpc | 0000111586 109 KB | |
python-skyfield-rpmlintrc | 0000000049 49 Bytes | |
python-skyfield.changes | 0000009120 8.91 KB | |
python-skyfield.spec | 0000003702 3.62 KB | |
skyfield-1.27.tar.gz | 0000293073 286 KB |
Revision 6 (latest revision is 21)
Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar_suse)
accepted
request 834847
from
Benjamin Greiner (bnavigator)
(revision 6)
- Update to version 1.27 * The printed appearance of both vectors and of vector functions like Earth locations and Earth satellites have been rewritten to be more informative and consistent. * Added compute_calendar_date() which lets the caller choose the Julian calendar for ancient dates instead of always using the proleptic Gregorian calendar. This should be particularly useful for historians. * Added J() that builds a time array from an array of floating point years. #436 * Added four new strftime methods for the non-UTC timescales (#443). All four of them support %f for microseconds, and provide a reasonable default format string for callers who don’t wish to concoct their own: tai_strftime() tt_strftime() tdb_strftime() ut1_strftime() * Thanks to several fixes, comets and asteroids with parabolic and hyperbolic orbits should now raise fewer errors. * The prototype planetary_magnitude() can now return magnitudes for Uranus without raising an exception. The routine does not yet take into account whether the observer is facing the equator or poles of Uranus, so the magnitude predicted for the planet will only be accurate to within about 0.1 magnitudes.
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