r-cran-phytools 0.7-70-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

r-cran-phytools (0.7-70-1) unstable; urgency=medium

  * New upstream version

 -- Andreas Tille <email address hidden>  Mon, 21 Sep 2020 11:18:07 +0200

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Uploaded by:
Debian R Packages Maintainers
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian R Packages Maintainers
Architectures:
all
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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Hirsute: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

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r-cran-phytools_0.7-70-1.dsc 2.3 KiB 3ce7c53694cb830bc17009034385021ad3bca56a8e79bc005f9792c9fe1d8ec0
r-cran-phytools_0.7-70.orig.tar.gz 314.7 KiB e3432c3b006e5cc6f1292bebd81ebc20044edf1f56c3d27a3497f738eb99f0d3
r-cran-phytools_0.7-70-1.debian.tar.xz 2.9 KiB bc06c2bb84b10e693aa57c37904225a575463e0cf87e9810ff8ba9dfff2a10f7

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Binary packages built by this source

r-cran-phytools: GNU R phylogenetic tools for comparative biology

 A wide range of functions for phylogenetic analysis. Functionality is
 concentrated in phylogenetic comparative biology, but also includes a
 diverse array of methods for visualizing, manipulating, reading or
 writing, and even inferring phylogenetic trees and data. Included among
 the functions in phylogenetic comparative biology are various for
 ancestral state reconstruction, model-fitting, simulation of phylogenies
 and data, and multivariate analysis. There are a broad range of plotting
 methods for phylogenies and comparative data which include, but are not
 restricted to, methods for mapping trait evolution on trees, for
 projecting trees into phenotypic space or a geographic map, and for
 visualizing correlated speciation between trees. Finally, there are a
 number of functions for reading, writing, analyzing, inferring,
 simulating, and manipulating phylogenetic trees and comparative data not
 covered by other packages. For instance, there are functions for
 randomly or non-randomly attaching species or clades to a phylogeny, for
 estimating supertrees or consensus phylogenies from a set, for
 simulating trees and phylogenetic data under a range of models, and for
 a wide variety of other manipulations and analyses that phylogenetic
 biologists might find useful in their research.