Sophie

Sophie

distrib > Mageia > 7 > armv7hl > media > core-release > by-pkgid > e0f7b2ef531ebe464808118e5462c506 > files > 63

wsjtx-2.0.1-2.mga7.armv7hl.rpm


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Thanks to:

    The FFTW library (http://www.fftw.org) without which the efficient
generation of  discrete fast Fourier transformations  essential to the
decoding DSP algorithms of WSJT-X would  be a considerable part of the
project.

    The Qt project (http://qt-project.org) that allows us to deliver a
rich  industrial strength  cross platform  GUI application  written in
C++.

    Nate  Bargmann, N0NB,  and  the Hamlib  developer  team for  their
excellent library  and for  prompt review and  acceptance of  the many
pull requests for upstream patches to Hamlib.

    Dave  Bernstein,  AA6YQ, for  being  so  receptive to  suggestions
allowing WSJT-X to  cooperate with his excellent Amateur  Radio DX and
award chasing suite (http://www.dxlabsuite.com).

    Laurie Cowcher,  VK3AMA, for  developing the  partner applications
JTAlertX and  JTMacrosX (http://www.hamapps.com) that make  DX chasing
with WSJT-X such an efficient and pleasurable experience.

    The  CMake build  and packaging  tools (http://www.cmake.org)  for
their comprehensive  scripting tools that make  automation of building
and packaging on all supported platforms possible.

    The  NSIS  MS  Windows  installer scripting  and  generator  tools
(http://nsis.sourceforge.net) that, through  the CPack NSIS generator,
allows us to build a comprehensive Windows installer package.

    The GNU Compiler Collection (http://gcc.gnu.org) that allows us to
compile and link  C++, Fortran and C code to  the latest Standards and
with high quality optimization.

     The clang C++ & C compiler  front ends and LLVM compiler back end
tools  (http://clang.llvm.org)  that  provide  us  with  another,  gcc
compatible, high quality C++ and C compiler and Standard Library suite
which, particularly on Apple Mac, allows  our code to be ported to the
maximum number of platforms.

    The  MinGW  project  (http://www.mingw.org)  that  ports  the  gcc
compilers and related GNU tools to the MS Windows environment allowing
a high quality  C++, Fortran and C application to  be portable between
native MS Windows and other platforms such as Linux and Apple Mac.