fitting 0.1.0

Pure Rust curve fitting library
Documentation
[package]
name = "fitting"
version = "0.1.0"
authors = ["Masaharu TASHIRO <masatsr.kit@gmail.com>"]
edition = "2018"

# A short blurb about the package. This is not rendered in any format when
# uploaded to crates.io (aka this is not markdown).
description = "Pure Rust curve fitting library"

# These URLs point to more information about the package. These are
# intended to be webviews of the relevant data, not necessarily compatible
# with VCS tools and the like.
documentation = "https://github.com/mshrtsr/fitting-rs"
homepage = "https://github.com/mshrtsr/fitting-rs"
repository = "https://github.com/mshrtsr/fitting-rs"

# This points to a file under the package root (relative to this `Cargo.toml`).
# The contents of this file are stored and indexed in the registry.
# crates.io will render this file and place the result on the crate's page.
readme = "README.md"

# This is a list of up to five keywords that describe this crate. Keywords
# are searchable on crates.io, and you may choose any words that would
# help someone find this crate.
keywords = ["fitting","statistics","probability","distribution","math"]

# This is a list of up to five categories where this crate would fit.
# Categories are a fixed list available at crates.io/category_slugs, and
# they must match exactly.
categories = ["science"]

# This is an SPDX 2.1 license expression for this package. Currently
# crates.io will validate the license provided against a whitelist of
# known license and exception identifiers from the SPDX license list
# 2.4. Parentheses are not currently supported.
#
# Multiple licenses can be separated with a `/`, although that usage
# is deprecated. Instead, use a license expression with AND and OR
# operators to get more explicit semantics.
license = "MIT"

# If a package is using a nonstandard license, then this key may be specified in
# lieu of the above key and must point to a file relative to this manifest
# (similar to the readme key).
# license-file = "..."

exclude = ["/.github/*", "./circleci/*", "/.travis.yml"]

[badges]
circle-ci = { repository = "mshrtsr/fitting-rs", branch = "master" }
travis-ci = { repository = "mshrtsr/fitting-rs", branch = "master" }

# Codecov: `repository` is required. `branch` is optional; default is `master`
# `service` is optional; valid values are `github` (default), `bitbucket`, and
# `gitlab`.
codecov = { repository = "mshrtsr/fitting-rs", branch = "master", service = "github" }

# Maintenance: `status` is required. Available options are:
# - `actively-developed`: New features are being added and bugs are being fixed.
# - `passively-maintained`: There are no plans for new features, but the maintainer intends to
#   respond to issues that get filed.
# - `as-is`: The crate is feature complete, the maintainer does not intend to continue working on
#   it or providing support, but it works for the purposes it was designed for.
# - `experimental`: The author wants to share it with the community but is not intending to meet
#   anyone's particular use case.
# - `looking-for-maintainer`: The current maintainer would like to transfer the crate to someone
#   else.
# - `deprecated`: The maintainer does not recommend using this crate (the description of the crate
#   can describe why, there could be a better solution available or there could be problems with
#   the crate that the author does not want to fix).
# - `none`: Displays no badge on crates.io, since the maintainer has not chosen to specify
#   their intentions, potential crate users will need to investigate on their own.
maintenance = { status = "actively-developed" }

# See more keys and their definitions at https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/manifest.html

[dependencies]