RE: LDraw.org 2024-03 Parts Update Now Available
2024-05-27, 9:20 (This post was last modified: 2024-05-27, 9:42 by Johannes Schauer.)
2024-05-27, 9:20 (This post was last modified: 2024-05-27, 9:42 by Johannes Schauer.)
Hi,
for Debian I am only keeping those parts which are licensed under CC-BY-4.0. After removing all parts which are themselves still licensed under the old license or are using sub-parts under the old license, this release makes it possible to keep a whopping 83.76% of all parts! This is amazing, thank you!
In my old statistics I listed some heuristics about how the situation can be improved. As now more than 80% are available, I think we are getting into a territory where the parts library in Debian main becomes quite usable. But still some important parts are missing, like a simple 1x1 brick or 1x3 brick. So I came up with a better heuristic to identify remaining problems. How many *popular* parts (according to how inventory_parts.csv and part_relationships.csv from rebrickable.com) would converting a part or sub-part unlock? Here are the top 10:
The first column shows the (sub-)part. The second column the sum of popularity (how often the part is used in models according to rebrickable.com) and the list at the end of each line lists the actual parts blocked by the sub-part in the first column. You can see that brick 1x1 3005.dat is among the most popular parts and blocked by parts/s/3005s01.dat.
The most popular parts which are thus still missing are: 3005, 3622, 6636, 87580, 87087, 3008, 44728, 32054, 48336
Contact me if you would like to see more stats or have any questions. Thank you!
for Debian I am only keeping those parts which are licensed under CC-BY-4.0. After removing all parts which are themselves still licensed under the old license or are using sub-parts under the old license, this release makes it possible to keep a whopping 83.76% of all parts! This is amazing, thank you!
In my old statistics I listed some heuristics about how the situation can be improved. As now more than 80% are available, I think we are getting into a territory where the parts library in Debian main becomes quite usable. But still some important parts are missing, like a simple 1x1 brick or 1x3 brick. So I came up with a better heuristic to identify remaining problems. How many *popular* parts (according to how inventory_parts.csv and part_relationships.csv from rebrickable.com) would converting a part or sub-part unlock? Here are the top 10:
Code:
parts/s/3005s01.dat 81358 ['60476', '2921', '3005']
parts/s/3622s01.dat 25867 ['3622']
parts/s/6636s01.dat 18786 ['6636']
parts/3068b.dat 14009 ['87580', '6253']
parts/s/3008s01.dat 12064 ['3008']
p/beamhol2.dat 9219 ['2905', '32449', '11126', '32250', '32294', '11478', '2825', '32017', '32251']
parts/s/41770s01.dat 6922 ['41770', '41769']
parts/96910.dat 6635 ['99563']
p/wpin2a.dat 4699 ['2926', '30277', '4488', '30278c01', '65202', '2441', '4600', '21445', '2484c01', '18892', '24055']
parts/s/54383s01.dat 3593 ['54384', '54383']
The first column shows the (sub-)part. The second column the sum of popularity (how often the part is used in models according to rebrickable.com) and the list at the end of each line lists the actual parts blocked by the sub-part in the first column. You can see that brick 1x1 3005.dat is among the most popular parts and blocked by parts/s/3005s01.dat.
The most popular parts which are thus still missing are: 3005, 3622, 6636, 87580, 87087, 3008, 44728, 32054, 48336
Contact me if you would like to see more stats or have any questions. Thank you!