Lhasa (computing)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In computing, Lhasa, pronounced rasa (IPA: /ɾasa/) in Japanese, is a Japanese computer program used to decompress compressed files in LHA, ZIP, and other formats.
It is also the name of a computer program developed in the research group of Elias James Corey at the Harvard University Department of Chemistry which uses AI techniques to discover sequences of reactions which may be used to synthesize a compound. LHASA in this case is an acronym for Logic and Heuristics Applied to Synthetic Analysis. This program was one of the first to use a graphical interface to input and display chemical structures.
[edit] External links
- Susie no heya — homepage of the author of Lhasa (in Japanese)
- LHASA group homepage — homepage of the LHASA group at Harvard University