Core Java™ 2: Volume I - Fundamentals
By Cay S. Horstmann, Gary Cornell
Publisher : Prentice Hall PTR
Pub Date : August 22, 2002
ISBN : 0-13-047177-1
Pages : 752
經典JAVA教程。
算法ebook(10部算法經典著作的合集) 算法ebook> 10部算法經典著作的合集 chm格式 (1)Fundamentals of Data Structures by Ellis Horowitz and Sartaj Sahni (2)Data Structures, Algorithms and Program Style Using C by James F. Korsh and Leonard J. Garrett (3)Data Structures and Algorithm Analysis in C by Mark Allen Weiss (4)Data Structures: From Arrays to Priority Queues by Wayne Amsbury (5)Information Retrieval: Data Structures & Algorithms edited by William B. Frakes and Ricardo Baeza-Yates (6)Introduction to Algorithms by Thomas H. Cormen, Charles E. Leiserson, and Ronald L. Rivest (7)Practical Data Structures in C++ by Bryan Flamig (8)Reliable Data Structures in C by Thomas Plum (9)Data Structures and Algorithms Alfred V. Aho, Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey John E. Hopcroft, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York Jeffrey D. Ullman, Stanford University, Stanford, California (10)DDJ Algorithms and Data Structures Articles
The goal of our final project was to design an efficient elevator simulator that can accept input from a user and mechanically operate (on a small scale) a system of 4 floors and 3 elevators using pulleys and stepper motors. Users enter input using physical pushbuttons or the computer. This input is then processed by the MCU and orders are given to the elevators. We attempted to devise an algorithm that can optimally handle any number of floors. This project seemed like a fun challenge and something that had practical applications. Both of us have been frustrated at times by the inefficiency of some of the elevators here at Cornell, and we wanted to see if we could do a better job.
Sensing in autonomous vehicles is a growing field due to a wide array of military and reconnaissance applications. The Adaptive Communications and Signals Processing Group (ACSP) research group at Cornell specializes in studying various aspects of autonomous vehicle control. Previously, ACSP has examined video sensing for autonomous control. Our goal is to build on their previous research to incorporate audio source tracking for autonomous control.