The ability to create groups of reports, and grant users access to reports by group. The ability to generate reports as PDF, XLS, HTML, and CSV files. The ability to generate bar, pie and xy charts for inclusion in reports. The ability to schedule and email PDF, XLS, and CSV reports. The ability to define reusable report parameters. Available parameter types include Date, Text, and Query Parameters. The ability to create multiple DataSources for use in generating reports. Support for JNDI DataSources and internal connection pooling via Commons-DBCP is included. The ability to upload and hot deploy new reports. Web based administration of users, groups, reports, parameters, and datasources. Cross platform database support via Hibernate based persistence layer. Available in a preconfigured bundle with Apache Tomcat.
Addressbook using double-linked list. This example shows the use of a double-linked list by implementing an addressbook for the console. It has features like inserting, searching(linear), sorting(bubble sort), deleting and load/save to a file. I wrote this during my study of Applied Computer Science so it s intended mainly for students who want to know about some advanced programming techniques in C. The Code was compiled with MSVC++ 6.0 but it should compile with any ANSI-compliant compiler.
This toolbox distributes processes over matlab workers available over the intranet/internet (SPMD or MPMD parallel model). It is very useful for corsely granular parallelization problems and in the precesence of a distributed and heterogeneus computer enviroment. No need for configuration files ! Cross platforms, cross OS and cross MATLAB versions. Workers can be added to the parallel computation even if it has started. No need of a common file system, all comms are using tcpip connections
Bochs is a highly portable open source IA-32 (x86) PC emulator
written in C++, that runs on most popular platforms. It includes
emulation of the Intel x86 CPU, common I/O devices, and a custom
BIOS. Currently, Bochs can be compiled to emulate a 386, 486,
Pentium, Pentium Pro or AMD64 CPU, including optional MMX, SSE,
SSE2 and 3DNow! instructions. Bochs is capable of running most
Operating Systems inside the emulation including Linux, DOS,
Windows 95/98 and Windows NT/2000.
Bochs was written by Kevin Lawton and is currently maintained by
the Bochs project at "http://bochs.sourceforge.net".
The traffic light is timed and lets cars pass during a
specific time period. There is a pedestrial crossing
button that lets pedestrians cross. The lights are
connected to Port 1. You can see this in action using
dScope.
The Small C compiler translates a subset of the C language into
assembly language. It runs under PC/MS-DOS 2.1 and later. Small
C is compatible with the Microsoft and Small Mac assemblers.
Small C takes full advantage of the ability of these assemblers
to generate relocatable object code, to maintain libraries of
relocatable modules, and to link separately compiled program
modules. It supports a small memory model with one code and one
data/stack segment.
In the ffuart.tar.gz it has one file.
The serial.c is the source codes of the FFUART as a console port, it should be put into the directory: /usr/src/linux/drivers/char/, and be compiled into the kernel.
The program SPLAY is a pascal to C translation of a program that
Kim Kokkonen wrote in Turbo Pascal to implement Splay Trees.
This program compresses and decompresses files, and does a pretty good
job of it.
Contents:
SPLAY.PAS Original TP source code
SPLAY.C Translation of code to C
SPLAY.EXE Compiled version of SPLAY.C (small model)
README.DOC You are looking at it
Read the comments at the beginning of SPLAY.C for more info.
This companion disc contains the source code for the sample
programs presented in INSIDE VISUAL C++ 5.0, as well as pre-
compiled copies of the programs.
To copy all of the sample code onto your hard disk, run the
SETUP.EXE program and follow the instructions that appear on
the screen. The sample code requires about 10 MB of hard disk
space.
graspForth is my humble attempt at a Forth-in-C that has the following goals:
GCC ......... to support all 32-bit micros that GCC cross-compiles to.
Relocatable . to be able to run in-place in either Flash or Ram.
Fast ........ to be "not much" slower than an assembly based native Forth.
Small ....... to fit-in approx 300 words in less than 25Kbytes on a 32-bit machine.
Portable .... to achieve a 5 minute port to a new 32bit micro-processor, or micro-controller.