JavaServer Pages™ Specification
This document is intended for:
· Web Server and Application Server vendors that want to provide JSP containers that
conform to the Tag Extensions specification.
· Web Authoring Tool vendors that want to generate JSP pages that conform to the Tag
Extensions specification.
· Service providers that want to deliver functionality as tag libraries.
· Sophisticated JSP page authors that want to define new tag libraries for their use, or who
are responsible for creating tag libraries for the use of a group.
· Eager JSP page authors who do not want to or cannot wait for Web Authoring Tools, or
even a User’s Guide.
This document is not a User’s Guide, but it contains some positioning and explanatory
material.
This document is intended for consumption by:
• Web Server and Application Server vendors that want to provide Servlet Engines that conform
with this specification.
• Web Authoring Tool developers that want to generate Web Applications that conform to this
specification
• Sophisticated Servlet authors who want to understand the underlying mechanisms of Servlet
technology.
Please note that this specification is not a User’s Guide and is not intended to be used as such.
As science advances, novel experiments are becoming more and more complex, requiring a zoo of control devices and electronics executing complicated sequences of steps. Device availability and monetary constrains usually lead to a highly heterogeneous setup with components from several different manufacturers using many different protocols and interfacing mechanisms. This often results in control software being puzzled together to use and provide a multitude of interfacing and control functionality, each using their own calling conventions, data structures, etc. To make matters worse, usually a group of relatively independent programmers is trying to write and maintain the code base. Often this causes extensive duplication of effort as program segments are hard to reuse, since unpredictable changes to the segments by the original authors might compromise other code using these segments.
s file contains the Joone Distributed training Environment (DTE).
See http://www.jooneworld.com/docs/dte.html to learn more about it.
To learn more about Joone - Java Object Oriented Neural Engine: http://www.joone.org
Joone and the DTE are both released with the LGPL license
@2004 Paolo Marrone and the Joone team - All rights reserved
====================================================================
Credits
The Joone DTE uses the following external packages:
- SUN Jini Network Technology http://wwws.sun.com/software/jini/index.html
- Computefarm Framework http://computefarm.jini.org
- Spring Framework http://www.springframework.org
We want to thank all the authors and contributors of the above packages.
Please read the respective licenses contained in this distribution.
Proceedings of Practice of Interesting Algorithms 2007
The editor assumes no responsibility for the accuracy, completeness or usefulness of
the information disclosed in this volume. Unauthorized use might infringe on
privately owned patents of publication right. Please contact the individual authors for
permission to reprint or otherwise use information from their papers.
First edition 2007
Publication Planned by Prof. Wenxin Li
Edited by Yili Zhao
All rights reserved
by
Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Peking University
June 26, 2007
PHP Cookbook has a wealth of solutions for problems that you ll face regularly. With topics that range from beginner questions to advanced web programming techniques, this guide contains practical examples -- or "recipes" -- for anyone who uses this scripting language to generate dynamic web content. Updated for PHP 5, this book provides solutions that explain how to use the new language features in detail, including the vastly improved object-oriented capabilities and the new PDO data access extension. New sections on classes and objects are included, along with new material on processing XML, building web services with PHP, and working with SOAP/REST architectures. With each recipe, the authors include a discussion that explains the logic and concepts underlying the solution.
mastering dojo
The book really rolls out the red carpet for Dojo to emerge with guns
blazing! The authors show you how easy it is to use impressive
widgets without installing a thing. I was amazed to discover that
JavaScript is not just a toy language, how Dojo is built on top of it,
and how both are invaluable in any web development project. Buy
this book. It’s the next best thing to having the authors working at
your side.
mani: MANIfold learning demonstration GUI by Todd Wittman, Department of Mathematics, University of Minnesota E-mail wittman@math.umn.edu with comments & questions.
MANI Website: httP://www.math.umn.edu/~wittman/mani/index.html
Last Modified by GUIDE v2.5 10-Apr-2005 13:28:36
Methods obtained from various authors.
(1) MDS -- Michael Lee
(2) ISOMAP -- J. Tenenbaum, de Silva, & Langford
(3) LLE -- Sam Roweis & Lawrence Saul
(4) Hessian LLE -- D. Donoho & C. Grimes
(5) Laplacian -- M. Belkin & P. Niyogi
(6) Diffusion Map -- R. Coifman & S. Lafon
(7) LTSA -- Zhenyue Zhang & Hongyuan Zha
This book is designed to teach you the best practices in developing Windows DNA applications.
We have avoided making this book a primer on every technology associated with
Windows DNA. If we had followed this course, this would be an encyclopedia set.
Everyone has their favorite authors and books on the various technical subject areas. The
market is full of books to teach you the basics, the how, this book tries to be different in
that we pull out the important points to teach you about the why. If you need training in
a particular technology covered in this book, Sams has a number of 24-hour and 21-day
books that cover a wide range of topics.