CGAL is a collaborative effort of several sites in Europe and Israel. The goal is to make the most important of the solutions and methods developed in computational geometry available to users in industry and academia in a C++ library. The goal is to provide easy access to useful, reliable geometric algorithms
This algorithm was developed by Professor Ronald L. Rivest of MIT and can be found presented in several languages. What I provide to you here is a C++ derivative of the original C implementation of Professor Rivets. The library code itself is platform-independant and has been tested in Redhat Linux. I ve included the sample code and makefile that I used for the Linux test. The demo, however, was written with Visual C++ 6 on a Windows 2000 platform.
a Java program that reads a file containing instructions written in self-defined file (TPL in this case), and executes those instructions. This program should take the name of the TPL file as a command line parameter, and write its output to the console.
Complete support for EBNF notation; Object-oriented parser design; C++ output; Deterministic bottom-up "shift-reduce" parsing; SLR(1), LALR(1) and LR(1) table construction methods; Automatic parse tree creation; Possibility to output parse tree in XML format; Verbose conflict diagnostics; Generation of tree traverse procedures
ADO.NET in a Nutshell is the most complete and concise source of ADO.NET information available. Besides being a valuable reference, this book covers a variety of issues that programmers face when developing web applications or web services that rely on database access. Most examples use Microsoft s C# language. The book s CD includes an add-in to integrate the reference with Visual Studio .NET help files.
Setting up an ADOCE project using Visual C++ 6.0 is rather simple. Assuming that you have downloaded and installed the ADOCE SDK from Microsoft, you are ready to use it in your Windows CE Database applications. The sample that I have provided is a *very* simple one illustrating how to instantiate the proper COM objects, and the basics of how to interface with them (in a very simple example)
Small utility which calculates the difference in hours and seconds between a starting time and finish time. Useful for calculating payroll hours, overtime, etc. with C source code. Freeware.
XMDS is a code generator that integrates equations. You write them down in human readable form in a XML file, and it goes away and writes and compiles a C++ program that integrates those equations as fast as it can possibly be done in your architecture.
This directory contains code implementing the K-means algorithm. Source codemay be found in KMEANS.CPP. Sample data isfound in KM2.DAT. The KMEANSprogram accepts input consisting of vectors and calculates the givennumber of cluster centers using the K-means algorithm. Output isdirected to the screen.
This module defines safer C library string * * routine replacements. These are meant to make C * * a bit more safe in reference to security and * * robustness