· Develop clear, readable, well-documented and well-designed programs in the C Programming Language.
· Develop software in the Unix/Linux using tools such as gcc, gdb, and make.
· Locate and interpreting “man pages” applicable to application-level system programming.
· Use the POSIX/Unix API to system functions to manage process and sessions as well as use signals and pipes for inter-process communication.
· Understanding how synchronization might become problematic in light of concurrency.
· Understand how to communicate and cooperate with a project partner.
Welcome to the ASTA 3 Help Tutorials. These are documented tutorials that included new user jump start, to file sends to server techniques with non-database servers showing how to use Providers and ServerMethods. A Current version of these tutorials can always be found on line
These templates are based on the documented outlines from Tim Ryan s "The
Anatomy of a Design Document" articles (published on Gamasutra). The filler
text comes straight from the articles, and have been slightly edited for
clarity (and to use the British spelling NMP).
To read the articles (which I would highly suggest), check out these links:
http://www.gamasutra.com/features/19991019/ryan_01.htm -- Part 1
http://www.gamasutra.com/features/19991217/ryan_01.htm -- Part 2
JaNet: Java Neural Network Toolkit
resume: A well documented toolkit for designing and training, and a java library for inclusion in third party programs.
description: jaNet package is a java neural network toolkit, which you can use to design, test, train and optimize an ideal Neural Network for your private application. You can then include your saved network in your program using the jaNet.backprop package. The consequent documentation is only in french for the moment, but an english translation is planned. The java source code is released under GPL, and can be compiled with JDK, Symantec Cafe or MS Visual J
Abstract: The rapid build out of today's smart grid raises a number of security questions. In this article,we review two recent well-documented security breaches and a report of a security gap. These situationsinclude a 2009 smart-meter hack in Puerto Rico; a 2012 password discovery in grid distributionequipment; and insecure storage of a private key in distribution automation equipment. For each of theseattacks, we examine the breach, the potential threat, and secure silicon methods that, as part of acomplete security strategy, can help thwart the attacks.
This is a serial mouse driver, which is compliant with Plug and Play, supports dynamic detection (via serenum) and removal (either hotplug or via the device manager). The code serves as a sample for any serial-enumerable device. The behavior of the various routines is documented in the source code files.
A C++ N-grams Package 2.0
This is a simple C++ n-grams package that includes a header, the corresponding cpp file, and a sample driver program. It is a natural language processing tool for creating n-gram profiles for text documents. The details on usage is documented in the header right above each public function defined. This package is based on Dr. Vlado Keselj s Perl package Text::Ngrams which is available in CPAN.
The Java Cookbook is a comprehensive collection of problems, solutions, and practical
examples for anyone programming in Java. Developers will find hundreds of tried-andtrue
Java "recipes" covering all of the major APIs as well as some APIs that aren t as well
documented in other Java books.
SNVision Library (.dll).是法國SpikeNet公司的核心視覺分析軟件。
SNVision Library (.dll) is the true core of our technology. It is made of 50 fully documented functions for image processing and analysis. It is provided with "how to use" examples for the main programming languages. SNVision Library is the runtime module which enables you to include Spikenet Technology into your application
This LDPC software is intended as an introduction to LDPC codes computer based simulation. The pseudo-random irregular low density parity check matrix is based on Radford M. Neal’s programs collection, which can be found in [1]. While Neal’s collection is well documented, in my opinion, C source codes are still overwhelming, especially if you are not knowledgeable in C language. My software is written for MATLAB, which is more readable than C. You may also want to refer to another MATLAB based LDPC source codes in [2], which has different flavor of code-writing style (in fact Arun has error in his log-likelihood decoder).