Eclipse is the leading Integrated Development envirOnment
(IDE) for Java, with a rich ecosystem of plug-ins and an open
source framework that supports other languages and projects.
You’ll fnd this reference card useful for getting started with
Eclipse and exploring the breadth of its features.
We rundown the Eclipse distributions and confguration
options, then guide you through Views, Editors, and Perspec-
tives in Workbench 101. We list the top shortcuts and toolbar
actions for everyday development. And, we provide a guide to
the best places for fnding plug-ins and getting involved with
the Eclipse community.
The Fuzzy Logic Toolbox™ product extends the MATLAB® technical computing envirOnment with tools for designing systems based on fuzzy logic. Graphical user interfaces (GUIs) guide you through the steps of fuzzy inference system design. Functions are provided for many common fuzzy logic methods, including fuzzy clustering and adaptive neurofuzzy learning.
The PMAC Executive Program for the IBM PC and compatibles is a host program envirOnment for the PMAC controller, intended as a development tool in creating PMAC applications. It provides a terminal emulator, a text editor for writing and editing PMAC motion and PLC programs, a screen to jog motors, extensive tuning utilities, plotting capabilities, and various special screens for viewing various PMAC variables and status registers.
This document specifies a collection of compiler directives, library routines, and
envirOnment variables that can be used to specify shared-memory parallelism in C, C++
and Fortran programs. This functionality collectively defines the specification of the
OpenMP Application Program Interface (OpenMP API). This specification provides a
model for parallel programming that is portable across shared memory architectures
from different vendors. Compilers from numerous vendors support the OpenMP API.
More information about OpenMP can be found at the following web site:
A java based programming envirOnment - processing - free from processing.org.
here it uses a free library - OpenCV - to detect blobs in a live video capture - some parts like - hands or head or the entire human are evidenced through some visual effects.