Digital Thermostat with High Accuracy
-6,00 to 46,00 °C
Digital Thermostat
we build a digital thermostat for home applications, which controls the room temperature. I
used the AT90S2313 microprocessor of ATMEL. The digital thermostat opens the main heating valve of
the apartment and the hot water flows in the radiators.
Digital Thermostat Board
If we have two individually sorted vectors "a" and "b" but they are not sorted with respect to each other and we want to merge them into vector "c" such that "c" is also a sorted vector. Then c=mergesorted(a,b) can be used.
In this paper, we describe the development of a mobile butterfly-watching learning (BWL)
system to realize outdoor independent learning for mobile learners. The mobile butterfly-watching
learning system was designed in a wireless mobile ad-hoc learning environment. This is first result
to provide a cognitive tool with supporting the independent learning by applying PDA with
wireless communication technology to extend learning outside of the classroom. Independent
learning consists of self-selection, self-determination, self-modification, and self-checking.
we often get questions about how the deflate() and inflate() functions should be used. Users wonder when they should provide more input, when they should use more output, what to do with a Z_BUF_ERROR, how to make sure the process terminates properly, and so on. So for those who have read zlib.h (a few times), and would like further edification, below is an annotated example in C of simple routines to compress and decompress from an input file to an output file using deflate() and inflate() respectively. The annotations are interspersed between lines of the code. So please read between the lines. we hope this helps explain some of the intricacies of zlib.
Zlib函數列表 we often get questions about how the deflate() and inflate() functions should be used. Users wonder when they should provide more input, when they should use more output, what to do with a Z_BUF_ERROR, how to make sure the process terminates properly, and so on. So for those who have read zlib.h (a few times), and would like further edification, below is an annotated example in C of simple routines to compress and decompress from an input file to an output file using deflate() and inflate() respectively. The annotations are interspersed between lines of the code. So please read between the lines. we hope this helps explain some of the intricacies of zlib.
《Prolog Programming in Depth》:
In this book, we emphasize practical Prolog programming, not just theory. we
present several ready-to-run expert system shells, as well as routines for sorting,searching, natural language processing, and even numerical equation solving.
we also emphasize interoperability with other software. For example, Chapter 5 presents techniques for reading Lotus spreadsheets and other special file formats from within a Prolog program.
In this report
we provide an overview of several closely related methods developed during the last few yers, to smooth, denoise,
edit, compress, transmit, and animate very large polygonal models.
we propose a simple and effective method for detecting view- and
scale-independent ridge-valley lines defined via first- and secondorder
curvature derivatives on shapes approximated by dense triangle
meshes.
In
this paper we propose to reduce the textural components by
modelling the coefficients of a wedgelet based regression tree
instead of the original pixel intensities