Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_J - J Programming
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 199    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         J Programming:     more books (100)
  1. Bluetooth Application Programming with the Java APIs Essentials Edition (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Networking) (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Networking) by Timothy J. Thompson, C Bala Kumar, et all 2008-02-15
  2. Parallel Programming in C with MPI and OpenMP by Michael J. Quinn, 2003-06-05
  3. Introduction To Programming with Visual Basic .net by Gary J. Bronson, David Rosenthal, 2004-12-30
  4. Crash Course in C (Programming series) by Paul J. Perry, 1993-01
  5. Multithreading Programming Techniques (J. Ranade Workstation Series) by Shashi Prasad, 1997-01
  6. Ado .Net Programming (Wordware Programming Library) by Terrence J. Joubert, Ryan N. Payet, 2002-08
  7. Ruby Programming for Medicine and Biology (Jones and Bartlett Series in Biomedical Informatics) by Jules J. Berman, 2007-09-13
  8. Introduction to Functional Programming Systems Using Haskell (Cambridge Computer Science Texts) by Antony J. T. Davie, 1992-06-26
  9. Systems Programming (McGraw-Hill computer science series) by John J. Donovan, 1972-03
  10. Programming with Constraints: An Introduction by Kim Marriott, Peter J. Stuckey, 1998-03-13
  11. Graphics Programming Solutions (J. Ranade Workstation Series/Book and Disk) by Julio Sanchez, Maria P. Canton, 1992-12
  12. An Introduction to Programming with Mathematica, Third Edition by Paul R. Wellin, Richard J. Gaylord, et all 2005-01-31
  13. Decomposition Techniques in Mathematical Programming: Engineering and Science Applications by Antonio .J. Conejo, Enrique Castillo, et all 2006-04-10
  14. Complete Internet and World Wide Web Programming Training Course, The (2nd Edition) (Prentice Hall Complete Training Courses) by Harvey M. Deitel, Paul J. Deitel, et all 2001-11-30

41. Genetic-programming.org-Home-Page
A definitive source of information about the field of genetic programming with links and conferences.
http://www.genetic-programming.org/
Welcome to
www.genetic-programming.org
a source of information about the field of genetic programming and the field of genetic and evolutionary computation)
Genetic programming (GP) is an automated method for creating a working computer program from a high-level problem statement of a problem. Genetic programming starts from a high-level statement of “what needs to be done” and automatically creates a computer program to solve the problem. There are now 36 instances where genetic programming has automatically produced a result that is competitive with human performance , including 15 instances where genetic programming has created an entity that either infringes or duplicates the functionality of a previously patented 20 th -century invention, 6 instances where genetic programming has done the same with respect to a 21 st -centry invention, and 2 instances where genetic programming has created a patentable new invention. Given these results, we say that “Genetic programming now routinely delivers high-return human-competitive machine intelligence ” Click here for our definitions of “human-competitive,”

42. Functional Programming, J, And Mathematical Notation
Functional programming, J, and Mathematical Notation.
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~jhowland/math-talk/functional/
Functional Programming, J, and Mathematical Notation
John E. Howland
Department of Computer Science
Trinity University
715 Stadium Drive
San Antonio, Texas 78212-7200
Voice: (210) 999-7364
Fax: (210) 999-7477
E-mail: jhowland@Ariel.CS.Trinity.Edu
Web: http://WWW.CS.Trinity.Edu/~jhowland/
Abstract:
A brief introduction to functional programming is given using the J programming language for examples. Several examples show the expressive power of functional languages and their application to topics in mathematics. Use of the J language as a substitute for mathematical notation is discussed. Subject Areas: Functional Programming, J Programming Language. Keywords: Functional Programming, J Programming Lanugage.
1 Introduction
A computer is a mechanism for interpreting a language. Computers interpret (perform the actions specified in) sentences in a language which is known as the computer's machine language. It follows, therefore, that a study of the organization of computers is related to the study of the organization of computer languages. Computer languages are classified in a variety of ways. Machine languages are rather directly interpreted by computers. Higher level computer languages are often somewhat independent from a particular computer and require translation (compilation) to machine language before programs may be interpreted (executed). Languages are also classified as being

43. SIGAda WWW Server Home Page
ACM Special Interest Group on Ada information on SIGAda organization and pointers to current information and resources for the Ada programming language.
http://www.acm.org/sigada/
Welcome to the World Wide Web Home Page for ACM SIGAda the S pecial I nterest G roup on Ada Here you'll find information on the SIGAda organization and pointers to current information and resources for the Ada programming language. New! SIGAda / ARA
Ada Employment Opportunities Database
New! A CGI application written completely in Ada SIGAda 2005
http://www.acm.org/conf/sigada2005/
Atlanta, Georgia
13-17 November 2005
Sponsored by ACM SIGAda Ada is also featured at the
1-4 May 2006 at Salt Lake City, Utah, USA and at the 11th International Conference on Reliable Software Technologies
Ada-Europe'2006

5-9 June 2006 at Porto, Portugal
Ada Awareness
Ada Community

Ada FAQs

Basic Information
... Ada Letters (SIGAda's quarterly publication) Purchase SIGAda Proceedings at ACM's e-store
Basic Information
Ada 95 Standard PDF (2,334 KBytes) Zip HTML (1,068 KBytes) Zip Text (427 KBytes) Ada 95 Rationale Zip PostScript (843 KBytes) Zip HTML (444 KBytes) Zip Text (408 KBytes) Learning Ada 95 What is Ada? Ada 95 Amendment 1 (future Ada 2005)
Ada FAQs
AdaPower FAQ comp.lang.ada

44. NLP (Neuro-Linguistic Programming) & DHE (Design Human Engineering)
Collection of articles, information, and resource hotlinks.
http://www.nlpschedule.com/
NLP and DHE General Information

Introducing
NLP
Intro to NLP

NLP Definition

NLP Books
NLP Tapes
...
NLP Training

NLP was developed in the mid-70s by John Grinder , a Professor at UC Santa Cruz and Richard Bandler , a graduate student. NLP, as most people use the term today, is a set of models of how communication impacts and is impacted by subjective experience . It's more a collection of tools than any overarching theory. Much of early NLP was based on the work of Virginia Satir , a family therapist; Fritz Perls , founder of Gestalt therapy; Gregory Bateson , anthropologist; and Milton Erickson , hypnotist. - Stever Robbins, NLP Trainer
Since 1993, this site has been the Internet's oldest site about Neuro-Linguistic Programming Design Human Engineering
NLPschedule.com features the most comprehensive calendar of training schedules on the web as well as an extensive database of practitioners and trainers seminar and book reviews articles , and much more. Enjoy!

45. Citations Programming Tools And Environments - Saltz, Sussman
Saltz J, Sussman A, Graham S, Demmel J, Baden S, Dongarra J. programming toolsand environments. Communications of the ACM 1998; 41(11)6473.
http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/context/1724694/0

46. Learn To Program Using Python: A Tutorial For Hobbyists, Self-Starters, And All
By Alan Gauld; Addison Wesley Professional, 2001, ISBN 0201709384, has CDROM. Introduction for those learning programming basics terminology, concepts, methods to write code. Assumes no prior knowledge but basic computer skills, unintimidating, clearly written. Addison Wesley
http://www.aw.com/catalog/academic/product/1,4096,0201709384,00.html
Select a Discipline Chemistry Computer Science Economics Finance Life Science Mathematics Physics / Astronomy Statistics by Keyword by Author by Title by ISBN Advanced Search View Cart ABOUT THIS PRODUCT Description Table of Contents Features Appropriate Courses Preface ... About the Author(s) RESOURCES Discipline-Specific RELATED TITLES Other LanguagesProgramming (Computer Science) Learn to Program Using Python: A Tutorial for Hobbyists, Self-Starters, and All Who Want to Learn the Art of Computer Programming View Larger Image Alan Gauld
ISBN: 0-201-70938-4
Publisher: Addison Wesley Professional
Format: Paper; 288 pp
Our Price: $32.95
Status: Instock
Published: 12/08/2000
Add to Cart Instructor Exam Copy Print Product Information Description This book is an ideal starting point for students learning the essentials of computer programming. Assuming no prior knowledge (other than basic computer operation), this unintimidating and clearly written guide introduces the student to programming terminology, fundamental concepts, and techniques for writing actual code. Python is ideal for novice programmers: it is available for free; it has simple syntax but powerful features; it supports lots of programming styles; it runs on many platforms; it has a friendly and helpful user community. Using the Python language to teach the fundamentals of computer programming, the book introduces elements of programming style and offers a look at the thinking and steps involved in designing a software solution. Several sample applications illustrate techniques and ideas in action.

47. Citations Programming In Ada - Barnes (ResearchIndex)
Barnes J. programming in Ada 95 (1st edn). AddisonWesley Reading, MA, 1995 . J. Barnes. programming in Ada 95, first edition. Addison Wesley, 1995.
http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/context/36555/0

48. Welcome To Kutztown University: Missing Page
Learn to program in the C computer language with many examples, and explanations.
http://www.kutztown.edu/~mant2494/Cindex.htm

Tell a Friend About KU!

Missing Page
Sorry! The file/page that you requested was either missing or unavailable.
Try our Search below to find what you need.
Match All Any term in Search Index: [ All ] www.kutztown.edu
Search with Quick Clicks About the Town Academic Year Calendar Academics Administrative Offices Admissions Alumni Center Apply Online Arts Athletics Bookstore Campus Tour/Map Career Services Computing Cultural Events Dining Services Lifelong Learning FAQs Financial Aid For Parents Graduate Studies Honors Program Housing and Residence Life Information Technology Location/Directions People and Place Finder Registrar's Office SBDC Student Life Summer Session Courses Tuition Undergraduate Catalog
Member of Pennsylvania's State System of Higher Education
Send comments to: webmaster@kutztown.edu

49. Mathematical Programming Glossary
This contains terms specific to mathematical programming, and some terms from Copyright© 1996 – 2005, Mathematical programming Glossary, by Harvey J.
http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~hgreenbe/glossary/index.php
Mathematical Programming Glossary Mirror at University of Waterloo (thanks to Henry Wolkowicz). Our Father, George B. Dantzig , died May 13, 2005. This contains terms specific to mathematical programming, and some terms from other disciplines, notably economics, computer science, and mathematics, that are directly related. Morality code You should look at the added information about this glossary, especially if this is your first time here. You will see Dictionaries, How to cite this glossary, and How you can contribute . When jumping to an entry (by clicking on the link), you should find that entry on your screen (usually at the top, but it depends on your browser). If you do not, please report that to me (click on my name above). In any case, you will be in the file of that letter. For example, if you click on Lagrangian, you will be in the L file (entries that begin with L). At the bottom of each file, you will find a link to Notation that will appear in the second window. The following are of general interest (you should read them if this is your first time here).

50. D Programming Language
Compiled, garbage collected, simpler C/C++ replacement by Walter Bright (wrote first DOS C++ compiler). Maximum similarity to C/C++, except where backward compatibility hurts. Overview, specification, download. Digital Mars
http://www.digitalmars.com/d/
Home Search D Last update Thu May 19 2005 D Language Phobos Comparisons ...
Acknowledgements

Tools
DMD D Compiler

GDC D Compiler

Linker

Profiler

Community
News Digest

News

Forum
Announcements ... D links Archives digitalmars.D digitalmars.D.dtl digitalmars.D.announce digitalmars.D.learn ... Old D
D Programming Language
"It seems to me that most of the "new" programming languages fall into one of two categories: Those from academia with radical new paradigms and those from large corporations with a focus on RAD and the web. Maybe it's time for a new language born out of practical experience implementing compilers." Michael "Great, just what I need.. another D in programming." Segfault This is the reference document for the D programming language. D was conceived in December 1999 by Walter Bright as a reengineering of C and C++, and has grown and evolved with helpful suggestions and critiques by friends and colleagues. Check out the quick comparison of D with C, C++, C# and Java. The D newsgroup in news.digitalmars.com server is where discussions of this should go. Suggestions, criticism, kudos, flames, etc., are all welcome there. Alternatively, try the D forum . There also may be a local D user group in your community (or you can start one!).

51. Mathematical Programming Glossary
Professor Harvey J. Greenberg Mathematics Department Campus Box 170 Copyright© 1996 – 2005, Mathematical programming Glossary, by Harvey J. Greenberg.
http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~hgreenbe/glossary/index.php?page=contact.htm

52. The Unlambda Programming Language
Minimalistic functional language based on the Lambda calculus but lacking the Lambda operator. Tutorial, reference, GPLed interpreters available.
http://www.eleves.ens.fr:8080/home/madore/programs/unlambda/
The Unlambda Programming Language
Unlambda: Your Functional Programming Language Nightmares Come True
Table of contents
  • What's New in Unlambda World? Introduction
    What's New in Unlambda World?
    (If you don't know what Unlambda is, skip this section and move directly to the introduction below.) [2001/08] This page is being revised in preparation of the Unlambda 3 distribution.
    Introduction
    CyberTabloid Computer Languages Today The Hitch-Hacker's Guide to Programming
    What is Unlambda?
    Unlambda is a programming language. Nothing remarkable there. The originality of Unlambda is that it stands as the unexpected intersection of two marginal families of languages:
    • Obfuscated programming languages, of which the canonical representative is Intercal . This means that the language was deliberately built to make programming painful and difficult (i.e. fun and challenging). Functional programming languages, of which the canonical representative is Scheme (a Lisp dialect). This means that the basic object manipulated by the language (and indeed the

53. Why Functional Programming Matters
John Hughes paper, dates from 1984, circulated as a Chalmers memo.
http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~rjmh/Papers/whyfp.html
Why Functional Programming Matters
John Hughes
This paper dates from 1984, and circulated as a Chalmers memo for many years. Slightly revised versions appeared in 1989 and 1990 in the Computer Journal and the Year of Programming. This version is based on the original Chalmers memo nroff source, lightly edited for LaTeX and to bring it closer to the published versions. Please excuse the slightly old-fashioned type-setting, and the fact that the examples are not in Haskell!
Abstract
As software becomes more and more complex, it is more and more important to structure it well. Well-structured software is easy to write, easy to debug, and provides a collection of modules that can be re-used to reduce future programming costs. Conventional languages place conceptual limits on the way problems can be modularised. Functional languages push those limits back. In this paper we show that two features of functional languages in particular, higher-order functions and lazy evaluation, can contribute greatly to modularity. As examples, we manipulate lists and trees, program several numerical algorithms, and implement the alpha-beta heuristic (an algorithm from Artificial Intelligence used in game-playing programs). Since modularity is the key to successful programming, functional languages are vitally important to the real world. The paper is available as postscript and pdf , and here is a bibtex entry. There is even a

54. Advanced Programming Languages
Useful links about programming languages. Describes the syntax and semantics of programming.
http://lsi.uniovi.es/~labra/APL.html
Advanced Programming Languages
by Jose Emilio Labra Gayo Table of Contents
  • Introduction Research Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
    This page collects my personal links in the field of Programming Languages . At first, it was devoted to functional programming . Now, I am very interested in the expressiveness of programming languages in general. With the term advanced I mean that it is oriented to researchers on programming languages I would like to add a personal comment to each link, but sometimes, I prefer to leave it blank than to include a meaningless comment. Of course, this page will always be under construction. You can contact me ( labra@lsi.uniovi.es ) for any comment or suggestion.
    Research
    Resources for Programming Language Research The Computing Research Repository (CoRR)
    A general repository of research material that contains an item about Programming Languages
    Programming Language Research , by M. Leone

    55. Java Programming, Main Index
    A free Java programming textbook by David J. Eck, available for use online andfor downloading.
    http://math.hws.edu/javanotes/
    Please Note: This is the Fourth Edition of this textbook. Many applets in this version require Java 1.3 or higher.
    The Third Edition, which only requires Java 1.1, is still available at:
    http://math.hws.edu/eck/cs124/javanotes3/
    Introduction to Programming Using Java
    Version 4.1, June 2004
    (With minor changes from Version 4.0 of July 2002)
    Author: David J. Eck eck@hws.edu
    W ELCOME TO Introduction to Programming Using Java, the fourth edition of a free, on-line textbook on introductory programming, which uses Java as the language of instruction. Previous versions have been used as a textbook for an introductory programming class at Hobart and William Smith Colleges. See http://math.hws.edu/eck/cs124/ for information about this course. This on-line book contains Java applets, many of which require Java 1.3 or higher. To see these applets, you will need a Web browser that uses a recent version of Java. To learn more, please read the preface Links for downloading copies of this text can be found at the bottom of this page. Search this Text: Although this book does not have a conventional index, you can search it for terms that interest you. Note that this feature searches the book at its on-line site, so you must be working on-line to use it.

    56. Designing And Testing New Programming Constructs In A Data Flow VL
    article by Elena Ghittori, Mauro Mosconi, Marco Porta
    http://iride.unipv.it/research/papers/98tr-dataflow/usabilit.htm
    Designing and Testing new Programming Constructs in a Data Flow VL
    Elena Ghittori - Mauro Mosconi - Marco Porta
    Via Ferrata, 1 - 27100 - Pavia - Italy
    mauro@ipvvis.unipv.it porta@ipvvis.unipv.it
    Technical Report
    Abstract
    A powerful and useful Data-Flow Visual Programming Language (DFVPL) must provide the necessary programming constructs to deal with complex problems. The main purpose of this paper is to give a contribution to the debate on DFVPL constructs by presenting the solutions we devised for the VIPERS language. Another purpose of the paper is to illustrate the methodology we developed in order to start a comparative usability study for different implementations of control flow constructs. We stress the features of this original methodology, which is effective, easy to implement in different working contexts (even remote ones), and which gave us interesting clues about the way people inspect visual programs.
    1. Introduction

    57. David J. Eck
    Java programming language. The textbook for the course will be the free eBookIntroduction to programming Using Java, which
    http://math.hws.edu/eck/
    David J. Eck
    (Ph.D. in Mathematics, Brandeis University Department of Mathematics and Computer Science Hobart and William Smith Colleges Geneva, New York 14456 Office: Lansing 301 Phone: (315)781-3398 Fax: (315)781-3860 E-mail: eck@hws.edu
    Courses That I Teach
    For Fall 2005, I will be teaching: CPSC 124: Introductory Programming
    You can visit the course handout and web site for this course.
    This is a first course in computer programming. It uses the
    Java programming language. The textbook for the course will be
    the free eBook Introduction to Programming Using Java , which
    is available on-line at the address http://math.hws.edu/javanotes/
    We will cover most of Chapters 1 through 8 of this book, along
    with a few selected topics from later chapters. Math 375: Abstract Algebra I
    You can visit the course handout and web site for this course.
    Abstract Algebra is one of the core fields of theoretical
    mathematics. This course is an introduction to the part of abstract algebra known as group theory , plus a very short introduction to rings and fields . The textbook for the course will be Abstract Algebra: A First Course , by Dan Saracino (ISBN 0-88133-665-3).

    58. EME Internet Services Include Web Design, Fast Page Updating And Maintenance, Do
    Offers setting up of Internet servers, domain registration, shopping carts with secure credit card facilities and database implementation.
    http://www.eme.com.au/

    Domain Names

    Server Prices

    On-Line Store Facilities

    Programming Services
    ...
    Website Maintenance

    For collectors of coins, banknotes, stamps, tokens and other collectables Australasian Numismatic Dealers Association
    Crisis management
    and campaign strategies
    Community relations
    Government relations Entertainment Event management Wilkinson Media Our Services EME Internet Services provides high quality, low cost web sites for businesses, associations and organisations. Our range includes private member sites, e-commerce (on-line shopping), database driven sites and simple information sites. We also offer assistance with mailouts, web page updates and other aspects pertaining to the web site. We do not allow our sites to be used for pornography or for any other purposes which are not allowed by law in Australia.

    59. Perlisisms - Epigrams In Programming By Alan J. Perlis
    A programming language is low level when its programs require attention to the A language that doesn t affect the way you think about programming,
    http://www.cs.yale.edu/quotes.html
    EPIGRAMS IN PROGRAMMING
    1. One man's constant is another man's variable. 2. Functions delay binding; data structures induce binding. Moral: Structure data late in the programming process. 3. Syntactic sugar causes cancer of the semicolon. 4. Every program is a part of some other program and rarely fits. 5. If a program manipulates a large amount of data, it does so in a small number of ways. 6. Symmetry is a complexity-reducing concept (co-routines include subroutines); seek it everywhere. 7. It is easier to write an incorrect program than understand a correct one. 8. A programming language is low level when its programs require attention to the irrelevant. 9. It is better to have 100 functions operate on one data structure than 10 functions on 10 data structures. 10. Get into a rut early: Do the same process the same way. Accumulate idioms. Standardize. The only difference(!) between Shakespeare and you was the size of his idiom list - not the size of his vocabulary. 11. If you have a procedure with ten parameters, you probably missed some. 12. Recursion is the root of computation since it trades description for time.

    60. GRAPE - Graphics Programming Environment
    A package for mathematical visualization, particularly in the fields of differential geometry and continuum mechanics. Available free by FTP but only to university departments and similiar research sites and only for nonprofit purposes.
    http://www-sfb256.iam.uni-bonn.de/grape/
    GRAPE - Graphics Programming Environment
    Welcome to the GRAPE information pages. GRAPE is a package for mathematical visualization. It has been particularly effective in the fields of differential geometry and continuum mechanics. But it will probably help to understand any other problem involving the numerics of partial differential equations or the need of advanced three-dimensional computer graphics. GRAPE is developed and distributed by the in cooperation with the Please feel free to use any of the services offered. If there is any information you still need, please don't hesitate to send us e-mail (see bottom of page for address). As part of the software development is done at the , we strongly recommend that you take a look at their World Wide Web server ( GRAPE in Freiburg ), too.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 199    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20

    free hit counter