Welcome - Ticalc.org Features programming tutorials, columns, news articles, and thousands of files for download. http://www.ticalc.org/
Extractions: Posted by Michael on 4 June 2004, 03:57 GMT Kirk Meyer of Detached Solutions has released a new flash application for the 83+/89/92+/V200: OurWorld. OurWorld is a world atlas that is fully zoomable and has political boundaries defined by 30,000 data points. There are also labels of countries, capitals, major cities, and lakes. The 83+ version uses a flat projection while the 89 version and 92+/V200 version use an orthographic projection for a globe-like appearance. It's also worth mentioning that this app won the grand prizes in the 2003 TI App Development Contest for both the Z80 and 68k divisions. Discuss (35 comments) Posted by Michael on 29 May 2004, 20:19 GMT We have reached yet another site milestone: Fifty thousand user accounts. Steve Taylor is the lucky owner of account #50000. Figuring approximately 100,000 posted comments, we're averaging two comments per user. We wish to thank you, the visitors, for our success. Hopefully we will reach 100,000 users in the future. Discuss (114 comments)
Mathematical Programming Glossary Glossary of keywords and phrases used in the field of optimization. http://www.cudenver.edu/~hgreenbe/glossary/glossary.html
Free C/C++ Libraries, Source Code And Frameworks(thefreecountry.com) A variety of free libraries, with or without source code, for accessing databases (with/without ODBC, SQL), encryption, graphics/images, compression, fonts, GUI's, 3D engines, 2D engines, and sockets programming. http://www.thefreecountry.com/developercity/freelib.html
Extractions: If you find this site useful, please link to us Here are some C and C++ libraries, DLLs, VCLs, source code, components, modules, application frameworks, class libraries, source code snippets, and the like, that you can use with your programs without payment of fees and royalties. Note that some libraries (etc) listed here may have certain restrictions about its use and/or distribution. Be sure you read the licence conditions in each package before using them. A few types of libraries have been moved to their own pages, due to the large number of items in those categories. Here are some of the other pages containing free libraries on this site: Free Compression and Archiving Libraries Free Database Libraries, SQL Servers, ODBC Drivers, and Tools
Programmingtutorials.com - Online Programming Tutorials Programmingtutorials.com is your online resource for learning to program using the .NET Framework, ASP.NET, C , C, C++, Java, J2EE, SQL, Perl, Web Services http://www.programmingtutorials.com/
Extractions: Sunday, June 06, 2004 ⢠Programming tutorials online .NET, Java, C++, and More Home .NET Framework ASP.NET C# ... Contact Us Download Site Code! Get Visual Studio! Your link to online programming tutorials Welcome to Programmingtutorials.com, your source for online tutorials. We hope you like our newly redesigned site! You will find over 300 programming language tutorials, lessons, and how-to's. You can surf through our collection of free online tutorials or read postings in one of our forums. Just choose the language you are interested in learning in the left nav, or use the drop downs below find a lesson and enjoy! We would like to welcome My Personal Programmer as our new site co-sponsor! My Personal Programmer is a great tool for learning early programming concepts. It's is designed for non-techies, as well as, beginning and intermediate programmers who want to learn or create an application without worrying about frustrating syntax. Try it today free for 30 days! Recent Forum Posting Posted By: POGI ( Saturday, June 05, 2004 12:18:00 AM
SearchPay Covers among other things, NASM assembler programming on the Linux i386 platform code, links, documents, comments. http://rocknpenguin.c2c2c.ca/linux-programming/?section=assembler
Top 10 Ways To Be Screwed By "C" The Top 10 Ways to get screwed by the C programming language. Infallible programmers, of the type unix and C designers anticipated, need read no further. http://www.andromeda.com/people/ddyer/topten.html
Extractions: Last modified Dec 1, 2003. To get on this list, a bug has to be able to cause at least half a day of futile head scratching, and has to be aggravated by the poor design of the "C" language. In the interests of equal time, and to see how the world has progressed in the 20-odd years since "C" escaped from its spawning ground, see my Top 10 Ways to be Screwed by the Java programming language , and for more general ways to wase a lot of time due to bad software, try my Adventures in Hell page. A better language would allow fallible programmers to be more productive. Infallible programmers, of the type unix' and "C" designers anticipated, need read no further. In fairness, I have to admit that the writers of compilers have improved on the situation in recent years, by detecting and warning about potentially bad code in many cases. Non-terminated comment , "accidentally" terminated by some subsequent comment, with the code in between swallowed. a=b; /* this is a bug
D Programming Language Compiled, garbage collected, simpler C++ replacement by Walter Bright (wrote first DOS C++ compiler). Goal maximum similarity to C/C++, except where backward compatibility gets in the way. Overview, specification, download. http://www.digitalmars.com/d/
Web Programming Topic Guide General guide to using CGI and other Webrelated programming with Python. http://www.python.org/topics/web/
Extractions: Home Search Download Documentation ... SIGs Web Home CGI Programming Basic CGI Fancy CGI Application Servers HTML ... Windows support Site Administration Site Management Web Applications Protocols HTTP Other Protocols Reference Resources Standards Email Us webmaster@python.org Python Software Foundation This Topic Guide covers Web-related programming with Python. This includes a wide spectrum of tasks, ranging from simple CGI programming, generating and parsing HTML and XML, writing HTTP clients and servers, all the way up to complete Web development environments such as Zope. CGI Programming Basic CGI programming If you're new to writing CGI scripts, or to writing them with Python, start by reading this page, which has links to documentation and tutorials. Fancy CGI modules Once you've mastered the basics of CGI programming, you may want to do more complicated tasks. There are various modules available for more complicated CGI tasks. Application Servers Application servers aim at providing a full environment for writing Web-based applications; several different systems have been written in Python. Graphics CGI scripts can do more than just output text; they can also output dynamically-generated graphics. Python has tools for generating images through scripts.
APC Frameset Page Offers data processing services for data conversion, data entry, direct mailings, custom programs and telephony. http://members.aol.com/apc68/
Extractions: This is not a specification for a programming language, but a description of the features which a programming language ought to have. From these, it should be easy for anyone to "fill in the blanks" from the features common to all programming language. Seentacks? We don't need no stinkin' Seentacks! Please excuse me while I take time out for a short rant. If you don't like rants, skip to the next section ASCII is a subset of the character set we use for written or printed language. At least, that some of us use - the Japanese, Russians, Arabs, and Greeks, to name but a few, have other ways of representing their language. But writing is just a way of representing spoken language (the very word language, from lingua , the Latin for tongue, reveals the background). The letters (with much allowance for the eccentric orthography of the English tongue) specify the sounds that are to be made, while the punctuation advises on the emphasis. But language was designed for human to communicate with human, not human with computer. Voice recognition is still a difficult problem for computers. And have you ever tried to read a computer program aloud? You can't - at least not in any language that I know. It is nearly impossible to convey to another human the meaning of even the simplest program, and requires curious contortions of emphasis which have little to do with the punctuation characters which actually break up the program.
Extreme Programming From A CMM Perspective Mark Paulk, one of the creators of the Capability Maturity Model (CMM) compares and contrasts XP and CMM. http://www.sei.cmu.edu/cmm/papers/xp-cmm-paper.pdf
Macrotech Resources for assembler and Delphi programming. http://www.macrotech.8m.com/
The Euphoria Programming Language Simple, flexible, surprisingly fast, interpreted, runs on 32bit DOS, Windows; FreeBSD, Linux; introduction, news, downloads (over 900 free user-contributed programs), fansite links, mailing list. Public Domain and commercial http://www.rapideuphoria.com/
Extractions: Search 58,000 posted messages Search 1,300 contributed programs Search the documentation Stop by the Euphoria Chat Room View This Site in Russian! Earn big bucks writing Euphoria programs The Latest User Contributions - Click title to download WIN Comment / un-comment macros for TextPad Rubem Pechansky Jun 4/04 These two macros are intended to use with TextPad, the excellent text editor from Helios Software Solutions. Use them to comment and un-comment multiple lines of Euphoria code at once. GEN Replacement print statement Derek Parnell Jun 3/04 GEN Tommy's Unicode Library 1.1
The Miranda Programming Language Overview of the language, areas of application and some sample programs. http://www.engin.umd.umich.edu/CIS/course.des/cis400/miranda/miranda.html
Extractions: TM Click below to go directly to a specific section: History Significant Language Features Areas of Application Sample Programs ... Acknowledgments Miranda was developed in 1985-86 by David Turner, and is now currently being marketed by Research Software Ltd. of England. Miranda was the successor of the functional languages SASL and KRC. With Miranda, the main goal was to produce a commercial version of a standard non-strict purely functional language. To make Miranda commercially viable, the development environment had to be made very flexible and easy-to-use. Miranda, A Non-Strict Purely Functional Language Non-Strict: In Non-Strict functional languages, the arguments to a function are not evaluated until they are actually required within the functions being called. Therefore, any parameter can be passed to a function and until it is needed in that function, this parameter is not evaluated. This is also known as lazy evaluation, and the main advantage of using this method is that it allows for passing infinite element data structures to a function. Purely Functional:
Practicum Structured Programming - Modula2 Exercises, tips, syntax reference, programs written in Modula2. Free University of Brussels. http://parallel.vub.ac.be/education/modula2/
The Multi-Paradigm Synchronous Programming Language LEA To program synchronous reactive systems, made by merging 3 existing synchronous languages (Lustre, Esterel, Argos) by uniform translation rules to a common intermediate format called Boolean automata. Paper, PDF format. http://www.ais.fraunhofer.de/~ap/papers/LEA.pdf
Extractions: Welcome to Uncanny Programming. This page contains various programming tutorials that the other pages never teach you. CSS, Active Channels, IE HTML, and Dynamic Fonts are some of the many cool programming tips that you will learn here, and virtually nowhere else. Check out the most recent programming tutorials below or search through the Programming Archive (yes, we do have more tutorials than the ones shown here). Do you love to write? Would writing a programming article for a major online resource interest you? If so, you could write an article for Uncanny Programming and get hits to your page in return. To get more info, contact ucprogramming@hotmail.com and tell him what type of article you have in mind! Now back to the most recent programming tutorials.... Come to this page looking for a good CSS tutorial? Well, NicNet, the creators of this page, have recently completed a new 7-step tutorial on Cascading Style Sheets. This tutorial is in-depth and shows you almost all of the features that can be done with CSS. An example of a popular CSS trick is that "cool MouseOver effect" that everyone asks me about.