public marks

PUBLIC MARKS from jpcaruana with tag programmation

August 2009

scala-migrations - Project Hosting on Google Code

(via)
Scala Migrations is a library to manage upgrades and rollbacks to database schemas. Migrations allow a source control system to manage together the database schema and the code using the schema. It is designed to allow multiple developers working on a project with a database backend to design schema modifications independently, apply the migrations to their local database for debugging and when complete, check them into a source control system to manage as one manages normal source code. Other developers then check out the new migrations and apply them to their local database. Finally, the migrations are used to migrate the production databases to the latest schema version. The Scala Migrations library is written in Scala and makes use of the clean Scala language to write easy to understand migrations, which are also written in Scala. Scala Migrations provides a database abstraction layer that allows migrations to target any supported database vendor.

July 2009

osmos - Google Code

(via)
Osmos provides on-disk ordered key-value tables for Erlang, based on a sort-merge machine with user-defined merging semantics. This allows a very high volume of updates to be handled efficiently while still supporting a variety of useful operations with transactional safety, e.g., adding to a counter, taking the union of sets, or simply replacing a record. Osmos is ideal for situations where updates are much more frequent than queries, for example, collecting statistics for reporting, and periodically generating reports.

June 2009

Erik Engbrecht's Blog: Pondering Actor Design Trades

(via)
# Why is the standard Scala actor implementation so complex when others have done it in a such simpler fashion? # Is it better to have one, big actor library that supports a wide variety of use cases, or a bunch of smaller ones targeted at specific niches and programming styles? # If there are to be a bunch, should they just be conceptually similar (e.g. all based on the actor model), or should there be interoperability among them?

scalacheck - Google Code

ScalaCheck is a powerful tool for automatic unit testing of Scala and Java programs. It features automatic test case generation and minimization of failing test cases. ScalaCheck started out as a Scala port of the Haskell library QuickCheck, and has since evolved and been extended with features not found in Haskell QuickCheck.

ScalaTest

ScalaTest is a free, open-source testing tool for Scala and Java programmers. It is written in Scala, and enables you to write tests in Scala to test either Scala or Java code. It is released under the Apache 2.0 open source license.

CodeProject: Designing And Implementing A Neural Network Library For Handwriting Detection, Image Analysis etc.- The BrainNet Library - Full Code, Simplified Theory, Full Illustration, And Examples. Free source code and programming help

(via)
This article will explain the actual concepts of Backward Propagation Neural Networks - in such a way that even a person with zero knowledge in neural networks can understand the required theory and concepts very easily. The related project demonstrates the designing and implementation of a fully working 'BackProp' Neural Network library, i.e, the Brain Net library as I call it. You can find the theory, illustration and concepts here - along with the explanation of the neural network library project - in this article. Also, find the full source code of the library and related demo projects (a simple pattern detector, a hand writing detection pad, an xml based neural network processing language etc) in the associated zip file.

Stack Overflow

by 11 others
Stack Overflow is a collaboratively edited question and answer site for programmers – regardless of platform or language. It's 100% free, no registration required.

The Pragmatic Bookshelf | Programming Scala

(via)
Scala is an exciting, modern, multi-paradigm language for the JVM. You can use it to write traditional, imperative, object-oriented code. But you can also leverage its higher level of abstraction to take full advantage of modern, multicore systems. Programming Scala will show you how to use this powerful functional programming language to create highly scalable, highly concurrent applications on the Java Platform.

The Scala Programming Language

by 3 others
Scala is a general purpose programming language designed to express common programming patterns in a concise, elegant, and type-safe way. It smoothly integrates features of object-oriented and functional languages, enabling Java and other programmers to be more productive. Code sizes are typically reduced by a factor of two to three when compared to an equivalent Java application

flatula - Google Code

flatula is a simple "write-once" database for Erlang that provides an easy way to remember a piece of data, then look it up later using a compact identifier. See FlatulaHowTo for a brief introduction and tutorial.

mochiweb - Google Code

by 1 other (via)
MochiWeb is an Erlang library for building lightweight HTTP servers.

jpcaruana's TAGS related to tag programmation

agile +   ajax +   amazon +   anti pattern +   apps +   arc +   backup +   bdd +   bench +   blog +   bottle +   build +   concurrent +   copinage +   css +   design +   doc +   docbook +   ebook +   EC2 +   eclipse +   Erlang +   extension +   firefox +   fit +   flask +   flickr +   fonctionnelle +   freeware +   fun +   geekeries +   go +   good practices +   google +   Grails +   gratuit +   haskell +   html5 +   hype +   iphone +   java +   java7 +   javadoc +   javascript +   jQuery +   json +   JUnit +   latex +   le futur est en marche +   libre +   lift +   linux +   lisp +   livre +   mac +   map reduce +   maven +   media-queries +   monde2merde +   moo +   music +   NoSQL +   open source +   otp +   perl +   photographie +   podcast +   python +   rake +   redis +   regex +   ruby +   ruby on rails +   s3 +   sbt +   Scala +   sip +   site hosting +   social +   spring +   stats +   struts +   svn +   system +   tdd +   tips +   tutoriaux +   twitter +   video +   vim +   voip +   we +   web +   web 2.0 +   web design +   wiki +   windows +   xml +   xmpp +   XtremeProgramming +