Normally smartphone events are tightly coupled to your phone device itself. When your cell phone is ringing, your phone speaker plays a ringtone. When you get a new text message, your phone displays it on its screen. Wouldn't it be thrilling to make thoses phone events visible somewhere else, on your wearable, in your living room, on your robot, in your office or where ever you want it to occur? Or would you like to use your smartphone sensors, like the accelerometer, light sensor, compass or your touchscreen to control other devices? 'android meets arduino' is a toolkit, basically consisting of an Android application and an Arduino library which will help you to interface with your phone in a new dimension. You can build your own interfaces almost without any programming experience.
This is a collection of answers to frequently asked questions (FAQs) about Java Generics, a new language feature added to the Java programming language in version 5.0 of the Java Standard Edition (J2SE 5.0).
The Animal Sniffer Plugin is used to build signatures of APIs and to check your classes against previously generated signatures. This plugin is called animal sniffer because the principal signatures that are used are those of the Java Runtime, and since Sun traditionally names the different versions of its Java Runtimes after different animals, the plugin that detects what Java Runtime your code requires was called "Animal Sniffer".
Annogen is a framework which helps you work with JSR175 Annotations. In a nutshell, Annogen generates a proxy layer in front of your Annotations. This lets you:
Override JSR175 Annotation values
...with data from XML or arbitrary plugin code that you write.
Migrate JDK1.4 code to JSR175
...by translating javadoc tags into Annotations
Work with popular introspection APIs
...including Reflection, Javadoc-Doclet, QDox, and APT-Mirror.
a language tool that provides a framework for constructing recognizers, compilers, and translators from grammatical descriptions containing Java, C#, C++, or Python actions. It provides excellent support for tree construction, tree walking, and translatio
Anvil is an Open Source Framework for creating Enterprise Portals with Flex as the Client and Java as the back end. It is being developed by Ryan Knight and Holly Edelson of Williams, James Ward of Adobe, Jon Rose of Gorilla Logic and many other great developers at Williams.
We wanted Anvil to be simple to deploy in any Java environment so it uses Plain Java Objects (POJO’s), Spring and BlazeDS. This allows it to be run in any application server or servlet container.
Here are some of the great features Anvil provides:
1. Single window or multi-window interface (similar to a Portal).
2. A pluggable security module which allows an enterprise to easily integrate their existing security systems into a Flex application.
3. The ability to load modules from different locations in the network for load balancing or fail-over.
4. Authorization and access control at different levels of granularity. This allows individual modules and remote services to be secured differently.
5. Common build scripts and templates to automate the building of Flex and Java.
6. A utility to auto-generating Flex code from Java.
7. A utility to auto-generate the project files for Flex Builder.
8. The ability to expose any Java class as a remote service to Flex
And many other great features! We will be writing about Anvil here and would appreciate any feedback or requests!
Apache CXF is an open source services framework. CXF helps you build and develop services using frontend programming APIs, like JAX-WS. These services can speak a variety of protocols such as SOAP, XML/HTTP, RESTful HTTP, or CORBA and work over a variety of transports such as HTTP, JMS or JBI.
Apache Derby, an Apache DB subproject, is an open source relational database implemented entirely in Java.
Formerly known as IBM Cloudscape it is now included in Java 6 as Java DB.
Apache ESME (Enterprise Social Messaging Environment) is a secure and highly scalable microsharing and micromessaging platform that allows people to discover and meet one another and get controlled access to other sources of information.
You can hardly turn a web page these days without seeing a story that describes how people are using social networks, whether it is Twitter, Facebook or some other service to develop and build their personal communities.
When solving problems, how useful might it be if a user was able to tap into the collective knowledge of her peers or surrounding groups of people with whom she might naturally network in the workplace setting? How much quicker and with greater precision might she be able to solve daily problems? What if there was a communications mechanism that takes the best of what services like Twitter offers and co-mingled that with readily recognizable business processes? That solution is Apache ESME.
Felix is a community effort to implement the OSGi R4 Service Platform, which includes the OSGi framework and standard services, as well as providing and supporting other interesting OSGi-related technologies. The ultimate goal is to provide a completely compliant implementation of the OSGi framework and standard services and to support a community around this technology. Felix currently implements a large portion of the OSGi release 4 specification, but additional work is necessary for full compliance. Despite this fact, the OSGi framework functionality provided by Felix is very stable.
This plugin for Maven 2 is based on the BND tool from Peter Kriens. The way BND works is by treating your project as a big collection of classes (e.g., project code, dependencies, and the class path). The way you create a bundle with BND is to tell it the content of the bundle's JAR file as a subset of the available classes. This plugin wraps BND to make it work specifically with the Maven 2 project structure and to provide it with reasonable default behavior for Maven 2 projects.
Since the 1.4.0 release, this plugin also aims to automate OBR (OSGi Bundle Repository) management. It helps manage a local OBR for your local Maven repository, and also supports remote OBRs for bundle distribution. The plug-in automatically computes bundle capabilities and requirements, using a combination of Bindex and Maven metadata.
Welcome to Apache Isis Apache Isis is a full-stack open source application development framework, designed to let you rapidly develop domain-driven business enterprise applications. The framework is designed around two patterns: * the first is the naked objects pattern, whereby the framework automatically generates an object-oriented user interface (OOUI) for your domain objects. If required, this OOUI can then be customized. * the second is the hexagonal architecture. This means it allows the same domain model to be run with different viewers, either as a desktop app or as a webapp. Equally, you can choose which object store to use in order to persist your domain objects. The diagram below shows the hexagonal architecture as it is implemented by Apache Isis.
MINA is a simple yet full-featured network application framework which provides:
* Unified API for various transport types:
o TCP/IP & UDP/IP via Java NIO
o Serial communication (RS232) via RXTX
o In-VM pipe communication
o You can implement your own!
* Filter interface as an extension point; similar to Servlet filters
* Low-level and high-level API:
o Low-level: uses ByteBuffers
o High-level: uses user-defined message objects and codecs
* Highly customizable thread model:
o Single thread
o One thread pool
o More than one thread pools (i.e. SEDA)
* Out-of-the-box SSL · TLS · StartTLS support using Java 5 SSLEngine
* Overload shielding & traffic throttling
* Unit testability using mock objects
* JMX managability
* Stream-based I/O support via StreamIoHandler
* Integration with well known containers such as PicoContainer and Spring
* Smooth migration from Netty, an ancestor of Apache MINA.
J. Paterson, J. Haddow, and M. Nairn. page 280 - 4. New York, NY, USA, (2006//)design patterns;BlueJ IDE;software design;software development;object oriented software;teaching;Java;.
A. Blewitt, A. Bundy, and I. Stark. Automated Software Engineering, 2001. (ASE 2001). Proceedings. 16th Annual International Conference on, (November 2001)
J. Broekstra, A. Kampman, and F. van Harmelen. Proceedings of the first International Semantic Web
Conference (ISWC 2002), 2342, page 54--68. Sardinia, Italy, Springer Verlag, Heidelberg Germany, (June 2002)See also http://www.openrdf.org/.
M. Chen, X. Qiu, W. Xu, L. Wang, J. Zhao, and X. Li. The Computer Journal, (2007)MR: Der Ansatz ist ein Gray-Box-Ansatz, obwohl es auf Modellen basiert, muss das Programm selbst auch ausgeführt werden um bestimmte Eingaben für das Verfahren zu liefern.
Die Generierung von Testdaten ist kaum automatisiert.
Für IST-SPL interessant wegen den Formalismen für Aktivitätsdiagramme..