emir burak scala.xml (draft book, updated for Scala 2.6.1) I. Semistructured Syntax and Data 1. Introduction XML, Types and Objects 2. The scala.xml API Nodes and Attributes Elements and Text Embedded expressions Other nodes Matching XML Updates and Queries Names and Namespaces Sharing namespace nodes 3. XPath projection 4. XSLT style transformations 5. XQuery style querying 6. Loading and Saving XML The native Scala parser Pull parsing (experimental) II. Library 7. Overview 8. scala.xml runtime classes 9. Scala's XML syntax, formally 10. Interpretation of XML expressions and patterns
x leroy, d remy Version monolitique, Postscript, PDF; Résumé: Ce document est un cours d’introduction à la programmation du système Unix, mettant l’accent sur la communication entre les processus. La principale nouveauté de ce travail est l’utilisation du langage Objective Caml, un dialecte du langage ML, à la place du langage C qui est d’ordinaire associé à la programmation système. Ceci donne des points de vue nouveaux à la fois sur la programmation système et sur le langage ML. Introduction Généralités Les fichiers Les processus Les signaux Communications inter-processus classiques Communications modernes: les prises Les coprocessus Pour aller plus loin Références
The Little Book of Semaphores is a free (in both senses of the word) textbook that introduces the principles of synchronization for concurrent programming. In most computer science curricula, synchronization is a module in an Operating Systems class. OS textbooks present a standard set of problems with a standard set of solutions, but most students don't get a good understanding of the material or the ability to solve similar problems. The approach of this book is to identify patterns that are useful for a variety of synchronization problems and then show how they can be assembled into solutions. After each problem, the book offers a hint before showing a solution, giving students a better chance of discovering solutions on their own. The book covers the classical problems, including "Readers-writers," "Producer-consumer", and "Dining Philosophers." In addition, it collects a number of not-so-classical problems