Skip to main content

Home/ Software Tools/ Group items tagged language

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Alan Stebbens

Graphviz - 0 views

  •  
    Very cool open-source tool for graph visualization -- you define the nodes, and graphviz does the rest -- with automatic layout
  •  
    Graph visualization is a way of representing structural information as diagrams of abstract graphs and networks. Automatic graph drawing has many important applications in software engineering, database and web design, networking, and in visual interfaces for many other domains. Graphviz is open source graph visualization software. It has several main graph layout programs. See the gallery for some sample layouts. It also has web and interactive graphical interfaces, and auxiliary tools, libraries, and language bindings. The Mac OS X edition of Graphviz, by Glen Low, won two 2004 Apple Design Awards. The Graphviz layout programs take descriptions of graphs in a simple text language, and make diagrams in several useful formats such as images and SVG for web pages, Postscript for inclusion in PDF or other documents; or display in an interactive graph browser. (Graphviz also supports GXL, an XML dialect.) Graphviz has many useful features for concrete diagrams, such as options for colors, fonts, tabular node layouts, line styles, hyperlinks, and custom shapes. In practice, graphs are usually generated from an external data sources, but they can also be created and edited manually, either as raw text files or within a graphical editor. (Graphviz was not intended to be a Visio replacement, so it is probably frustrating to try to use it that way.)
Alan Stebbens

prog21: The World's Most Mind-Bending Language Has the Best Development Environment - 1 views

  •  
    Good summary of the J programming language, its features, and development facilities.
  •  
    I think everyone should read your blog who want to good information about Software Development services. Thanks and keep it up!
Alan Stebbens

Clojure » home - 0 views

  •  
    Yet another Lisp clone..
  •  
    Yet another Lisp clone -- but this one is based on Java, JVM, and incorporates functional programming -- like function signature matching -- and some features of OO languages, like class inheritance.
anonymous

The Word As We Knew It - 0 views

  •  
    The internet and it's unique ability to rapidly share information across the planet has created a sort of 'hot-bed' for the evolution of language. New phrases, words, acronyms and slangs have been given the ability to virally evolve and disseminate to new populations within a matter of days. Definitions are born, morph, and die based on the evolving collective consciousness of humanity.
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page