Pascal XE is an easy to use IDE for Pascal programming.
Pascal XE is an IDE for Pascal programming, it is user friendly and designed specially for beginners in programming.
Pascal XE includes 3 free compilers:
- Virtual Pascal Compiler 2.1.279 (default)
- Free Pascal Compiler 3.0.4
- GNU Pascal Compiler 20070904
Software for calculating geometric properties of cross sections
Software for calculating geometric properties of cross sections and polygons. Calculates: area, moments of inertia, product of inertia, radius of gyration, section modulus, among others. It also supports import and export of CSV, JSON and DXF files. Able to do geometric transformations and 2D and 3D visualization of the cross sections.
http://www.filehelpers.net
The FileHelpers are an easy to use .NET library written in C#. Is designed to read/write data from flat files with fixed length or delimited records (CSV). Also has support to import/export data from different data storages (Excel, Access, SqlServer)
Code on GitHub: https://github.com/MarcosMeli/FileHelpers
TimeFinder automatically optimizes schedules (timetables) for universities and high schools. It makes manual timetabling for the timetabler easier via a Java GUI. Export+import is supported via xml and text formats. http://timefinder.sourceforge.net/
Deploy in 115+ regions with the modern database for every enterprise.
MongoDB Atlas gives you the freedom to build and run modern applications anywhere—across AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud. With global availability in over 115 regions, Atlas lets you deploy close to your users, meet compliance needs, and scale with confidence across any geography.
This project is using genetics algorithms to complete scheduling tasks such as timetables for elementary / high schools etc. Currently NetBeans project with no GUI and simple HTML export.
Extract a Term Concept Map from Wikipedia. It takes an export of the Wikipedia and imports it into a database. The extracted term concept map can then serve as a basis for semantically enhancing applications, with the depth and bredth of the Wikipedia.