Visualize the distribution of code coverage in your project. This helps to identify code areas with high and low coverage. Useful when you have a large project with lots of files and packages. This 2D image-hash of your project should be more representative than a single number. For each module, the node representing the greatest version (i.e., the version chosen by Go's minimal version selection algorithm) is colored green. Other nodes, which aren't in the final build list, are colored grey...
Julia has @edit, @less, etc. which are very handy for reading the implementation of functions. However, you need to specify a "good enough" set of (type) parameters for them to find the location of the code.
gloost is a free software, platform independent framework for OpenGL programming. It includes handy wrappers for most OpenGL entities.
gloost can be used freely under the terms of the GPL. It is also possible to get gloost licensed under the terms of the LGPL for selected projects. Please contact Felix Weißig ( thesleeper@gmx.net ) if you are interested to licence gloost under the LGPL.
This package provides a display for figures, plots and tables. When you load the package, it will push a new display onto the Julia display stack and from then on it will display any value that can be rendered as png, svg, vega, vega-lite or plotly in an electron-based window. This is especially handy when one works on the REPL and wants plots or tables to show up in a nice window.
a 3d replacement for mosix's boring text based mon program.
Interaces with gomd (www.nonngu.org/gomd) so you dont have
to run this big openGL app on your cluster, just a handy server.