Showing 2 open source projects for "scientific plotting software"

View related business solutions
  • Build Secure Enterprise Apps Fast with Retool Icon
    Build Secure Enterprise Apps Fast with Retool

    Stop wasting engineering hours. Build secure, production-grade apps that connect directly to your company’s SQL and APIs.

    Create internal software that meets enterprise security standards. Retool connects to your business data—databases, APIs, and vector stores while ensuring compliance with granular permissions and audit logs. Whether on our cloud or self-hosted, build the dashboards and admin panels your organization needs without compromising on security or control.
    Learn More
  • Find Hidden Risks in Windows Task Scheduler Icon
    Find Hidden Risks in Windows Task Scheduler

    Free diagnostic script reveals configuration issues, error patterns, and security risks. Instant HTML report.

    Windows Task Scheduler might be hiding critical failures. Download the free JAMS diagnostic tool to uncover problems before they impact production—get a color-coded risk report with clear remediation steps in minutes.
    Download Free Tool
  • 1
    Sensitizer

    Sensitizer

    A toolset to automate STOP analysis with Zemax OpticStudio

    SENSITIZER is an ESO software toolset written in Matlab and Mathematica aiming at automating some Structural/Thermal/Optical Performance (STOP) sensitivity analyses with Zemax OpticStudio (ZOS). The core code of SENSITIZER runs in MATLAB and drives ZOS in the background through the ZOS-API interface, based on .NET. The output is saved in the MATLAB file format and can be post-processed using MATLAB and/or Mathematica routines. The optical system to analyze is defined in a normal Zemax lens...
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    Mathematica-SPICE

    Mathematica-SPICE

    Call SPICE from Mathematica to enable advanced circuit optimization

    This project connects the ubiquitous circuit simulation software, SPICE, with the powerful tools of Mathematica. This allows the optimization of circuits based on arbitrarily complex criteria. For example, automatically tune component values to match a desired filter profile. Tweak a circuit to maximize its efficiency. Match a circuit's output to an arbitrary waveform. As long as you can quantify your goal as a fitness function, you can automate the search for the optimal component specs.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next