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A Local Front End for Remote EditingStallman, Richard M. 01 February 1982 (has links)
The Local Editing Protocol allows a local programmable terminal to execute the most common editing commands on behalf of an extensible text editor on a remote system, thus greatly improving speed of response without reducing flexibility. The Line Saving Protocol allows the local system to save text which is not displayed, and display it again later when it is needed, under the control of the remote editor. Both protocols are substantially system and editor independent.
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Application of extensible markup language in logistics communicationChenhansa, Suporn January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Virtual procurement system for virtual enterprisesAl-Biqami, Nasser Monahi January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Rozšiřitelný provider pro Windows PowerShell / Extensible Provider for Windows PowershellZávišek, Josef January 2011 (has links)
This thesis deals with the design and implementation of an extensible provider for Windows PowerShell. This provider allows registering the adapters which provide access to various data stores. The thesis gives an introduction into PowerShell and outlines how to realize new extensions. It then elaborates the architecture of the provider in detail. Next part is devoted to the design and implementation of the adapter for compressed files. For this purpose, the SevenZip library is used which had to be adapted for the use from C# language. Therefore, the thesis also includes description of the wrapper allowing the library utilization from the managed code.
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An Overview Of An Instrumentation Hardware Abstraction LanguageHamilton, John, Fernandes, Ronald, Koola, Paul, Jones, Charles H. 10 1900 (has links)
ITC/USA 2006 Conference Proceedings / The Forty-Second Annual International Telemetering Conference and Technical Exhibition / October 23-26, 2006 / Town and Country Resort & Convention Center, San Diego, California / In this paper we provide the motivation for a neutral instrumentation hardware abstraction language that is focused on the description and control of instrumentation systems and networks. We also describe the design approach and structure of such a language that meets the needs. The language design is described according to the three roles it must serve: (1) as a descriptive language for specifying and describing the components and configuration of an instrumentation system, (2) as a command language for issuing configuration and data commands to instrumentation hardware and (3) as a query language for requesting the current state of instrumentation hardware.
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DEMONSTRATION OF XML ON THE USAF E-9A AIRBORNE TELEMETRY PLATFORM USING JAVAMurray, Ernest 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 20-23, 2003 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / This paper describes the basic foundations of XML and the description of a JAVA-based
eXtensible Markup Language (XML) prototype application being developed for the E-9A
Airborne Telemetry Platform. In an effort to eliminate proprietary software and improve
range safety data exchange, radar boat position data will be tagged with pre-defined
XML tags prior to being transmitted from the E-9A. Ground Station software will then
processes the XML-based boat position data to provided a means for ground station
personnel to strip out data and distribute over the Internet. Leveraging XML for a
telemetry application provides the ability to efficiently exchange telemetry data between
users over the Internet and harness a web based standard with industry wide support.
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AN XML VOCABULARY FOR TMATSDowning, Bob 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 23-26, 2000 / Town & Country Hotel and Conference Center, San Diego, California / XML is a simple, powerful way to agree on data transfers between organizations, applications and/or
computer systems. XML was originally developed to separate data content definition from the display
of data on a web page. XML is based on a subset of the Standardized General Markup Language
(SGML), which means XML uses a tag-based syntax similar to Hyper Text Markup Language (HTML).
Whereas HTML uses fixed tags to display data, XML uses custom designed tags to describe data. XML
provides a simple, standard, portable, and flexible way to transfer data between applications. This could
provide a useful way to transfer telemetry attributes data between customers and systems. Currently,
there is not a significant amount of support for the use of the Telemetry Attributes Transfer Standard
(TMATS). Telemetry vendors still use their own formats, customers maintain their own databases, and
support facilities/ranges promote the use of their own implementations. TMATS was supposed to define
a common ground to transfer data definitions, but the tools to TMATS have not come about. TMATS is
a well defined, structured specification that maps into XML extremely well. Even though XML is a
fairly new technology, there are already many tools available to support XML parsing with more
becoming available. This makes XML an excellent choice to supplement TMATS for the interchange of
telemetry attribute information. This paper provides an initial attempt at defining the language and
structure for an XML vocabulary of TMATS.
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APPLYING INTERACTIVE WEB PAGESSelf, Lance 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 22-25, 2001 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / Visitors to web pages are, in most cases, restricted to viewing information the page designer has anticipated they will be interested in viewing. Many times this is adequate, but there are instances where the visitor wants the information they view to be based on selections they choose. The Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) Space Vehicles Directorate anticipates selected customers will have a need to view very large data sets that vary from the satellite payload to the satellite state of health1, and will require controlling what they view in an “ad hoc” manner. In response, AFRL is using Java Server Pages developed within the data center to bring interactive and dynamic web page content to these customers.
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Cross-Platform, Parallel Development in Xamarin : Design and Implementation of the Platform for Building Extensible, Cross-platform GUI Applications Based on Plug-in Framework in XamarinWaclawek, Mariusz January 2016 (has links)
This thesis describes research of plug-in frameworks, their application and benefits and also a way to develop cross-platform GUI applications in Xamarin with Xamarin.Forms. It describes also the limitations that mobile systems set on plug-in frameworks. The result of the thesis is a basic and extensible platform for building GUI applications based on the MVVM design pattern with modularity and extensibility of MEF 2.0.
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Syntactic ClosuresBawden, Alan, Rees, Jonathan 01 June 1988 (has links)
In this paper we describe {\\it syntactic closures}. Syntactic closures address the scoping problems that arise when writing macros. We discuss some issues raised by introducing syntactic closures into the macro expansion interface, and we compare syntactic closures with other approaches. Included is a complete implementation.
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