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I've recently inherited a collection of PL/SQL packages/procedures. Most operations involve one procedure calling another procedure which calls a third procedure, etc. I'm sure it made sense originally, but I'm struggling to get a good overall view.
Does anyone know of any software that maps/diagrams out the permutations of procedure call stacks in a visual way?
Found out about a view called dba_dependencies from http://www.dba-oracle.com/d_dba_dependencies.htm which appears to contain a raw form much of what I'm looking for. (The one drawback is it shows what packages are called by a specific package, not what procedures in a package are called by a specific procedure in a package.)
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right now I have a big project with legacy C/C++ source codes. There are many global variables spread in different functions. In order to analyze the code, I need a tool which can take a look into these functions, check what local/global variables are used and modified in this function, and then better show theses interfaces graphically.
Does anyone have experience with this kind of analysis and know accordingly the tool names? I've tried Understand from SciTools, but it cannot deliver this kind of report.
Thanks!
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Is there a collections library in R that has the rough equivalent of what is in Java's is in java.util.Collections:
Various Distionaries
Various Trees
Various Bags
etc.
As far as I know, there is no such package that implements all the features of collections. Dataframes are the easiest and fun way to manipulate data. However, we can use lists for most of the functionality of linked-lists, stack and queues. This is how it is done.
Edit: For optimal results, implementation of linkedlists using lists is not recommended because of the way in which R allocates memory.
Hope it helped!
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Are there any components built with polymer that allow displaying of tabular data? I would like something that compares with current UI grids out there.
I am interested in infinite scrolling and 2 way binding to json data in particular.
One good place to look for such things is the Component Kitchen
Looking there I found aha-table. It doesn't appear to have infinite-scrolling, but it lists pagination as a feature.
Not a completely useful answer but here's what I'm aware of:
Seems that the team plans to add what you're looking for - https://github.com/Polymer/core-list/issues/20
This might help you do something now - https://github.com/polymer/core-layout-grid
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I want to make a Vocabulary Trainer and I was thinking about the best way to do it. First I searched some translation APIs to use, to avoid having to build my own dictionary, but I found that most of them are paid and some are free but have limitations.
So, I think the best way is to make my own dictionary, which also allow me to work offline, but I wonder if there is any free database of English-Spanish words to avoid starting from scratch.
Do you know any?
Thanks a lot!
You could try http://www.omegawiki.org/ as they claim this:
The aim of our project is to create a dictionary of all words of all languages, including lexical, terminological and ontological information. Our data is available in a relational database, as a result it is possible to use the data for many purposes.
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We are building a "configurator" application for conveyors. Basically user comes in and picks a model, then start picking the parts they want. Some components have dependencies on other components. E.g. if I pick Part A, then I am required to select 1 or more Part B's. It is somewhat similar to configuring a PC at Dell.com. The app will also provide suggestions on parts/components.
Based on this info, I am researching if there is an existing pattern(s) that would allow us to make this easy to maintain and design. Any thoughts, ideas? Are there any open source projects that have similar functionality I can borrow ideas/patterns?
I am mostly interested in how to define "rules" between components without hardcoding the rules/dependencies.
Thanks for any help.
Not that it should matter, but we are building this in .NetFramework 3.5/Asp.Net
Without a good reason to do otherwise, I'd keep it simple and each part would have a list of dependent parts.