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This question might not be suitable for this site, but after long search, I have come here to ask experts.
I am going to work with JPEG compression. The library I have to use is Kakadu 2.2. However I haven't found any documentation stating all the functions/methods the library provides like other api do (Android, Windows Phone etc).
So the question is, is there any documentation or list of all functions that I can use for development.
Regards
Since Kakadu is closed source, they don't provide good documentation for free on the internet. If you've purchased their product, you should ask them for a list of functions, or simply peruse the source code where possible.
If you have any choice in the matter then you may be better off with libjpeg as it's free and pretty standard. Then again, I have no idea what you are using this for.
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Ideally would want libraries that handle creating graphs on screen well. For now these would be read-only, but eventually we may want to re-draw based on user GUI manipulations.
The other side of the story is SDEs. Would appreciate comments on any experiences people have of SDE calculations and modelling of stochastic math projections using Java. What are the likely performance tradeoff scenarios?
Would prefer to rely on widely used libraries if possible. Any thoughts?
jgraph is the general standard.
http://www.jgraph.com/
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I am looking for something like jsfiddle but for java, so that code snippets and classes can be shared and tested.
At the moment, I am using a combination of pastebin and compileonline.com. I would rather not sign up for a huge online compiler service, just a quick and dirty code sharing/testing platform, that provides unique URL's for my code snippets.
I have seen other people asking similar questions:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15320286/is-there-online-compiler-for-java-like-jsfiddle
But there doesn't seem to be just the right tool. Anyone provide any pointers?
I tried using http://ideone.com/.
It supports a bunch of languages, including Java.
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Can anyone recommend a based open source mailing list software ?
The following would all be desired if possible:
Java as the underlying language, as we have people who are experienced with Java
Something which is packaged as a war and can be dropped into a Tomcat server
A sleek interface
Underlying data should be reasonably transparent
Good support for groups - sometimes we want to send mail to everyone, sometimes only people working in a certain area etc.
This is for a non-profit tax-payer funded research organization, so open-source (free) is a high priority. Thanks.
http://subetha.tigris.org/
Apache James http://james.apache.org/server/2.3.2/mailing_lists.html
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Closed 8 years ago.
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For a project I need to read and write ESRI shapefiles. It should be very easy, as I don't need advanced features. Is something out there?
GeoTools supports shapefiles via a plugin. GIS is a complicated area and I think what you will find is that there are very few "simple" libraries out there. Any library powerful enough to do general GIS will unfortunately have a learning curve. That said, Shapefiles aren't that complicated and there's a lot of code out there for references purposes.
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I'm looking for a library to handle iCalendar data in Java.
Open source, well-documented implementations with a good object model are preferred. iCal parsing capabilities are less important to me, but still nice to have.
Does anyone have any recommendations?
A challenger appears! Please give biweekly a try. I'm looking for lots of feedback on how it can be improved.
I had limited success with iCal4j (intro) on a project last year.
It seems to be a fairly popular choice for ical work in the java community.
If I remember correctly the API can be slightly confusing at first glance.
However It's pretty solid in the long run.
Good luck,
Brian