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JGuiGen rev-237
JGuiGen is a Java GUI Generation System Elegant CRUD (Create/Review/Update/Delete). more>>
JGuiGen is a Java GUI Generation System Elegant CRUD (Create/Review/Update/Delete). It supports any major database using JDBC. It generates fully internationalized and accessible screens that allow users to search tables, run reports, and calculate summary stats.
It generates multi-user safe screens with help buttons that work, generates test cases to test the generated GUIs, and generates HTML documentation about the GUIs generated.
Here is a partial list of classes that are included and used by JGuiGen:
- BoundedTextField.java - Creates a JTextField that will not accept more than x characters where you define the x value. BoundedPlainDocument.java - part of BoundedTextField
- CustomViewer.java - This is a pop-up viewer for JTables. It allows you to view the contents of long strings or text fields.
- DateDialog.java - pop-up calendar for choosing a date.
- DoublyLinkedList.java - create two lists, side by side. Move items from side to the other in order to select a group of options, features, tasks, people etc.
- Frequency Count routine - Create a table that shows a count of the values in a column in a result set.
- GeneralDialog.java - a generic three button, give text and ask a question screen.
- GeneralDialog4Btn.java - a generic four button, give text and ask a question screen.
- GetBrowserAndWP.java - code to ask a user for the path to their word processor and Browser. These values are stored in a table and used to call up these applications as needed.
- History.java - code to view an HTML file. The date and time a user views the file is stored and they are only offered the option to view the file when it is newer than the one they last viewed. Used by a developer to notify users of changes in the application they are using.
- JFreeReports example - generate a report using an existing JTable of data.
- JSearchableComboBox.java - A JComboBox with "Look-ahead". It fills in the most probable answer based upon what the user has entered so far. (This fills a much needed void in Java. By default in a pup-up list if your user types FL for Florida they will get Louisiana. It goes to Florida with the F and then Louisiana with the L. The look-ahead system will leave them on Florida.
- JxFrame.java - a class to inherit instead of JFrame. This gives a single point to make modifications that will affect each frame in an entire application. This one adds the automatic determination of Look and Feel code. It also informs the system to make button more active.
- JxButton.java -a class to inherit instead of JButton. This gives a single point to make modifications that will affect each frame in an entire application.
- JxLabel.java - a class to inherit instead of JLabel. This gives a single point to make modifications that will affect each frame in an entire application.
- JxTextArea.java - a class to inherit instead of JTextArea. This gives a single point to make modifications that will affect each frame in an entire application. This one makes the tab key exit a JTextArea that is being edited. The default requires a user to press CTRL-Tab. ListDialog.java - a generic screen to show a list that the user chooses an option from. It has an optional "Add a new value" feature.
- LowVisionMetalLookAndFeel.java - code to change the look and feel to very large text and very high contrast.
- MutableInteger.java - code to pass an integer value into a class and allow changes made in the class to be known by the calling class.
- NumericPlainDocument.java - Part of the Numeric TextField class.
- NumericTextField.java - creates a JTextField that accepts a number with a specified number of decimal places.
- ProgressMonitorDemo.java - and ProgressMonitorInc.java and ProgressMonitorWork.java. I found it very difficult to get the ProgressMonitor (a small pop-up that fills as your long running task runs) to work. I finally figured out something that works reliably and these three classes show how to do it.
- PrintScreen code - this code is included inside the various classes that JGuiGen generates.
- RegexFormatter.java - code to help apply a Regex value to a JFormattedText field
- RowLayout1.java - a layout manager that includes one column of labels and then a variable number of columns. This can be used for most business applications.
- RowLayoutConstraint.java - part of the rowlayout manager.
- SetIcon.java - code to replace the coffee cup icon on each frame.
- SQLWhereClause.java - a class to pop-up a simple SQL Where clause generator. It includes the ability to name, save and rerun queries. It also saves and runs reports using JFreeReports.
- StreamEditorPane.java - Part of the TextEditor class.
- SwitchLF.java - code to switch look and feels in a running application.
- TableMap.java - part of the TableSorter class.
- TableSorter.java - code to make a JTable that sorts on each column when the column header is clicked.
- TernarySearchTree.java - part of the JSearchableComboBox class.
- TextViewer.java - Code to view a Text field.
- TextEditor.java - Code to edit a text field. This includes a way to make Tab exit a JTextArea (which is not the default for Java.)
- TableHeaderJLabel.java - Code to display special headers over a column in a JTable.
- WholeNumberField.java - code to create a JTextField that will only accept integer values.
- Switch Look and Feel menu
- Change Locale menu
- Change Font menu
<<lessIt generates multi-user safe screens with help buttons that work, generates test cases to test the generated GUIs, and generates HTML documentation about the GUIs generated.
Here is a partial list of classes that are included and used by JGuiGen:
- BoundedTextField.java - Creates a JTextField that will not accept more than x characters where you define the x value. BoundedPlainDocument.java - part of BoundedTextField
- CustomViewer.java - This is a pop-up viewer for JTables. It allows you to view the contents of long strings or text fields.
- DateDialog.java - pop-up calendar for choosing a date.
- DoublyLinkedList.java - create two lists, side by side. Move items from side to the other in order to select a group of options, features, tasks, people etc.
- Frequency Count routine - Create a table that shows a count of the values in a column in a result set.
- GeneralDialog.java - a generic three button, give text and ask a question screen.
- GeneralDialog4Btn.java - a generic four button, give text and ask a question screen.
- GetBrowserAndWP.java - code to ask a user for the path to their word processor and Browser. These values are stored in a table and used to call up these applications as needed.
- History.java - code to view an HTML file. The date and time a user views the file is stored and they are only offered the option to view the file when it is newer than the one they last viewed. Used by a developer to notify users of changes in the application they are using.
- JFreeReports example - generate a report using an existing JTable of data.
- JSearchableComboBox.java - A JComboBox with "Look-ahead". It fills in the most probable answer based upon what the user has entered so far. (This fills a much needed void in Java. By default in a pup-up list if your user types FL for Florida they will get Louisiana. It goes to Florida with the F and then Louisiana with the L. The look-ahead system will leave them on Florida.
- JxFrame.java - a class to inherit instead of JFrame. This gives a single point to make modifications that will affect each frame in an entire application. This one adds the automatic determination of Look and Feel code. It also informs the system to make button more active.
- JxButton.java -a class to inherit instead of JButton. This gives a single point to make modifications that will affect each frame in an entire application.
- JxLabel.java - a class to inherit instead of JLabel. This gives a single point to make modifications that will affect each frame in an entire application.
- JxTextArea.java - a class to inherit instead of JTextArea. This gives a single point to make modifications that will affect each frame in an entire application. This one makes the tab key exit a JTextArea that is being edited. The default requires a user to press CTRL-Tab. ListDialog.java - a generic screen to show a list that the user chooses an option from. It has an optional "Add a new value" feature.
- LowVisionMetalLookAndFeel.java - code to change the look and feel to very large text and very high contrast.
- MutableInteger.java - code to pass an integer value into a class and allow changes made in the class to be known by the calling class.
- NumericPlainDocument.java - Part of the Numeric TextField class.
- NumericTextField.java - creates a JTextField that accepts a number with a specified number of decimal places.
- ProgressMonitorDemo.java - and ProgressMonitorInc.java and ProgressMonitorWork.java. I found it very difficult to get the ProgressMonitor (a small pop-up that fills as your long running task runs) to work. I finally figured out something that works reliably and these three classes show how to do it.
- PrintScreen code - this code is included inside the various classes that JGuiGen generates.
- RegexFormatter.java - code to help apply a Regex value to a JFormattedText field
- RowLayout1.java - a layout manager that includes one column of labels and then a variable number of columns. This can be used for most business applications.
- RowLayoutConstraint.java - part of the rowlayout manager.
- SetIcon.java - code to replace the coffee cup icon on each frame.
- SQLWhereClause.java - a class to pop-up a simple SQL Where clause generator. It includes the ability to name, save and rerun queries. It also saves and runs reports using JFreeReports.
- StreamEditorPane.java - Part of the TextEditor class.
- SwitchLF.java - code to switch look and feels in a running application.
- TableMap.java - part of the TableSorter class.
- TableSorter.java - code to make a JTable that sorts on each column when the column header is clicked.
- TernarySearchTree.java - part of the JSearchableComboBox class.
- TextViewer.java - Code to view a Text field.
- TextEditor.java - Code to edit a text field. This includes a way to make Tab exit a JTextArea (which is not the default for Java.)
- TableHeaderJLabel.java - Code to display special headers over a column in a JTable.
- WholeNumberField.java - code to create a JTextField that will only accept integer values.
- Switch Look and Feel menu
- Change Locale menu
- Change Font menu
Download (10.1MB)
Added: 2006-05-22 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1256 downloads
FL-COW 0.6
The File Link Copy On Write (FL-COW) library is an LD_PRELOAD based library that automatically breaks file system hard links. more>>
The library born to solve a problem I had when working with the Linux Kernel archives that I use to replicate using hard links. Replicating archives with hard links is both fast and space saving, and it helped me a lot in speeding up my operations when working on the kernel source.
A recent Archs mailing list thread that suggested that use of hard links to create archive cached revisions pushed me to write the FL-COW library. What is the problem with hard links when, for example, Im working with kernel sources? The problem is that I do a:
$ cp -al linux-2.6-test6 linux-2.6-test6.vm-fix
This command replicate at light speed the vanilla (Linus) archive into an archive I can start hacking on. The problem is that I have to manually remember to break hard links on files I start working on, otherwise even the original copy get modified.
This might break because I forgot doing so and it might also break because other tools might eventually touch file they were not supposed to touch. If it happens that I forget to decouple a file hard link, the next command:
$ diff -Nru linux-2.6-test6 linux-2.6-test6.vm-fix
will skip all changes done on the file I forgot, because my changes has been applied to the original file also. The library works by intercepting all file open operations happening inside a configured path list, and by decoupling the hard link with a COW if a write operation is requested.
The library is installed using the environment variable LD_PRELOAD and in this way it is able to hook glibc open(2) functions and it is able to perform the COW when necessary. The environment variable FLCOW_PATH control which paths should be subject to COWing. The logic that the library follow to know if a file should be COWed is the following:
Is the file being opened with O_RDWR or O_WRONLY modes?
Is the file inside one of the paths listed inside the FLCOW_PATH environment variable?
Is the file being opened a regular file?
Is the (struct stat)->st_nlink variable greater than one?
If all those answers are yes, the file is COWed by leaving the calling application with a non hard linked version of the file. To setup the library you must start with building it doing a (for example):
$ ./configure --prefix=/usr
$ make
$ make check
$ su
# make install
If all those steps complete correctly you will have your library installed in /usr/lib/libflcow.so that is ready for use. I use to set the LD_PRELOAD inside my .bashrc file so that I am sure that no tool will screw up my hard-linked archives.
This is the relevant section of my .bashrc file:
export LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/libflcow.so:$LD_PRELOAD
export FLCOW_PATH=/usr/src/:/home/davide/arch-archives/
<<lessA recent Archs mailing list thread that suggested that use of hard links to create archive cached revisions pushed me to write the FL-COW library. What is the problem with hard links when, for example, Im working with kernel sources? The problem is that I do a:
$ cp -al linux-2.6-test6 linux-2.6-test6.vm-fix
This command replicate at light speed the vanilla (Linus) archive into an archive I can start hacking on. The problem is that I have to manually remember to break hard links on files I start working on, otherwise even the original copy get modified.
This might break because I forgot doing so and it might also break because other tools might eventually touch file they were not supposed to touch. If it happens that I forget to decouple a file hard link, the next command:
$ diff -Nru linux-2.6-test6 linux-2.6-test6.vm-fix
will skip all changes done on the file I forgot, because my changes has been applied to the original file also. The library works by intercepting all file open operations happening inside a configured path list, and by decoupling the hard link with a COW if a write operation is requested.
The library is installed using the environment variable LD_PRELOAD and in this way it is able to hook glibc open(2) functions and it is able to perform the COW when necessary. The environment variable FLCOW_PATH control which paths should be subject to COWing. The logic that the library follow to know if a file should be COWed is the following:
Is the file being opened with O_RDWR or O_WRONLY modes?
Is the file inside one of the paths listed inside the FLCOW_PATH environment variable?
Is the file being opened a regular file?
Is the (struct stat)->st_nlink variable greater than one?
If all those answers are yes, the file is COWed by leaving the calling application with a non hard linked version of the file. To setup the library you must start with building it doing a (for example):
$ ./configure --prefix=/usr
$ make
$ make check
$ su
# make install
If all those steps complete correctly you will have your library installed in /usr/lib/libflcow.so that is ready for use. I use to set the LD_PRELOAD inside my .bashrc file so that I am sure that no tool will screw up my hard-linked archives.
This is the relevant section of my .bashrc file:
export LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/libflcow.so:$LD_PRELOAD
export FLCOW_PATH=/usr/src/:/home/davide/arch-archives/
Download (0.29MB)
Added: 2005-10-21 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1463 downloads
SURVIVOR 1.0
SURVIVOR is yet another systems monitor. more>>
SURVIVOR is yet another systems monitor.
Does the world need yet another systems monitor? Well, the world has had the Backstreet Boys, N Sync, 98 Degrees, Take That, Boyzone, Westlife, 5ive, O-Town, not to mention New Kids on the Block, All-4-One, Boyz II Men, New Edition, and Menudo, so clearly there is an ability to accept and even appreciate redundancy. Not that one needs to appreciate boy bands to appreciate systems monitoring, and perhaps now would be a good time to underscore that the SURVIVOR project does not endorse or even listen to boy bands.
Differentiating systems monitors can be a lot like differentiating boy bands. At first glance, they all look alike. With careful study, however, they all still look alike, except that some have goatees and others dont. With further study, it is possible to detect different accents, but no matter how far you look you still have a boy band.
In this respect, SURVIVOR is a lot like other systems monitors. It was written because of requirements that dictated the equivalent of a boy band with two Americans, two Brits, and an Australian, two with goatees, three brunettes, and not all of them living in the same town in Florida.
Unlike most boy bands, the core of SURVIVOR is a POSIX-thread based scheduler, responsible for determining when services should be checked and when alerts should be transmitted. The scheduler should be highly scalable, although it has not yet been tested against an entire class B network.
Like almost every other package, check and alert modules may be written in any language. These modules should generally scale quite well, although specifics depend on what the module actually does.
A command line interface, web interface, and two-way messaging gateway are provided.
Unlike most boy bands, SURVIVOR is intended to be a very high quality, feature rich, package. It is unlikely to ever get airtime on TRL.
Enhancements:
- In addition to the usual bugfixes, this stabilization release adds five new check modules, a flap reporting module, and adds various improvements to the command and Web interfaces.
- This is the first release with accompanying RPMs.
<<lessDoes the world need yet another systems monitor? Well, the world has had the Backstreet Boys, N Sync, 98 Degrees, Take That, Boyzone, Westlife, 5ive, O-Town, not to mention New Kids on the Block, All-4-One, Boyz II Men, New Edition, and Menudo, so clearly there is an ability to accept and even appreciate redundancy. Not that one needs to appreciate boy bands to appreciate systems monitoring, and perhaps now would be a good time to underscore that the SURVIVOR project does not endorse or even listen to boy bands.
Differentiating systems monitors can be a lot like differentiating boy bands. At first glance, they all look alike. With careful study, however, they all still look alike, except that some have goatees and others dont. With further study, it is possible to detect different accents, but no matter how far you look you still have a boy band.
In this respect, SURVIVOR is a lot like other systems monitors. It was written because of requirements that dictated the equivalent of a boy band with two Americans, two Brits, and an Australian, two with goatees, three brunettes, and not all of them living in the same town in Florida.
Unlike most boy bands, the core of SURVIVOR is a POSIX-thread based scheduler, responsible for determining when services should be checked and when alerts should be transmitted. The scheduler should be highly scalable, although it has not yet been tested against an entire class B network.
Like almost every other package, check and alert modules may be written in any language. These modules should generally scale quite well, although specifics depend on what the module actually does.
A command line interface, web interface, and two-way messaging gateway are provided.
Unlike most boy bands, SURVIVOR is intended to be a very high quality, feature rich, package. It is unlikely to ever get airtime on TRL.
Enhancements:
- In addition to the usual bugfixes, this stabilization release adds five new check modules, a flap reporting module, and adds various improvements to the command and Web interfaces.
- This is the first release with accompanying RPMs.
Download (1.0MB)
Added: 2007-04-04 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
933 downloads
GatorMail 1.0.11
GatorMail project offers a Java Servlet-based Webmail designed for a large user base. more>>
GatorMail project offers a Java Servlet-based Webmail designed for a large user base.
GatorMail is a Java Servlet-based Webmail application built on the Jakarta Struts framework. It was originally developed to meet the needs of the University of Florida.
Efficient interaction with the mail store along with a low support overhead and simple, user-friendly interface are the primary goals of the project
<<lessGatorMail is a Java Servlet-based Webmail application built on the Jakarta Struts framework. It was originally developed to meet the needs of the University of Florida.
Efficient interaction with the mail store along with a low support overhead and simple, user-friendly interface are the primary goals of the project
Download (8.6MB)
Added: 2007-02-23 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
978 downloads
WWW::Mechanize::Examples 1.30
WWW::Mechanize::Examples is a Perl module with sample programs that use WWW::Mechanize. more>>
SYNOPSIS
Plenty of people have learned WWW::Mechanize, and now, you can too!
Following are user-supplied samples of WWW::Mechanize in action.
You can also look at the t/*.t files in the distribution.
Please note that these examples are not intended to do any specific task. For all I know, theyre no longer functional because the sites they hit have changed. Theyre here to give examples of how people have used WWW::Mechanize.
Note that the examples are in reverse order of my having received them, so the freshest examples are always at the top.
Starbucks Density Calculator, by Nat Torkington
Heres a pair of scripts from Nat Torkington, editor for OReilly Media and co-author of the Perl Cookbook.
Rael [Dornfest] discovered that you can easily find out how many Starbucks there are in an area by searching for "Starbucks". So I wrote a silly scraper for some old census data and came up with some Starbucks density figures. Theres no meaning to these numbers thanks to errors from using old census data coupled with false positives in Yahoo search (e.g., "Dodie Starbuck-Your Style Desgn" in Portland OR). But it was fun to waste a night on.
Here are the top twenty cities in descending order of population, with the amount of territory each Starbucks has. E.g., A New York NY Starbucks covers 1.7 square miles of ground.
New York, NY 1.7
Los Angeles, CA 1.2
Chicago, IL 1.0
Houston, TX 4.6
Philadelphia, PA 6.8
San Diego, CA 2.7
Detroit, MI 19.9
Dallas, TX 2.7
Phoenix, AZ 4.1
San Antonio, TX 12.3
San Jose, CA 1.1
Baltimore, MD 3.9
Indianapolis, IN 12.1
San Francisco, CA 0.5
Jacksonville, FL 39.9
Columbus, OH 7.3
Milwaukee, WI 5.1
Memphis, TN 15.1
Washington, DC 1.4
Boston, MA 0.5
Download (0.10MB)
Added: 2007-07-20 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
828 downloads
Fawlty Language 0.70
Fawlty Language is an array-oriented interactive programming language for scientific data processing and visualization. more>>
. Its syntax is almost identical to that of the Interactive Data Language (IDL).
Main features:
- all language elements are supported
- multithreaded operators
- array operations use MMX/SSE/SSE2, if available
- module profiling
- line profiling
- about 300 library functions (more or less usable)
- true-color (24 bit) direct graphics devices: X, WIN, PS, PDF, Z
- run-time performance: for many programs, FL is faster than IDL (eg. the empty loop is three times faster in FL :-)
Installation:
- create a directory (INSTDIR), where you want to install FL
- unpack the archive into this directory
- create an FL_DIR environment variable, which points to INSTDIR/fl/fl_0.61
- run FL_DIR/bin/fl
Enhancements:
- This release introduces Distributed FL, and can be started as a TCP/IP daemon (Linux only), waiting for requests from other hosts (masters) and working for them as a slave.
<<lessMain features:
- all language elements are supported
- multithreaded operators
- array operations use MMX/SSE/SSE2, if available
- module profiling
- line profiling
- about 300 library functions (more or less usable)
- true-color (24 bit) direct graphics devices: X, WIN, PS, PDF, Z
- run-time performance: for many programs, FL is faster than IDL (eg. the empty loop is three times faster in FL :-)
Installation:
- create a directory (INSTDIR), where you want to install FL
- unpack the archive into this directory
- create an FL_DIR environment variable, which points to INSTDIR/fl/fl_0.61
- run FL_DIR/bin/fl
Enhancements:
- This release introduces Distributed FL, and can be started as a TCP/IP daemon (Linux only), waiting for requests from other hosts (masters) and working for them as a slave.
Download (3.5MB)
Added: 2007-06-14 License: Free To Use But Restricted Price:
866 downloads
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