Search Results

Search found 4221 results on 169 pages for 'bounding volume hierarchy'.

Page 92/169 | < Previous Page | 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99  | Next Page >

  • .NET Geometry Library

    - by dewald
    Does anyone know of a good (efficient, nice API, etc.) geometry open source library for .NET? Some of the operations needed: Data Structures Vectors (2D and 3D with floats and doubles) Lines (2D and 3D) Rectangles / Squares / Cubes / Boxes Spheres / Circles N-Sided Polygon Matrices (floats and doubles) Algorithms Intersection calculations Area / Volume calculations

    Read the article

  • How can I quickly enumerate directories on Win32?

    - by BillyONeal
    Hello everyone :) I'm trying to speedup directory enumeration in C++, where I'm recursing into subdirectories. I currently have an app which spends 95% of it's time in FindFirst/FindNextFile APIs, and it takes several minutes to enumerate all the files on a given volume. I know it's possible to do this faster because there is an app that does: Everything. It enumerates my entire drive in seconds. How might I accomplish something like this?

    Read the article

  • who do you admire in a scientific/technical field [closed]

    - by Tshepang
    This off-topic item refers to people with major achievements in fields such as engineering, science, and mathematics. Here's my picks: Eric Drexler for his work on molecular nanotech. His book, Engines of Creations, is mind-blowing. Robert Freitas for his work on molecular nanotech. The breadth of his multi-volume book, Nanomedicine, is impressive. Richard Stallman for promoting Free Software.

    Read the article

  • Can Spotlight index a MacFUSE filesystem?

    - by tdavies
    Spotlight indexes at the file level, so a file containing a complicated data structure may need to be split into a set of files for Spotlight to index it in a useful way. Can you use MacFUSE to achieve this more dynamically? Will Spotlight index a MacFUSE volume? Can MacFUSE handle the necessary per-file metadata? Can a MacFUSE process notify Spotlight when attributes of a file change?

    Read the article

  • bibtex and label/ref

    - by Tim
    Hi, I was wondering how I can add \label into bibtex so that when I cite in my document and I can also \ref to it by clicking it and jumping to the Bibliography at the end? for example: @article{greenwade93, author = "George D. Greenwade", title = "The {C}omprehensive {T}ex {A}rchive {N}etwork ({CTAN})", year = "1993", journal = "TUGBoat", volume = "14", number = "3", pages = "342--351" } Thanks and regards

    Read the article

  • Any success using Apache Thrift on iPhone?

    - by jhs
    Has anybody done or seen a deployment of Apache Thrift in an iPhone app? I am wondering if is a reasonable solution for a high-volume, low(er)-latency network service for iPhones compared to HTTP. One noteworthy thing I found is a bug report about running Thrift on the iPhone, which seems to have been fixed. But that doesn't necessarily indicate that it's a done deal.

    Read the article

  • Stop all sounds but one

    - by Fahim Akhter
    Hi, I posted a question earlier about stopping all sounds in a swf. Now, to do that I'm using the following code. var transform1:SoundTransform=new SoundTransform(); transform1.volume=0; flash.media.SoundMixer.soundTransform=transform1; Which solves the problem (mutes all sounds) but now there is an issue, I want to stop all sounds but one. Any Ideas?

    Read the article

  • can widgets be cached ?

    - by movieuser
    Is there a way to cache widgets. For example if you place your widgets on high volume websites then each time when someone access that site, a call will be made to your server to get the widget code. This way my server can get too much overloaded just to display the widget . Can I cache the widget HTML code and place it on some server like Akamai. Any suggestions or tips highly appreciated. Thanks in advance.

    Read the article

  • Is the Finch audio library for iPhone capable of doing this?

    - by mystify
    I need to: - start / stop sounds with lengths between 0.1 and 10 seconds - change the playback volume I want to / would like to / would be nice to have to: - change the playback speed - change the playback pitch / frequency - pause an sound and resume playing it later - play a sound backwards Is Finch my best friend here?

    Read the article

  • How to disable jQuery.jplayer autoplay?

    - by Mr_Nizzle
    when i initialize the player like this: $("#jquery_jplayer").jPlayer({ ready: function () { this.element.jPlayer("setFile", "/previews/cancion.mp3", "/previews/horse.ogg").jPlayer("play"); }, volume: 50, oggSupport: true }) is there any way to disable the autoplay?

    Read the article

  • Python sock.listen(...)

    - by Ian
    All the examples I've seen of sock.listen(5) in the python documentation suggest I should set the max backlog number to be 5. This is causing a problem for my app since I'm expecting some very high volume (many concurrent connections). I set it to 200 and haven't seen any problems on my system, but was wondering how high I can set it before it causes problems.. Anyone know?

    Read the article

  • Running resize2fs on /

    - by Paul Steckler
    I'm trying to resize an ext4 filesystem on a Fedora 11 box. Using fsdisk and lvm, I was able to grow the partition and logical volume containing the filesystem. When I try to run resize2fs on the device containing the filesystem (/dev/sda2 in this case), I get: "Device or resource busy while trying to open /dev/sda2, Couldn't find valid filesystem superblock" I've tried this from a rescue disk that doesn't have the filesystem mounted, no joy. Maybe resize2fs doesn't know about ext4?

    Read the article

  • Recommended textbook for machine-level programming?

    - by Norman Ramsey
    I'm looking at textbooks for an undergraduate course in machine-level programming. If the perfect book existed, this is what it would look like: Uses examples written in C or assembly language, or both. Covers machine-level operations such as two's-complement integer arithmetic, bitwise operations, and floating-point arithmetic. Explains how caches work and how they affect performance. Explains machine instructions or assembly instructions. Bonus if the example assembly language includes x86; triple bonus if it includes x86-64 (aka AMD64). Explains how C values and data structures are represented using hardware registers and memory. Explains how C control structures are translated into assembly language using conditional and unconditional branch instructions. Explains something about procedure calling conventions and how procedure calls are implemented at the machine level. Books I might be interested in would probably have the words "machine organization" or "computer architecture" in the title. Here are some books I'm considering but am not quite happy with: Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective by Randy Bryant and Dave O'Hallaron. This is quite a nice book, but it's a book for a broad, shallow course in systems programming, and it contains a great deal of material my students don't need. Also, it is just out in a second edition, which will make it expensive. Computer Organization and Design: The Hardware/Software Interface by Dave Patterson and John Hennessy. This is also a very nice book, but it contains way more information about how the hardware works than my students need. Also, the exercises look boring. Finally, it has a show-stopping bug: it is based very heavily on MIPS hardware and the use of a MIPS simulator. My students need to learn how to use DDD, and I can't see getting this to work on a simulator. Not to mention that I can't see them cross-compiling their code for the simulator, and so on and so forth. Another flaw is that the book mentions the x86 architecture only to sneer at it. I am entirely sympathetic to this point of view, but news flash! You guys lost! Write Great Code Vol I: Understanding the Machine by Randall Hyde. I haven't evaluated this book as thoroughly as the other two. It has a lot of what I need, but the translation from high-level language to assembler is deferred to Volume Two, which has mixed reviews. My students will be annoyed if I make them buy a two-volume series, even if the price of those two volumes is smaller than the price of other books. I would really welcome other suggestions of books that would help students in a class where they are to learn how C-language data structures and code are translated to machine-level data structures and code and where they learn how to think about performance, with an emphasis on the cache.

    Read the article

  • Avaudioplayer problem

    - by Arun Sharma
    Hi All, Actually i am using avaudioplayer. my player is working very fine (forward,revind,play,pause,volume,progress bar). Only problem is that i am not able to stop the song. so all songs are overlapped please any body tell me where i put [self.player stop] to stop my player when i play new song.

    Read the article

  • Wav analysis in python

    - by mudder
    I'm looking for a python library that will help me analyze the audio in wav files. At the very least I'm hoping to find some kind of interface that understands .wav format so that I don't have to :P at best I need a module with methods for reading wave form parameters like pitch, volume levels, etc

    Read the article

  • How to display a status message in the Gnome panel?

    - by George Edison
    I have a Gnome applet I've been working on. It is written in Python and it displays the progress of something in a small label. My question is: what is the best way to display status notifications to the user? On Ubuntu, I notice that whenever I connect to a network or adjust the volume, a black box appears in the upper-right corner. Is there a way to do something like that with Python?

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99  | Next Page >