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parent from group dk.cloudcreate.essentials (version 0.40.12)

Essentials is a set of Java version 17 (and later) building blocks built from the ground up to have no dependencies on other libraries, unless explicitly mentioned. The Essentials philosophy is to provide high level building blocks and coding constructs that allows for concise and strongly typed code, which doesn't depend on other libraries or frameworks, but instead allows easy integrations with many of the most popular libraries and frameworks such as Jackson, Spring Boot, Spring Data, JPA, etc.

Group: dk.cloudcreate.essentials Artifact: parent
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Artifact parent
Group dk.cloudcreate.essentials
Version 0.40.12
Last update 23. June 2024
Organization not specified
URL https://github.com/cloudcreate-dk/essentials
License Apache License, Version 2.0
Dependencies amount 0
Dependencies No dependencies
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mydas from group uk.ac.ebi.mydas (version 1.0.2)

This project aims to offer an easy-to-extend Java DAS server framework. It offers several advantages: * Implementing data sources is very easy but also flexible and powerful. * Data caching is built into the system, with access to the caching mechanism made available to the data sources. * All aspects of the server are highly configurable, including selecting options where the DAS 1.53 specification offers choices to the implementor. * The latest Java technologies have been used throughout the system to optimise performance and simplify data source development. * Wherever possible the same terminology is used in the API as in the DAS specification and XML - again, making data source development more easy. * The server allows XSLT transforms of the DAS XML to be configured to provide a simple DAS client view (limited to the single DAS source). More details of the DAS protocol, DAS servers and DAS clients can be found at http://www.biodas.org/wiki/Main_Page. The first version of this server is a complete implementation of Distributed Sequence Annotation System (DAS) Version 1.53. If you are interested in learning more about DAS 1.53, the specification is highly recommended as a concise and complete description of the DAS protocol that can be obtained from: http://biodas.org/documents/spec.html

Group: uk.ac.ebi.mydas Artifact: mydas
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Artifact mydas
Group uk.ac.ebi.mydas
Version 1.0.2
Last update 19. August 2007
Organization not specified
URL http://code.google.com/p/mydas/
License The Apache Software License 2.0
Dependencies amount 7
Dependencies commons-collections, servlet-api, log4j, xpp3, xercesImpl, oscache, commons-logging,
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jsgen from group com.github.jochenw (version 1.2)

Jsgen is a Java Source Generation Framework: That means, it should be a valuable tool, if you intend to write a custom generator for Java sources. As such, it is the successor of a previous framework, called JaxMeJS (http://jaxme.sourceforge.net/JaxMeJS/docs/index.html). The predecessor came into being as a standalone project. It was incorporated into the bigger JaxMe project, when the latter was adopted by the Apache Webservices project. And it was buried as part of the bigger project, when the latter was moved to the Apache Attic (http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/webservices/archive/jaxme/). That was fine for quite some time, because the latest released version (JaxMeJS 0.5.2) did its job quite well. Over the years, however, the Java language has evolved, and the lack of support for features like Generics, or Annotations, became a burden. Hence the Successor: Jsgen picks up, where JaxMeJS ended. It is, however, a complete rewrite with several additional features, that the author considers to be important for modern Java applications: 1. It supports Generics. 2. It supports Annotations. 3. The builder pattern has been adopted. Almost all important classes are implemented as builders. This should make writing the actual source generators much more concise, and maintainable, than it used to be before. 4. The code style is configurable. Code styles allow you to concentrate on the actual work. The resulting Jave source will look nicely formatted, anyways. As of this writing, you can select between two builtin code styles: - The default code style is basically the authors personal free style, roughly comparable to the default code style of the Eclipse Java IDE. - As an alternative, there is also a Maven code style, which is widely used in the Open Source communities. Compared to the default style, it is less concise, if not even a bit verbose. On the other hand, it is widely adopted by projects in the vicinity of {{{https://maven.apache.org}Apache Maven}}. 5. Import lists are created, and sorted, automatically.

Group: com.github.jochenw Artifact: jsgen
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Artifact jsgen
Group com.github.jochenw
Version 1.2
Last update 10. November 2019
Organization not specified
URL https://jochenw.github.io/jsgen
License Apache License, Version 2.0
Dependencies amount 1
Dependencies jsr305,
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