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stringtemplate from group org.antlr (version 4.0.2)

StringTemplate is a java template engine for generating source code, web pages, emails, or any other formatted text output. StringTemplate is particularly good at multi-targeted code generators, multiple site skins, and internationalization/localization. It evolved over years of effort developing jGuru.com. StringTemplate also generates the stringtemplate website: http://www.stringtemplate.org and powers the ANTLR v3 code generator. Its distinguishing characteristic is that unlike other engines, it strictly enforces model-view separation. Strict separation makes websites and code generators more flexible and maintainable; it also provides an excellent defense against malicious template authors. There are currently about 600 StringTemplate source downloads a month.

Group: org.antlr Artifact: stringtemplate
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15 downloads
Artifact stringtemplate
Group org.antlr
Version 4.0.2
Last update 19. May 2011
Organization not specified
URL http://www.stringtemplate.org
License BSD licence
Dependencies amount 1
Dependencies antlr-runtime,
There are maybe transitive dependencies!

xmlwriter from group xmlwriter (version 2.2.2)

A great way to output Xml. Far easier to code with than painful DOM or SAX like solutions and much nicer in terms of speed and memory usage. <br/> <br/> While XmlWriter contains its own xml outputter, it has the ability to sit on top of other core Xml writing products, such as <a href="http://xmlenc.sf.net/">XmlEnc</a>. In addition, the user may layer <a href="Optional.html">other functionalities</a> on top of the core writing, such as on the fly schema checking, date/number formatting, specific empty-element handling and pretty-printing.

Group: xmlwriter Artifact: xmlwriter
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0 downloads
Artifact xmlwriter
Group xmlwriter
Version 2.2.2
Last update 02. January 2008
Organization OSJava
URL http://www.osjava.org/xmlwriter/
License not specified
Dependencies amount 3
Dependencies xmlenc, isorelax, junit,
There are maybe transitive dependencies!

preferredlistgen from group au.net.zeus.jgdms.tools (version 3.1.0)

Tool used to generate the preferred class information for downloadable JAR files in the form of a META-INF/PREFERRED.LIST required for use by the {@link net.jini.loader.pref.PreferredClassLoader}. The list is generated by examining the dependencies of classes contained within a target JAR file and zero or more additional supporting JAR files. Through various command-line options, a set of "root" classes are identified as belonging to a public API. These root classes provide the starting point for recursively computing a dependency graph, finding all of the classes referenced in the public API of the root classes, finding all of the classes referenced in turn by the public API of those classes, and so on, until no new classes are found. The results of the dependency analysis are combined with the preferred list information in the additional supporting JAR files to compute a preferred list having the smallest number of entries that describes the preferred state of the classes and resources contained in all of the JAR files. The output of the tool is a new version of the target JAR file containing the generated preferred list, and/or a copy of the list printed to System.out.

Group: au.net.zeus.jgdms.tools Artifact: preferredlistgen
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0 downloads
Artifact preferredlistgen
Group au.net.zeus.jgdms.tools
Version 3.1.0
Last update 04. January 2019
Organization not specified
URL Not specified
License not specified
Dependencies amount 0
Dependencies No dependencies
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comparators from group de.cit-ec.tcs.alignment (version 3.1.1)

This module defines the interfaces for Comparators in the TCS Alignment Toolbox. A Comparator has the purpose of defining the dissimilarity between elements in the input sequences of an Alignment. More specific information on Comparators can be found in the 'Comparator' interface. You can find a lot of helpful standard implementations of Comparators in the comparators-lib module. In the TCS Alignment Toolbox we require the output values of Comparators to lie in the range [0,1]. Many natural dissimilarities on value sets do not meet this criterion, such that additional normalization has to be applied. To that end this package also contains a Normalizer interface for functions that map real values from the range [0, infinity) to the range [0,1]. This package also provides a few convenience implementations of the Comparator interface to make the implementation of custom Comparators simpler, namely: SkipExtendedComparator, ParameterLessSkipExtendedComparator, ComparisonBasedSkipExtendedComparator, and ParameterLessComparisonBasedSkipExtendedComparator. Finally the TCS Alignment Toolbox also provides the means to learn parameters of Comparators. To enable that Comparators must implement the DerivableComparator interface to properly define the parameters that can be learned and the gradient of the dissimilarity with respect to these parameters. Gradients are stored using the Gradient interface as well as some convenience implementations of said interface, namely EmptyGradient, SingletonGradient, ArrayGradient and ListGradient.

Group: de.cit-ec.tcs.alignment Artifact: comparators
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0 downloads
Artifact comparators
Group de.cit-ec.tcs.alignment
Version 3.1.1
Last update 26. October 2018
Organization not specified
URL http://openresearch.cit-ec.de/projects/tcs
License The GNU Affero General Public License, Version 3
Dependencies amount 1
Dependencies lombok,
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libswresample from group com.tagtraum (version 4.0.0)

The libswresample library performs highly optimized audio resampling, rematrixing and sample format conversion operations. Specifically, this library performs the following conversions: Resampling: is the process of changing the audio rate, for example from an high sample rate of 44100Hz to 8000Hz. Audio conversion from high to low sample rate is a lossy process. Several resampling options and algorithms are available. Format conversion: is the process of converting the type of samples, for example from 16-bit signed samples to unsigned 8-bit or float samples. It also handles packing conversion, when passing from packed layout (all samples belonging to distinct channels interleaved in the same buffer), to planar layout (all samples belonging to the same channel stored in a dedicated buffer or "plane"). Rematrixing: is the process of changing the channel layout, for example from stereo to mono. When the input channels cannot be mapped to the output streams, the process is lossy, since it involves different gain factors and mixing. Various other audio conversions (e.g. stretching and padding) are enabled through dedicated options.

Group: com.tagtraum Artifact: libswresample
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0 downloads
Artifact libswresample
Group com.tagtraum
Version 4.0.0
Last update 25. April 2018
Organization FFmpeg.org
URL http://ffmpeg.org/
License not specified
Dependencies amount 0
Dependencies No dependencies
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oneClassClassifier from group nz.ac.waikato.cms.weka (version 1.0.4)

Performs one-class classification on a dataset. Classifier reduces the class being classified to just a single class, and learns the datawithout using any information from other classes. The testing stage will classify as 'target'or 'outlier' - so in order to calculate the outlier pass rate the dataset must contain informationfrom more than one class. Also, the output varies depending on whether the label 'outlier' exists in the instances usedto build the classifier. If so, then 'outlier' will be predicted, if not, then the label willbe considered missing when the prediction does not favour the target class. The 'outlier' classwill not be used to build the model if there are instances of this class in the dataset. It cansimply be used as a flag, you do not need to relabel any classes. For more information, see: Kathryn Hempstalk, Eibe Frank, Ian H. Witten: One-Class Classification by Combining Density and Class Probability Estimation. In: Proceedings of the 12th European Conference on Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in Databases and 19th European Conference on Machine Learning, ECMLPKDD2008, Berlin, 505--519, 2008.

Group: nz.ac.waikato.cms.weka Artifact: oneClassClassifier
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3 downloads
Artifact oneClassClassifier
Group nz.ac.waikato.cms.weka
Version 1.0.4
Last update 14. May 2013
Organization University of Waikato, Hamilton, NZ
URL http://weka.sourceforge.net/doc.packages/oneClassClassifier
License GNU General Public License 3
Dependencies amount 1
Dependencies weka-dev,
There are maybe transitive dependencies!

pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.12 from group au.com.dius (version 4.0.10)

pact-jvm-consumer-specs2 ======================== ## Specs2 Bindings for the pact-jvm library ## Dependency In the root folder of your project in build.sbt add the line: ```scala libraryDependencies += &quot;au.com.dius&quot; %% &quot;pact-jvm-consumer-specs2&quot; % &quot;3.2.11&quot; ``` or if you are using Gradle: ```groovy dependencies { testCompile &quot;au.com.dius:pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.11:3.2.11&quot; } ``` __*Note:*__ `PactSpec` requires spec2 3.x. Also, for spray users there&apos;s an incompatibility between specs2 v3.x and spray. Follow these instructions to resolve that problem: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/spray-user/2T6SBp4OJeI/AJlnJuAKPRsJ ## Usage To author a test, mix `PactSpec` into your spec First we define a service client called `ConsumerService`. In our example this is a simple wrapper for `dispatch`, an HTTP client. The source code can be found in the test folder alongside the `ExamplePactSpec`. Here is a simple example: ``` import au.com.dius.pact.consumer.PactSpec class ExamplePactSpec extends Specification with PactSpec { val consumer = &quot;My Consumer&quot; val provider = &quot;My Provider&quot; override def is = uponReceiving(&quot;a request for foo&quot;) .matching(path = &quot;/foo&quot;) .willRespondWith(body = &quot;{}&quot;) .withConsumerTest { providerConfig =&gt; Await.result(ConsumerService(providerConfig.url).simpleGet(&quot;/foo&quot;), Duration(1000, MILLISECONDS)) must beEqualTo(200, Some(&quot;{}&quot;)) } } ``` This spec will be run along with the rest of your specs2 unit tests and will output your pact json to ``` /target/pacts/&lt;Consumer&gt;_&lt;Provider&gt;.json ``` # Forcing pact files to be overwritten (3.6.5+) By default, when the pact file is written, it will be merged with any existing pact file. To force the file to be overwritten, set the Java system property `pact.writer.overwrite` to `true`.

Group: au.com.dius Artifact: pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.12
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0 downloads
Artifact pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.12
Group au.com.dius
Version 4.0.10
Last update 18. April 2020
Organization not specified
URL https://github.com/DiUS/pact-jvm
License Apache 2
Dependencies amount 5
Dependencies pact-jvm-consumer, json, specs2-core_2.12, async-http-client, scala-java8-compat_2.12,
There are maybe transitive dependencies!

pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.11 from group au.com.dius (version 3.5.24)

pact-jvm-consumer-specs2 ======================== ## Specs2 Bindings for the pact-jvm library ## Dependency In the root folder of your project in build.sbt add the line: ```scala libraryDependencies += &quot;au.com.dius&quot; %% &quot;pact-jvm-consumer-specs2&quot; % &quot;3.2.11&quot; ``` or if you are using Gradle: ```groovy dependencies { testCompile &quot;au.com.dius:pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.11:3.2.11&quot; } ``` __*Note:*__ `PactSpec` requires spec2 3.x. Also, for spray users there&apos;s an incompatibility between specs2 v3.x and spray. Follow these instructions to resolve that problem: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/spray-user/2T6SBp4OJeI/AJlnJuAKPRsJ ## Usage To author a test, mix `PactSpec` into your spec First we define a service client called `ConsumerService`. In our example this is a simple wrapper for `dispatch`, an HTTP client. The source code can be found in the test folder alongside the `ExamplePactSpec`. Here is a simple example: ``` import au.com.dius.pact.consumer.PactSpec class ExamplePactSpec extends Specification with PactSpec { val consumer = &quot;My Consumer&quot; val provider = &quot;My Provider&quot; override def is = uponReceiving(&quot;a request for foo&quot;) .matching(path = &quot;/foo&quot;) .willRespondWith(body = &quot;{}&quot;) .withConsumerTest { providerConfig =&gt; Await.result(ConsumerService(providerConfig.url).simpleGet(&quot;/foo&quot;), Duration(1000, MILLISECONDS)) must beEqualTo(200, Some(&quot;{}&quot;)) } } ``` This spec will be run along with the rest of your specs2 unit tests and will output your pact json to ``` /target/pacts/&lt;Consumer&gt;_&lt;Provider&gt;.json ```

Group: au.com.dius Artifact: pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.11
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0 downloads
Artifact pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.11
Group au.com.dius
Version 3.5.24
Last update 04. November 2018
Organization not specified
URL https://github.com/DiUS/pact-jvm
License Apache 2
Dependencies amount 10
Dependencies kotlin-stdlib-jdk8, kotlin-reflect, slf4j-api, groovy-all, kotlin-logging, scala-library, scala-logging_2.11, pact-jvm-consumer_2.11, specs2-core_2.11, async-http-client,
There are maybe transitive dependencies!

pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.10 from group au.com.dius (version 2.4.20)

pact-jvm-consumer-specs2 ======================== ## Specs2 Bindings for the pact-jvm library ## Dependency In the root folder of your project in build.sbt add the line: ```scala libraryDependencies += &quot;au.com.dius&quot; %% &quot;pact-jvm-consumer-specs2&quot; % &quot;3.2.2&quot; ``` or if you are using Gradle: ```groovy dependencies { testCompile &quot;au.com.dius:pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.11:3.2.2&quot; } ``` __*Note:*__ `PactSpec` requires spec2 3.x. Also, for spray users there&apos;s an incompatibility between specs2 v3.x and spray. Follow these instructions to resolve that problem: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/spray-user/2T6SBp4OJeI/AJlnJuAKPRsJ ## Usage To author a test, mix `PactSpec` into your spec First we define a service client called `ConsumerService`. In our example this is a simple wrapper for `dispatch`, an HTTP client. The source code can be found in the test folder alongside the `ExamplePactSpec`. Here is a simple example: ``` import au.com.dius.pact.consumer.PactSpec class ExamplePactSpec extends Specification with PactSpec { val consumer = &quot;My Consumer&quot; val provider = &quot;My Provider&quot; override def is = uponReceiving(&quot;a request for foo&quot;) .matching(path = &quot;/foo&quot;) .willRespondWith(body = &quot;{}&quot;) .withConsumerTest { providerConfig =&gt; Await.result(ConsumerService(providerConfig.url).simpleGet(&quot;/foo&quot;), Duration(1000, MILLISECONDS)) must beEqualTo(200, Some(&quot;{}&quot;)) } } ``` This spec will be run along with the rest of your specs2 unit tests and will output your pact json to ``` /target/pacts/&lt;Consumer&gt;_&lt;Provider&gt;.json ```

Group: au.com.dius Artifact: pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.10
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0 downloads
Artifact pact-jvm-consumer-specs2_2.10
Group au.com.dius
Version 2.4.20
Last update 14. April 2018
Organization not specified
URL https://github.com/DiUS/pact-jvm
License Apache 2
Dependencies amount 4
Dependencies slf4j-api, scala-library, pact-jvm-consumer_2.10, specs2-core_2.10,
There are maybe transitive dependencies!

multiLayerPerceptrons from group nz.ac.waikato.cms.weka (version 1.0.10)

This package currently contains classes for training multilayer perceptrons with one hidden layer, where the number of hidden units is user specified. MLPClassifier can be used for classification problems and MLPRegressor is the corresponding class for numeric prediction tasks. The former has as many output units as there are classes, the latter only one output unit. Both minimise a penalised squared error with a quadratic penalty on the (non-bias) weights, i.e., they implement "weight decay", where this penalised error is averaged over all training instances. The size of the penalty can be determined by the user by modifying the "ridge" parameter to control overfitting. The sum of squared weights is multiplied by this parameter before added to the squared error. Both classes use BFGS optimisation by default to find parameters that correspond to a local minimum of the error function. but optionally conjugated gradient descent is available, which can be faster for problems with many parameters. Logistic functions are used as the activation functions for all units apart from the output unit in MLPRegressor, which employs the identity function. Input attributes are standardised to zero mean and unit variance. MLPRegressor also rescales the target attribute (i.e., "class") using standardisation. All network parameters are initialised with small normally distributed random values.

Group: nz.ac.waikato.cms.weka Artifact: multiLayerPerceptrons
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10 downloads
Artifact multiLayerPerceptrons
Group nz.ac.waikato.cms.weka
Version 1.0.10
Last update 31. October 2016
Organization University of Waikato, Hamilton, NZ
URL http://weka.sourceforge.net/doc.packages/multiLayerPerceptrons
License GNU General Public License 3
Dependencies amount 1
Dependencies weka-dev,
There are maybe transitive dependencies!



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