| Software Engineering With Microsoft Visual Studio Team System |
| Written by Administrator, on 05-04-2009 08:57 |
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 It is about the value-up paradigm of software development, which forms the basis of VSTS: its guiding ideas, why they are presented in certain ways, and how they fit into the process of managing the software lifecycle. This book is the next best thing to having an onsite coach who can lead the team through a consistent set of processes. Sam Guckenheimer has been the chief customer advocate for VSTS, responsible for its end-to-end external design. He has written this book as a framework for thinking about software projects in a way that can be directly tooled by VSTS. It presents essential theory and practical examples to describe a realistic process for IT projects Download Link: http://rapidshare.de/files/31484825/Software_Engineering_with_Microsoft_Visual_Studio_Team_System_-_Addison_Wesley.rar.html Last update: 05-04-2009 08:57
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| Electonic Device And Circuit |
| Written by Administrator, on 05-04-2009 08:50 |
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 This updated version of its internationally popular predecessor provides and introductory problem-solved text for understanding fundamentalconcepts of electronic devices, their design, and their circuitry. Providing an interface with Pspice, the most widely used program in electronics, new key features include a new chapter presenting the basics of switched mode power supplies, thirty-one new examples, and twenty-three PS solved problems Download Link: http://rapidshare.com/files/4555478/Schaum_27s.Outline.of.Electronic.Devices.and.Circuits.pdf Last update: 05-04-2009 08:50
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| Written by Administrator, on 05-04-2009 08:43 |
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 The proliferation of processors, environments, and constraints on systems has cast compilertechnology into a wider variety of settings, changing the compiler and compiler writer’s role. No longer is execution speed the sole criterion for judging compiled code. Today, code might be judged on how small it is, how much power it consumes, how well it compresses, or how many page faults it generates. In this evolving environment, the task of building a successful compiler relies upon the compiler writer’s ability to balance and blend algorithms, engineering insights, and careful planning. Today’s compiler writer must choose a path through a design space that is filled with diverse alternatives, each with distinct costs, advantages, and complexities. Engineering a Compiler explores this design space by presenting some of the ways these problems have been solved, and the constraints that made each of those solutions attractive. By understanding the parameters of the problem and their impact on compiler design, the authors hope to convey both the depth of the problems and the breadth of possible solutions. Their goal is to cover a broad enough selection of material to show readers that real tradeoffs exist, and that the impact of those choices can be both subtle and far-reaching. Authors Keith Cooper and Linda Torczon convey both the art and the science of compiler construction and show best practice algorithms for the major passes of a compiler. Their text re-balances the curriculum for an introductory course in compiler construction to reflect the issues that arise in current practice. ·Focuses on the back end of the compilerreflecting the focus of research and development over the last decade. ·Uses the well-developed theory from scanning and parsing to introduce concepts that play a critical role in optimization and code generation. ·Introduces the student to optimization through data-flow analysis, SSA form, and a selection of scalar optimizations. ·Builds on this background to teach modern methods in code generation: instruction selection, instruction scheduling, and register allocation. ·Presents examples in several different programming languages in order to best illustrate the concept. ·Provides end-of-chapter exercises, with on-line solutions available to instructors. Download Link: http://rapidshare.com/files/24382311/155860698X.Morgan_20Kaufmann.Engineering_20a_20Compiler.pdf Last update: 05-04-2009 09:09
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