Guava
Gephi
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Guava | Gephi | |
---|---|---|
58 | 48 | |
49,412 | 5,674 | |
0.5% | 0.8% | |
9.6 | 9.6 | |
about 6 hours ago | 20 days ago | |
Java | Java | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Guava
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Lists: do you know the nature of yours? The strange story of a data container in Java
The first problem is at the level of Type System, given that a situation more correct would allow us to distinguish through the Collection Type which abstraction we are operating with, species if definable as mutable or immutable. The JCF was born at a time when great care was taken to offer immediate operational data structures, and with attention to performance, but with less attention to constructs or uses that are now seen as common. These concepts have been taken up by other infrastructures from which we certainly cannot fail to mention: Eclipse Collection, Guava Collections, and VAVR.
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Google/guava: Google core libraries for Java
Even better is getting Gradle/Maven to correctly pull "plain" vs "Android" versions of the package instead of them just publishing the diverging code base as two repository packages.
https://github.com/google/guava/issues/2914
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Guava 32.0 (released today) and the @Beta annotation
I'll admit I'm surprised to see that BOMs have been documented on maven.apache.org since mid-2008. It looks like Spring, for example, didn't adopt them until mid-2014. I don't know how widely they caught on in other areas. The first discussion of them in the context of Guava may have been in 2018, as I don't see mention of them in the various issues from 2011-2015 (#605, #1329, #1471, #1954.
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Best Practice of Guava ImmutableList
And a quick peek at the source code for ImmutableList seems to confirm this (https://github.com/google/guava/blob/master/guava/src/com/google/common/collect/ImmutableList.java - it goes via a bunch of methods, but ends up using Arrays.copyOf(), which creates a fixed-size array).
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Genuine question: how do you all use Haskell IRL?
The guava library of Java has some of these data structures implemented: https://github.com/google/guava/wiki/ImmutableCollectionsExplained , but implementations of the above book in many languages can be found on github (say, this one for Haskell: https://github.com/aistrate/Okasaki )
- Murmurhash -criando um rollout progressivo via backend
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Один из примеров почему ChatGPT еще очень далеко до замены программистов, та и остальных профессий тоже.
Java Mask: Java Mask is a library that offers various string masking techniques for sensitive data such as credit card numbers, email addresses, and more. You can find the library at: https://github.com/miguelfreitas93/java-mask DataMasker: DataMasker is a Java library specifically designed for masking sensitive data, including credit card numbers, using customizable masking patterns. Visit the GitHub repository for more information and usage examples: https://github.com/GDSSecurity/DataMasker Maskify: Maskify is a simple Java library that can be used to mask credit card numbers, Social Security numbers, and other sensitive information. You can find the library at: https://github.com/jonathancarvalhoalves/maskify CreditCardUtils: This is a lightweight Java library that provides utility methods for validating, formatting, and masking credit card numbers. Visit the GitHub repository for more information: https://github.com/malkusch/creditcardutils Google Guava: Google Guava is a popular set of Java libraries containing a wealth of utilities for working with strings, collections, and more. While not specifically designed for masking credit card information, you can use Guava's string manipulation methods to mask sensitive data: https://github.com/google/guava
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Twitter makes some of its source code public
I mean, I guess, technically? If you define it like that, then Microsoft has people working for them for free, as does Google, as does Apple, etc. It's not that weird, and you can try to twist it to be weird, but those of us in the software industry largely regard this as a good thing.
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Managing unfixable CVEs
So we have https://github.com/google/guava/issues/4011
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Java 17 migration: bias locks regression
Ok, so let's implement our lazy initialization more smartly to avoid acquiring the lock every time and use old fashion but still working double-checked locking. I've found it implemented by Suppliers.memoize in guava library.
Gephi
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The Hunt for the Missing Data Type
The following are not exactly what you have asked for.
https://gephi.org/ This implements lots of graph visualization algorithms.
https://strlen.com/treesheets/ Excel for tree data.
- NetworkX – Network Analysis in Python
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🇺🇳 Discover a country UN SDGs concerns w/ Open Metadata on Neo4J
🧑🎨 Enjoy some movie data art experience with Gephi and Runway
- Gephi – The Open Graph Viz Platform
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Engaging with Complex Systems
. Gephi (https://gephi.org)
- [AMA] We're Flat Head Studio, four developers from Austria and we just released We Are One on the Quest - ask us anything!
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piece of software to find /crawl information about yourself?
Maybe try exporting your data from spiderfoot and use a graph tool like Gephi to import your data to and have it generate a graph for you.
- Graph of character interactions in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone
- [AskJS] Looking for a light javascript library to help me build character relationship diagrams
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Countries with the most military conflicts according to Wikipedia (List of wars) [OC]
Tool: custom python scripts and Gephi
What are some alternatives?
JGit - JGit project repository (jgit)
Protégé - Protege Desktop
javatuples - Typesafe representation of tuples in Java.
Caffeine - A high performance caching library for Java
Dex - Dex : The Data Explorer -- A data visualization tool written in Java/Groovy/JavaFX capable of powerful ETL and publishing web visualizations.
Eclipse Collections - Eclipse Collections is a collections framework for Java with optimized data structures and a rich, functional and fluent API.
JADE - a pug implementation written in Java (formerly known as jade)
Hashids.java - Hashids algorithm v1.0.0 implementation in Java
Cytoscape.js - Graph theory (network) library for visualisation and analysis
ZXing - ZXing ("Zebra Crossing") barcode scanning library for Java, Android
HaikunatorJAVA - Generate Heroku-like random names to use in your Java applications