search for: representing

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 14469 matches for "representing".

2004 Mar 11
1
Re: Fax support and 'f' DTMF tone extension & Asterisk mangling faxes
For whom asked me support for capi devices, that's here: http://www.junghanns.net/asterisk/ I'm using a AVM B1 card. also AVM passive card (FRITZ!PCI) works.... Then is you use SuSe all is configured by yast... Hello, probably is a feature what I'm asking for but because of my inexperience to asterisk this is my question: I've configured CAPI ISDN to receive calls. When I
2011 Jun 13
3
[LLVMdev] Is LLVM expressive enough to represent asynchronous exceptions?
On 11-06-12 7:40 PM, John McCall wrote: > On Jun 12, 2011, at 2:14 PM, Cameron Zwarich wrote: > >> > On Jun 12, 2011, at 1:25 AM, Duncan Sands wrote: >> > >>> >> Hi Sohail, >>> >> >>>> >>> Is LLVM expressive enough to represent asynchronous exceptions? >>> >> >>> >> not currently. The
2010 Jan 20
2
could we use ":" to represent multiple matrice in a list or sequential chracter names
Hi, I know we can use 1:10 to represent the 1,2,3,...,10 numbers, but the following conditions are except. Anybody knows how to represent the following two cases with similar usage of ":" or others? Usually, i will get several hundred names for them, such as a1,a2,... or f[[1]],f[[2]],... #Example data a1<-array(1:12,c(2,3,2)); a2<-array(2,c(2,3,2)); a3<-array(0,c(2,3,2))
2012 Oct 22
5
Represent point size according to frequency
Hello! I would like to make a scatterplot of my data, but the problem is that several points have the same x and y values and are represented as only one point. I wonder if there is a way to represent the data points, but with point size representing the frequency of the depicted x-y value? Thank you! -- View this message in context: http://r.789695.n4.nabble.com/Represent-point-size-according-to-frequency-tp4646976.html Sent from the R help mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
2011 Jun 12
6
[LLVMdev] Is LLVM expressive enough to represent asynchronous exceptions?
On Jun 12, 2011, at 1:25 AM, Duncan Sands wrote: > Hi Sohail, > >> Is LLVM expressive enough to represent asynchronous exceptions? > > not currently. The first step in this direction is to get rid of the invoke > instruction and attach exception handling information to basic blocks. See > http://nondot.org/sabre/LLVMNotes/ExceptionHandlingChanges.txt > for a
2011 Jun 13
0
[LLVMdev] Is LLVM expressive enough to represent asynchronous exceptions?
On Jun 12, 2011, at 5:31 PM, Sohail Somani wrote: > On 11-06-12 7:40 PM, John McCall wrote: >> On Jun 12, 2011, at 2:14 PM, Cameron Zwarich wrote: >> >>>> On Jun 12, 2011, at 1:25 AM, Duncan Sands wrote: >>>> >>>>>> Hi Sohail, >>>>>> >>>>>>>> Is LLVM expressive enough to represent asynchronous
2011 Jun 12
0
[LLVMdev] Is LLVM expressive enough to represent asynchronous exceptions?
On Jun 12, 2011, at 2:14 PM, Cameron Zwarich wrote: > On Jun 12, 2011, at 1:25 AM, Duncan Sands wrote: > >> Hi Sohail, >> >>> Is LLVM expressive enough to represent asynchronous exceptions? >> >> not currently. The first step in this direction is to get rid of the invoke >> instruction and attach exception handling information to basic blocks. See
2006 May 09
2
draw a graphic using segments to represent data
Hello, I'd like to draw a graphic using different color line segments to represent microarray data. It simply likes this: Data=cbind(c(1, 2, -1, 3, -2.2), c(1, 3, -1, -1.8, 4)) The first col No represents y'axis position (negative down and positive up). The second col No represents a length of segment (negative segment should be on left of y, and positive on right). Also the
2005 Sep 07
4
[LLVMdev] LiveIntervals, replace register with representative register?
I don't understand the following code snippet in LiveIntervalAnalysis.cpp. Why changing the type of the opreand from a virtual register to a machine register? The register number (reg) is still a virtual register index (>1024). bool LiveIntervals::runOnMachineFunction(MachineFunction &fn) { // perform a final pass over the instructions and compute spill // weights, coalesce
2005 Jul 10
2
Boxplot in R
I am trying to draw a plot like Matlab does: The upper extreme whisker represents 95% of the data; The upper hinge represents 75% of the data; The median represents 50% of the data; The lower hinge represents 25% of the data; The lower extreme whisker represents 5% of the data. It looks like: --- 95% | | ------- 75% | | |-----| 50% | | | | -------
2005 Sep 07
0
[LLVMdev] LiveIntervals, replace register with representative register?
On Wed, 2005-09-07 at 15:09 +0800, Tzu-Chien Chiu wrote: > I don't understand the following code snippet in LiveIntervalAnalysis.cpp. > > Why changing the type of the opreand from a virtual register to a > machine register? The register number (reg) is still a virtual > register index (>1024). > > > bool LiveIntervals::runOnMachineFunction(MachineFunction &fn)
2005 Sep 07
1
[LLVMdev] LiveIntervals, replace register with representative register?
On 08/09/05, Alkis Evlogimenos <evlogimenos at gmail.com> wrote: > representative register (found using a union find algorithm). Note that > the representative register could be a real register if we ever joined > an interval of a real register with one of a virtual register (and this > real register will be the representative register of the set of > intervals joined
2008 Sep 15
1
How to plot a matrix of intervals
Dear R-users, I have some nonstandard data set which I would like to plot but don't know how to do it in R. The data is in a matrix where the rows represent samples and the columns represent locations. The entries of the matrix are 0's and 1's, where 1 represents an event and 0 represents a non-event. e.g. aberrations <- matrix(rbinom(1000, 1, 0.8), nrow=20, ncol=50,
2008 Jul 24
2
[LLVMdev] Indirect Branch Representation
Hi, I was thinking about the ways to represent indirect branch in LLVM. It seems that "Switch instruction" is the only way to logically represent indirect branch inside LLVM. Is there any other easier way to represent indirect branch in LLVM? Thanks Kapil -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL:
2010 Sep 10
3
(no subject)
Hello, I'm trying to do bar plot where 'sex' will be the category axis and 'occupation' will represent the bars and the clusters will represent the mean 'income'. sex occupation income 1 female j 12 2 male b 34 3 male j 22 4 female j 54 5 male b 33 6
2005 Jun 03
2
Setting up calls through the manager interface
Hello all! I am currently making a script which is supposed to set up a call on request from a user, say, through a web page, for support issues etc. I am new into both asterisk and php, but I am working my way through the path as good as I can. Basically, what I would want to do, is to give the user the possibility to initiate a call by clicking a button. I?ve seen a cgi-alternative for this,
2011 Jun 13
1
[LLVMdev] Is LLVM expressive enough to represent asynchronous exceptions?
On 11-06-12 8:53 PM, John McCall wrote: >> > The CFG point is a valid point. In what I've read on the topic so far >> > (yay Internet), it seems like the CFG would have to represent the fact >> > that control can jump to a handler after nearly every instruction in the >> > presence of async exceptions. The Hotspot compiler probably does this. >> >
2007 Jul 17
0
Bug#433533: xen-3.0: warnings building source diff after first attempt
Package: xen-3.0 Version: 3.0.4-1-1 Severity: minor Starting from a fresh source package, if you build the package once and then attempt to build it again, there are file permissions not being cleaned up that then cause warnings when building the source package. Here is the section of the build log: dh_clean dpkg-source -b xen-3.0-3.0.4-1 dpkg-source: building xen-3.0 using existing
2010 Apr 19
0
Representing networks on the node...
I meant to send this out a while back, but don't see that I ever actually sent it. I'm currently reworking the matahari agents to clean up the code, refactor elements and also enhance the agents. And the one that has me stumped is the NIC agent. The main problem is that, if we're going to represent network interfaces, we shouldn't limit it to only physical devices. Instead, I
2009 May 28
6
[LLVMdev] mov instruction in LLVM IR
The input language is at assembly level, and the location akin to a %temp ( a virtual register if you will) and contains moves from one virtual to another. Though these are not like memory but I could represent them as local variables and do loads and stores; so I dont know how to represent it in C except as local variables. On Thu, May 28, 2009 at 4:06 PM, Mike Stump <mrs at apple.com>