Displaying 9 results from an estimated 9 matches for "researchy".
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2008 Mar 18
0
[LLVMdev] Google Summer of Code 2008
...st any other
> project, if you feel, that it definitely can be useful.
Just some ideas to add to the mix:
One of the suggestions is to write a code-density optimizer for the ARM
backend. For an interesting alternative, try optimizing for power consumption
instead. If you want something super researchy, try doing this for one of the
clockless (asynchronous) ARM cores:
http://www.arm.com/products/CPUs/ARM996HS.html
Another suggestion under "Miscellaneous Additions" was to write a new
front-end for Java/OCaml/Forth. IMHO, reimplementing Java or OCaml from
scratch is way too much wo...
2008 Mar 18
2
[LLVMdev] Google Summer of Code 2008
Hello, Everyone
LLVM recently was approved to take part in Google Summer of Code 2008.
We welcome everyone to apply for this program.
The list of ideas for (possible) projects is located at
http://llvm.org/OpenProjects.html. Surely you can suggest any other
project, if you feel, that it definitely can be useful.
Our common requirement for student is to submit proposal to LLVM
Developers
2011 Jun 09
1
any documents
Hi,
I'm doing a textual analysis of several articles discussing the evolution of
prices in order to give a forecast. if someone can give me a clear approach
to this knowing that I work on the package tm.
Thank you very much
--
View this message in context: http://r.789695.n4.nabble.com/any-documents-tp3584961p3584961.html
Sent from the R help mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
2006 Apr 19
2
[LLVMdev] glibc to LLVM port
Hi guys,
on the webpages of your project i have found, that you are
trying to port glibc to LLVM (sounds interesting). I am student of Faculty
of Informatics in Brno, and currently i am trying to search a theme for my
diploma thesis. Do you think that this one could have the scope to
cover (serve) as the diploma work.
Thanks
Regards
iankko
--- reklama
2006 Apr 19
0
[LLVMdev] glibc to LLVM port
...esis. Do you think that this one could have the scope to
> cover (serve) as the diploma work.
While porting glibc would be interesting and of interest to LLVM, its up
to your advisor/thesis committee to determine if its enough for a diploma.
Typically universities want something that is "researchy" (new or novel)
as a basis for your thesis. It varies a lot though... so I would approach
them with your idea and see what they say.
LLVM would really benefit from this work or any of the other projects
listed on our website. So there should be some project that makes your
advisor/univers...
2006 Aug 03
1
[LLVMdev] Alice / ML and C--/llvm
Hello,
The Mozart-Oz isn't suitable for our project beacause of disappointing
"raw" performances :
http://shootout.alioth.debian.org/gp4/benchmark.php?test=all&lang=al
http://www.gecode.org/benchmarks.html
I have found a very interesting language :
http://www.ps.uni-sb.de/alice/
Concurrency, logic verification
I found this link : http://www.cminusminus.org with a
2020 Feb 06
2
Writing loop transformations on the right representation is more productive
On 2/5/20 6:13 PM, Chris Lattner via llvm-dev wrote:
>
>
>> On Feb 2, 2020, at 10:35 PM, Michael Kruse via llvm-dev
>> <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> That's actually not how I read it. Red/green trees was *one* of the
>>> nine items you mentioned in your list and this didn't
2020 Feb 08
2
Writing loop transformations on the right representation is more productive
...red).
This is why I am enthusiastic about speculative transformations -- a
generic cost function can handle many cases without requiring code for each
transformation.
> 4) While red/green trees are interesting, there are other approaches to
> tackle these problems. However, they are also researchy and need to be
> proven. I’m happy to explain my thoughts on this if you are interested.
>
>
> Overall, I am super enthusiastic about new research directions, but I
> think they should be done along the lines of Polly, where the “new thing”
> gets built and can then be quantitati...
2004 Jun 18
5
Another NEWBIE
Hi,
I'm a very fresh newbie to R.
My first main question is, what the limitations of R are, what methods can R
NOT do, esp. compared to (a) SPSS and (b) SAS?
The second question is, how do you handle the data entry, data management
and data manipulation in R, to me it seems to be really complicated and
confusing?! Are there a kind of "helping tools"?
The third question: are