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  2. Application checkpointing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Application_checkpointing

    One of the original and now most common means of application checkpointing was a "save state" feature in interactive applications, in which the user of the application could save the state of all variables and other data and either continue working or exit the application and restart the application and restore the saved state at a later time.

  3. Stable Diffusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stable_Diffusion

    There are three methods in which user-accessible fine-tuning can be applied to a Stable Diffusion model checkpoint: An "embedding" can be trained from a collection of user-provided images, and allows the model to generate visually similar images whenever the name of the embedding is used within a generation prompt. [45]

  4. Merge (version control) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merge_(version_control)

    It is a rough merging method, but widely applicable since it only requires one common ancestor to reconstruct the changes that are to be merged. Three way merge can be done on raw text (sequence of lines) or on structured trees. [2] The three-way merge looks for sections which are the same in only two of the three files.

  5. Fork–join model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fork–join_model

    It is also supported by the Java concurrency framework, [7] the Task Parallel Library for .NET, [8] and Intel's Threading Building Blocks (TBB). [1] The Cilk programming language has language-level support for fork and join, in the form of the spawn and sync keywords, [4] or cilk_spawn and cilk_sync in Cilk Plus. [1]

  6. DrJava - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DrJava

    DrJava is a lightweight IDE for the Java programming language.Designed primarily for beginners and actively developed and maintained by the JavaPLT group at Rice University, its interface uses Sun Microsystems' Swing toolkit and therefore has a consistent appearance on different platforms. [1]

  7. Cascading (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cascading_(software)

    Cascading is a software abstraction layer for Apache Hadoop and Apache Flink.Cascading is used to create and execute complex data processing workflows on a Hadoop cluster using any JVM-based language (Java, JRuby, Clojure, etc.), hiding the underlying complexity of MapReduce jobs.

  8. Jess (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jess_(programming_language)

    Rather than a procedural paradigm, where one program has a loop that is activated only one time, the declarative paradigm used by Jess applies a set of rules to a set of facts continuously by a process named pattern matching. Rules can modify the set of facts, or can execute any Java code. It uses the Rete algorithm [1] to execute rules.

  9. List of Java bytecode instructions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Java_bytecode...

    This is a list of the instructions that make up the Java bytecode, an abstract machine language that is ultimately executed by the Java virtual machine. [1] The Java bytecode is generated from languages running on the Java Platform, most notably the Java programming language.