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Enable isolated unit testing of individual paragraphs in COBOL programs, in a standalone environment with no connection to a z/OS system. Distributed under GNU General Public License. ECBLUnit: No [175] Simple Unit Testing for z/OS written in IBM Enterprise COBOL. Distributed under GNU General Public License. GCBLUnit: No [176]
The Test Anything Protocol (TAP) is a protocol for communicating between test logic, called a TAP producer, and a test harness in a language-agnostic way. Originally developed for unit testing of the Perl interpreter in 1987, producers and parsers are now available for many development platforms.
Test::More is a unit testing module for Perl. Created and maintained by Michael G Schwern with help from Barrie Slaymaker, Tony Bowden, chromatic , Fergal Daly and perl-qa. Test::More is the most popular Perl testing module, as of this 2010 about 80% of all CPAN distributions made use of it.
Unit tests: Yes Yes Apache Tapestry: Java Prototype, jQuery Yes Pull Yes JPA, Hibernate, Cayenne: Selenium, TestNG, JUnit: Spring Security, Shiro Yes with extensions Native or Bean Validation: Apache Wicket: Java Extensions for YUI, ExtJS, more No (Modular event-driven) Pull Yes with extensions Mock objects, unit and integration tests via ...
CPAN—Comprehensive Perl Archive Network; CP/M—Control Program/Monitor; CPRI—Common Public Radio Interface; CPS—Characters per second; CPU—Central processing unit; CQS—Command–query separation; CQRS—Command Query Responsibility Segregation; CR—Carriage return; CRAN—Comprehensive R Archive Network; CRC—Cyclic redundancy check
Perl OpenGL (POGL) is a portable, compiled wrapper library that allows OpenGL to be used in the Perl programming language.. POGL provides support for most OpenGL 2.0 extensions, abstracts operating system specific proc handlers, and supports OpenGL Utility Toolkit (GLUT), a simple cross-platform windowing interface.
The Raku design process was first announced on 19 July 2000, on the fourth day of that year's Perl Conference, [10] by Larry Wall in his State of the Onion 2000 talk. [11] At that time, the primary goals were to remove "historical warts" from the language; "easy things should stay easy, hard things should get easier, and impossible things should get hard"; and a general cleanup of the internal ...
A frame is "the unit of transmission in a link layer protocol, and consists of a link layer header followed by a packet." [2] Each frame is separated from the next by an interframe gap. A frame is a series of bits generally composed of frame synchronization bits, the packet payload, and a frame check sequence. Examples are Ethernet frames ...