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  2. General Architecture for Text Engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Architecture_for...

    General Architecture for Text Engineering (GATE) is a Java suite of natural language processing (NLP) tools for man tasks, including information extraction in many languages. [1] It is now used worldwide by a wide community of scientists, companies, teachers and students.

  3. Bridge pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge_pattern

    The bridge pattern is often confused with the adapter pattern, and is often implemented using the object adapter pattern; e.g., in the Java code below. Variant: The implementation can be decoupled even more by deferring the presence of the implementation to the point where the abstraction is utilized.

  4. Treiber stack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treiber_Stack

    In some languages—particularly, those without garbage collection—the Treiber stack can be at risk for the ABA problem.When a process is about to remove an element from the stack (just before the compare and set in the pop routine below) another process can change the stack such that the head is the same, but the second element is different.

  5. JAPE (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JAPE_(linguistics)

    In computational linguistics, JAPE is the Java Annotation Patterns Engine, a component of the open-source General Architecture for Text Engineering (GATE) platform. JAPE is a finite state transducer that operates over annotations based on regular expressions.

  6. Readers–writers problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Readers–writers_problem

    Therefore, the third readers–writers problem is sometimes proposed, which adds the constraint that no thread shall be allowed to starve; that is, the operation of obtaining a lock on the shared data will always terminate in a bounded amount of time. A solution with fairness for both readers and writers might be as follows:

  7. Race condition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Race_condition

    For example, in Java, this guarantee is directly specified: [8] A program is correctly synchronized if and only if all sequentially consistent executions are free of data races. If a program is correctly synchronized, then all executions of the program will appear to be sequentially consistent (§17.4.3).

  8. Javadoc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Javadoc

    Javadoc is an API documentation generator for the Java programming language. Based on information in Java source code, Javadoc generates documentation formatted as HTML and via extensions, other formats. [1] Javadoc was created by Sun Microsystems and is owned by Oracle today.

  9. Rice's theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice's_theorem

    For example, Rice's theorem implies that in dynamically typed programming languages which are Turing-complete, it is impossible to verify the absence of type errors. On the other hand, statically typed programming languages feature a type system which statically prevents type errors.