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  2. Gayle Laakmann McDowell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gayle_Laakmann_McDowell

    First self-published in 2008, her book Cracking the Coding Interview provides guidance on technical job interviews, and includes solutions to example coding interview questions. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] As of 2015, the book was in its sixth edition and have been translated into seven languages.

  3. SparkFun Electronics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SparkFun_Electronics

    Rather than pay the cost of shipping the imported multimeters back, SparkFun chose to have them destroyed. [22] In a letter to SparkFun, Fluke announced that they would be supplying the company with a shipment of genuine Fluke products and equipment as a gesture of goodwill and support for the maker movement, which SparkFun accepted. [23]

  4. Adafruit Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adafruit_Industries

    The control protocol for NeoPixels is based on only one communication wire. Adafruit provides an Arduino library [13] and a Python Library [14] to help with the programming of NeoPixels. In addition to the traditional RGB technology, Adafruit manufactures a red-green-blue-white (RGBW) variant of NeoPixel for all products except those that ...

  5. Pseudocode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudocode

    Function calls and blocks of code, such as code contained within a loop, are often replaced by a one-line natural language sentence. Depending on the writer, pseudocode may therefore vary widely in style, from a near-exact imitation of a real programming language at one extreme, to a description approaching formatted prose at the other.

  6. Adaptive Huffman coding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptive_Huffman_coding

    For "a" transmit its binary code. Step 2: NYT spawns two child nodes: 254 and 255, both with weight 0. Increase weight for root and 255. Code for "a", associated with node 255, is 1. For "b" transmit 0 (for NYT node) then its binary code. Step 3: NYT spawns two child nodes: 252 for NYT and 253 for leaf node, both with weight 0.

  7. Reflective programming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflective_programming

    Discover and modify source-code constructions (such as code blocks, classes, methods, protocols, etc.) as first-class objects at runtime. Convert a string matching the symbolic name of a class or function into a reference to or invocation of that class or function. Evaluate a string as if it were a source-code statement at runtime.

  8. Convolutional code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convolutional_code

    Convolutional code with any code rate can be designed based on polynomial selection; [15] however, in practice, a puncturing procedure is often used to achieve the required code rate. Puncturing is a technique used to make a m/n rate code from a "basic" low-rate (e.g., 1/n) code. It is achieved by deleting of some bits in the encoder output.

  9. Block code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_code

    Under this definition codes such as turbo codes, terminated convolutional codes and other iteratively decodable codes (turbo-like codes) would also be considered block codes. A non-terminated convolutional encoder would be an example of a non-block (unframed) code, which has memory and is instead classified as a tree code .