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Ark is a file archiver and compressor developed by KDE and included in the KDE Applications software bundle. It supports various common archive and compression formats including zip , 7z , rar , lha and tar (both uncompressed and compressed with e.g. gzip , bzip2 , lzip or xz ).
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TK Solver's core technologies are a declarative programming language, algebraic equation solver, [1] an iterative equation solver, and a structured, object-based interface, using a command structure. [ 1 ] [ 7 ] The interface comprises nine classes of objects that can be shared between and merged into other TK files:
According to Mulder & Wunsch (2003), Concorde “is widely regarded as the fastest TSP solver, for large instances, currently in existence.” In 2001, Concorde won a 5000 guilder prize from CMG for solving a vehicle routing problem the company had posed in 1996. [7] Concorde requires a linear programming solver and only supports QSopt [8] and ...
The SciPy scientific library, for instance, uses HiGHS as its LP solver [13] from release 1.6.0 [14] and the HiGHS MIP solver for discrete optimization from release 1.9.0. [15] As well as offering an interface to HiGHS, the JuMP modelling language for Julia [ 16 ] also describes the specific use of HiGHS in its user documentation. [ 17 ]
Mystic Ark (ミスティックアーク, Misutikku Āku) is a 1995 role-playing video game developed by Produce! and published by Enix for the Super Famicom. The video game was only released in Japan. Mystic Ark has strong similarities to the games The 7th Saga [2] and Brain Lord, also developed by Produce
The Stanford Research Institute Problem Solver, known by its acronym STRIPS, is an automated planner developed by Richard Fikes and Nils Nilsson in 1971 at SRI International. [1] The same name was later used to refer to the formal language of the inputs to this planner.