34 projects tagged "C++ Library"
XmlPlus xsd2cpp is a tool that compiles an XML schema into C++ data bindings. When invoked on an input XSD file, it generates the C++ sources (implementation/headers) for the supplied XML schema, a main.cpp template to demonstrate how generated sources can be consumed, and the automake/autoconf files for building the generated source.
CS::SkipList Library is a C++ template library of containers based on skip lists. These containers work like sets and maps, but can also be accessed via numerical index. This collection has vector-like containers where all operations work in logarithmic time. It also has a composite container where you can order the same elements in many different ways at the same time.
Elemental is a C++ framework for distributed-memory dense linear algebra that strives to be fast, portable, and programmable. It can be thought of as a generalization of PLAPACK to element-by-element distributions that also makes use of recent algorithmic advances from the FLAME project. Elemental usually outperforms both PLAPACK and ScaLAPACK, however, it heavily relies on MPI collectives so a good MPI implementation is crucial. Both pure MPI and hybrid OpenMP-MPI configurations are supported.
SupplyChain is a C++ library that simulates a supply chain. It takes full advantage of concurrent programming and multi-core CPUs without the programmer having to know anything about it. A supply chain consists of two mandatory components: initial producers and final consumers. Apart from these components, a supply chain can include any number of manufacturer nodes. Each node can contain any number of elements of its own type. These elements allow very powerful supply chains to be modeled and constructed.
The Hummus PDF Writer library allows you to generate PDF files. It was developed with a principal “one-off” method of generating PDF files. Adhering to this idea, it is both fast and retains a low memory signature regardless of how large the file grows. The library has a set of high level features for adding content to a PDF, including creation of pages; drawing primitives and any of the simple PDF operators for drawing content; embedding of PDF, JPEG, and TIFF images; Unicode text support with Type1, TrueType, and OpenType fonts; and defining reusable objects using XObject Forms. You can also use the library as a PDF parser. The library is very extensible. It is easy to implement more PDF features by using the lower level set of methods, which provide access to the PDF building blocks themselves. Adding a feature requires you to be familiar with the PDF formatting of that feature, but will not require you to write the basic PDF building blocks, as the library handles this.