6 projects tagged "Eclipse Public License 1.0"
kbd-cheatsheet is a small application that generates a list of Eclipse keyboard shortcuts from Eclipse's CSV export function. The shortcuts are grouped, sorted, and arranged according to user defined settings. Since the basis for the sheet is your current Eclipse installation, everybody can create their own personalised version.
protobuf-dt is Google’s Eclipse-based editor for protocol buffers. It provides all the features you’d expect from an Eclipse editor (syntax highlighting, outline view, content assist, etc.) plus some protocol buffer-specific features, such as "Open Declaration" (hyperlinking) support, including imported .proto files, configurable integration with protoc, and automatic removal of trailing whitespace.
QuantComponents is a framework for financial time-series analysis and algorithmic trading, based on Java and OSGi, with an Eclipse front-end. It is highly modular: usable as a plain Java API, OSGi components, or integrated into Eclipse. It works standalone or with a client-server architecture, depending on performance and reliability needs, and is integrated with Interactive Brokers through the IB Java API. Its generic broker API means that it can easily be extended to work with other brokers. A backtesting facility and an extensible SWT charting library are provided.
TOPCASED stands for Toolkit in OPen source for Critical Applications and SystEm Development. It is a system and software engineering workshop based on Eclipse. It aims to provide the tools required to go from requirements to the implementation stages. Focused on modeling development engineering, it includes several graphical editors (for ECORE, UML, SysML, SAM, AADL, and more), an OCL rules editor and checker, several code generators (SMUC, UML2C, UML2Java, UML2Python), a document generator, gPM (a ticket tracker), xHDL tools, Tramway (a requirements traceability framework), and more. External tools can be easily connected to the workshop through its API or models.
OVal is a pragmatic and extensible validation framework for any kind of Java objects (not only JavaBeans). Constraints can be configured with annotations, POJOs, or XML. Custom constraints can be expressed in pure Java or by using scripting languages such as JavaScript, Groovy, or BeanShell. Besides simple object validation, OVal provides certain Programming by Contract features. They can easily be enabled by using the provided AspectJ aspects.