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what is the difference between monolithic and microkernel.
Well explained at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microkernel ,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:OS-structure.svg
The Wikipedia articles are pretty good. However, if you are looking for a more abstract answer, you can draw an analogy to the plugin system in Eclipse. Eclipse provides abstractions over the basic needs of an IDE and depends on plugins to implement language-specific features such as compiler integration. Similarly, a microkernel provides abstractions over low level system details and requires plugins to implement the majority of real features such as file systems and networking protocols.
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Not only "swift-algorithms" but also "swift-collections" which is announced yesterday are so amazing library I think.
I wonder why apple didn't include that libraries in official swift.
Maybe you who will answer to me absolutely don't know too.
If you don't know, could you tell me if developer teams of each of library is different with developer team of official swift?
They're both not in the swift standard library (yet) because they haven't passed the Swift Evolution process. This is explained in the Swift Algorithms announcement:
It’s our ambition for the standard library to include a rich, pragmatic set of generic algorithms. We think the Algorithms package can help realize this goal by serving as a low-friction venue to build out new families of related algorithms—giving us an opportunity to iteratively explore the problem space and learn how different algorithms connect and interact—before graduating them into the standard library.
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I am starting to learn how to build rest Web service (I come from soap web service).
I'm an intermediate scala programer. I'd like to know as of now, what is the most widespread framework for building Restful Service. But i would also appreciate personal opinion on what is the easiest to use for the task of solely building rest api/web-service, very fast, with a not so complicate learning curve.
Many thanks,
-M-
Play, Scalatra and Spray are all good choices with a reasonable learning curve.
You'll have to look at these (and others), then decide which fits best with your own preferences. It's a very subjective question and there are too many variables for anyone to be able to give a definitive answer.
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I want to create a REST based chat application in Java using Eclipse, but I have no idea how to start. How do I take care of resources, verbs, and HEATOS.
Check out this link, or this link, or this link. I would personally recommend Jersey. restelt is very powerful, but might be quite complicated. RESTeasy has more features than jersey, but it can also be a pain to configure outside JBoss, and their community is not as 'active'. I would recommend Jersey, their startup tutorial is very easy to follow.
You can also look at this book, and this book. Sorry, I can't provide any hard answers as I have no knowledge, your level of expertise on the subject. Hope this helps.
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I'm looking for a premade IRC bot, that i can easily install on some of my channels. They are mainly support channels, so we will need to be able to add commands to give out important notices etc.
All help is much appretiated.
You should have a look at Supybot. It's an extensible and easily configurable IRC bot written in Python. You will find many plug-ins on the official website or on GitHub. If you happen to know some Python, it is probably your best option.
You could also try Eggdrop (or Windrop which is basically an Eggdrop version for Windows). Many TCL scripts (extensions) are available pretty much everywhere.
I suggest you to visit the IRC-Wiki which could be useful when you need information about anything related to IRC.
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I recently read through Code Complete, and it recommends that I create a project specification before actually coding.
The book didn't go very far into detail about what 'specs' are, and how they are made. Because this is a crucial part of software development, I would like to know how to create quality specs that are not too exhaustive.
Where can I learn more about software specifications? Or any of the other prerequisites outlined in Code Complete?
Here's Joel's article on Function Design documents.
http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000036.html
If you are looking for books, I can recommend two right now, and in fact, I ordered a third because it looked good.
The two I can recommend fully are:
Software Requirements (2nd Edition)
More about Software Requirements
I also ordered a third book:
Software Requirements Patterns
Joel Spolsky posted the functional spec to his CoPilot application along with a brief blog post about it.
http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/AardvarkSpec.html