Introduction To Scripting
Found 6 free book(s)Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide - Linux Documentation Project
tldp.orgscripting techniques. The exercises and heavily-commented examples invite active reader participation, under the premise that the only way to really learn scripting is to write scripts. This book is suitable for classroom use as a general introduction to programming concepts. This document is herewith granted to the Public Domain. No copyright!
Adobe InDesign CS6 JavaScript Scripting Guide
www.adobe.com1 Introduction This document shows how to do the following: Work with the Adobe® InDesign® scripting environment. Use advanced scripting features. Perform basic document tasks like setting up master spreads, printing, and exporting. Work with page items (rectangles, ellipses, graphic lines, polygons, text frames, and groups).
A Hands-on Introduction to Docker
resources.sei.cmu.eduA Hands on Introduction to Docker. May 1–4, 2017 ©2017 Len Bass. SATURN. 2017. Setting expectations. This is an introduction to Docker intended for those who have no hands on experience with Docker. If you have used Docker you will likely not get much from this session. The material (and hands on portion) is taken from the course
Introduction to Python: Data types - Purdue University
www.purdue.edu•Scripting language hence easily portabble •Python interpreter is supported onmostmodern OS’s •Extensibilitywithlibraries •Large base of third-party libraries that greatly extend functionality. Eg., NumPy, SciPyetc.
Finite Element Method Magnetics
www.femm.infoThe Lua scripting language is integrated into the interactive shell. Unlike previous versions of FEMM (i.e. v3.4 and lower), only one instance of Lua is running at any one time. This single instance of Lua can both build and analyze a geometry and evaluate the post-processing results, simplifying the creation of various sorts of “batch” runs.
Bash Reference Manual
www.gnu.org1 Introduction 1.1 What is Bash? Bash is the shell, or command language interpreter, for the gnu operating system. The name is an acronym for the ‘Bourne-Again SHell’, a pun on Stephen Bourne, the author of the direct ancestor of the current Unix shell sh, which appeared in the Seventh Edition Bell Labs Research version of Unix.