Computing Reviews
Today's Issue Hot Topics Search Browse Recommended My Account Log In
Browse by topic Browse by titles Authors Reviewers Browse by issue Browse Help
Search
 
Stevens, W.

Tucson, Arizona
  Follow this Reviewer
 
 
 
Options:
Date Reviewed  
 
1
- 5 of 5 reviews

   
  UNIX curses explained
Goodheart B., Prentice-Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ, 1991.  Type: Book (9780139319570)

The curses library is now part of most UNIX systems and is still used for full-screen applications that run on ASCII video terminals. This book is a comprehensive tutorial on writing programs that use curses....

Jun 1 1992  
  Programming perl
Wall L., Schwartz R., O’Reilly & Associates, Inc., Sebastopol, CA, 1991.  Type: Book (9780937175644)

Perl is an interpreted script language that has become a popular utility tool for some UNIX users. It is freely available and easy to install, so it has propagated widely. This book, coauthored by the developer of perl, is the first bo...

Feb 1 1992  
  Transform coding of images
Clarke R., Academic Press Prof., Inc., San Diego, CA, 1986.  Type: Book (9789780121757304)

There are two basic approaches to image data compression: predictive coding (in the spatial domain) and transform coding (in the frequency domain). This text is concerned with the latter. Transform coding takes the digital image, appli...

Apr 1 1987  
  Properties, implementations and applications of rank filters
Hodgson R., Bailey D., Naylor M., Ng A., McNeill S. Image and Vision Computing 3(1): 3-14, 1985.  Type: Article

Rank filters are nonlinear, local operators that operate on a neighborhood of pixels to generate each output pixel. The pixel values in the window are ranked (sorted) according to numerical value, regardless of their physical location ...

Apr 1 1986  
  Connected components in binary images: the detection problem
Ronse C., Devijver P., John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, NY, 1984.  Type: Book (9789780863800160)

This monograph describes in detail the detection of connected components in binary images. It is assumed that the image is scanned in a raster mode and, at the lowest level, 1-dimensional runs are detected (see Chapter 3). Chapter 4 di...

Aug 1 1985  
 
 
   
Send Your Comments
Contact Us
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.   Copyright 1999-2024 ThinkLoud®
Terms of Use
| Privacy Policy