15,869 research outputs found
dr-joe-wirth/phantasm: PHANTASM v1.1.3
<p>This release was created to facilitate a conda installation. It now allows for higher versions of iqtree, checks that the required R packages have been installed, and verifies that directories defined in param.py are properly defined.</p>
<p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: https://github.com/dr-joe-wirth/phantasm/compare/v1.1.2...v1.1.3</p>
Life of Philip Wirth : a lifetime with an Australian circus / by Philip Wirth.
Electronic reproduction. Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, 2013
Hana Wirth-Nesher / Henry Roth correspondence 1991-1992
Contains three letters Henry Roth wrote to Hana Wirth-Nesher, and a letter from a publisher to her. Roth writes of his house in Alberquerque, NM; the reissuing of "Call It Sleep", and completing the final draft of "Mercy of a Rude Stream." The letter from the publisher asks Wirth-Nesher's permission to use one of her articles in the new "Call It Sleep" editionHana Wirth-NesherNHPRCCAT - r
Rena Wirth Family Collection 1937-1947
The collection contains German passports for Karl Rossmann and Heinrich Wirth; and Heinrich Wirth's membership
book and working card from the American Federation of Labor; certificate of naturalization; and social security cards.Heinrich (Henry) Wirth was born in Gemünden on April 10, 1879. Before immigrating to the United States, he was merchant
in Mannheim, where he owned a department store. His wife died in a concentration camp. After World War II, he lived in New York and
worked in a brush factory until his death in 1952. His daughter Ilse married Karl Rossmann.Karl Rossmann was born on June 21, 1907, in Kitzingen. He emigrated from Germany to New York in 1937. He served in the
US Army during World War II.Processed for digtizatio
No.361, Craig Brandon Wirth, interview by Tim Larson
Transcript (164 pages) of interview by Tim Larson] with Craig Wirth, radio and television broadcaster, on October 27 and 31, 1989. This interview is no. 361 in the Everett L. Cooley Oral History Project, and tape nos. U-1128, 1129, and 1130. Includes Wirth\u27s resumeIn a series of 1989 interviews and 1990s updates with Tim Larson, Craig Wirth (b. 1952) recalls growing up in Montana and early broadcast experiences. College at the University of Utah, 1970-1974 at which time he began his broadcast career in Utah. Receiving masters degree from Wisconsin, 1976; teaching experiences; broadcasting experiences in Salt Lake, 1970s-1990s; experience in New York City--WOR-TV and working with Linda Ellerbee, 1980s; experience in California, 1980s-1990s and working with the Financial News Network, 1989-1991. He also discusses ownership of a Moab, Utah radio station, KURA. He discusses several Salt Lake City broadcasters. Interviewer: Tim Larso
Niklaus Wirth — A Pioneer of Computer Science 1
Niklaus Wirth is one of the most influential scientists of the early computer age. His ideas and especially his programming languages have shaped generations of programmers worldwide. This paper tries to acknowledge the scientific achievements of Niklaus Wirth and to honor him as a person. A small part of the paper is also devoted to Wirth's influence on computer science at the Johannes Kepler University of Linz
Practitioner Profile: An Interview with Erin Wirth, AFC
Erin Wirth is an Accredited Financial Counselor and the Director of the University of Nebraska – Lincoln Student Money Management Center, a financial education program for college students. The program offers one-on-one money management education and counseling sessions, money management workshops, and a variety of other interactive educational activities aimed to help college students understand the importance of financial literacy. The program recently won the Outstanding Financial Counseling and Planning Education Award from the Association for Financial Counseling and Planning Education
Compiler Construction—The Art of Niklaus Wirth 1 Compiler Construction
Niklaus Wirth is not only a master of language design but also a pioneer of compiler construction. For four decades he has refined his techniques for building simple, efficient and reliable compilers. This paper tries to collect some general principles behind his work. It is not a paper about new compilation techniques but a reflection about Wirth's way to write compilers.
dr-joe-wirth/phantasm: PHANTASM v1.1.3
<p>This release was created to facilitate a conda installation. It now allows for higher versions of iqtree, checks that the required R packages have been installed, and verifies that directories defined in <code>param.py</code> are properly defined.</p>
Wirth BNF Grammars [retrieved from
Wirth uses his own meta language to define its own syntax (and serve as an example of its use): grammar = { production}. production = identifier "= " expression ".". expression = term { "| " term}. term = factor { factor}. factor = identifier | literal | "( " expression ") " | "[ " expression "] " | "{ " expression "}". literal = """ " character { character} """". The word identifier is used to denote a nonterminal symbol, and literal denotes a terminal symbol. For brevity, identifier and character are not further defined. Repetition is denoted by curly braces, i.e., { a} denotes: empty, a, aa,.... Optionality is expressed by square brackets, i.e., [ a] denotes a or empty. Parentheses merely serve for grouping, i.e., ( a | b) c stands for: a c | b c. Terminal symbols are either literals, i.e., are enclosed in quote marks or are identifiers which do not appear on the left hand side of the metasymbol =. If a quote mark appears a a literal itself, then it is written twice (as is common in many programming languages). As a machine readable form, I have added the following additional properties to Wirth BNF grammars: Each production must start on a new line and may not have leading spaces. Each symbol, whether meta, terminal, or nonterminal, must be separated from all other symbols by spaces, except the terminating period. Productions may be freely continued on a new line; for readability these lines are often indented. Grammars may contain comments, which are lines which begin with a #, followed by a space. The remainder of the line is ignored. Grammars may contain blank lines to improve readability. Note that the spacing permits convenient processing by simple awk scripts
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