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Most opencv documents I have read are about how to use the classes and functions insider this great library. However, develop documents on opencv are few, especially documents on how to design and develop this libraries from a software developer's perspective. For example, cv::Mat is well designed to use the reference counting scheme and avoid deep-copying as much as possible, but the documents on how to realize it are few. So my questions is are there some documents or books available on this topic? Thanks.
You might want to check the doc, there are always more tutorials/user guides. There is also a dedicated Q&A forum (quite the same as here though) and a wiki which is more developper oriented
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What are the good books on OCaml, which considered as a must read for OCaml developers on all levels?
I came across "Real World OCaml" by Yaron Minsky and Co. (https://realworldocaml.org/). It is quite a good introduction into the language, although biased towards Core library and its features. And so far I could find nothing more descriptive.
Start at this page. I would suggest to read Jason Hickey's book... and all others in order. There is also a new book OCaml from the very begining, although I haven't read it myself (only few chapters), I would recommend it.
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I want to learn Multithreading in C++ and I'm therefore on the hunt for some good literature on the subject containing lots of code and examples. I've found several books online but I was hoping that someone could give a tip on books that you've read yourself and found beneficial for your learning.
Thanks in advance for any reply on the subject
Learn about concurrency and about C++ separately. This will let you better understand what is essential and what is there because either cannot be done differently in C++ or because can be done much better in C++. I may cast downvotes but for learning concurrency as the beginner you will hardly find anything as handy as Java Tutorial from Sun. Even well known and respected Posix threads have been modeled after Solaris threads (which Sun has designed).
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My development team is going to build a voice chat application.
Our plan is to use a pre-made library just for this purpose, but we haven't found any good one after days of searching the internet, so I thought I would consider a question here!
So the question is:
What library / project do you recommend? We are deadly serious with this, so it needs to be a good working one. Preferable an open-source one as well.
We have been looking at some XMPP libraries and projects, but none seems to be up-to-date, tested and well-documented.
Did you have a look at libjingle ? Its the base library for Google Talk.
And on what platforms are you interested in such libraies ? I would recommend http://camaya.net/gloox/ or http://www.igniterealtime.org/projects/smack/ for portability, completeness and open standards.
www.pjsip.org
I think it is the best sip sdk around.
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I'm looking for a RTP/RTSP library in C++. I found pjsip but it is more C-style. I'm looking for more OO library.
Check live555 Useful libraries and code examples of how to stream stuff from your own app. The repo is full of RTP, RTSP, and SIP code examples and libraries.
JRTPLIB is very nice, and used in well-known projects such as SightSpeed (and lots of little ones). Pretty well-designed, very flexible license; pretty easy to get things right with it.
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I'm looking to work with others to quickly build a rather large class flow diagram that may or may not be strict UML. Can anyone recommend a networked, concurrent collaboration tool for such a task? Price is not an issue, but the target system must be Windows.
Surely someone must have done something like this in the past.
Any ideas?
DabbleBoard has an online diagramming tool that may do what you want. It should work on Windows, although it is a web-based and fairly low-level.
I don't know exactly how concurrent you need it, but Google Docs have just introduced a 'drawing' document type, which is basically a stencil based system like visio. It includes flowchart elements, and of course can be shared.