GRAPE

GRAPE, or GRAphics Programming Environment is a software development environment for mathematical visualization, especially differential geometry and continuum mechanics.[1] In 1994, it won the European Academic Software Award.[2]

For the Tokyo University supercomputer, see Gravity Pipe.

The term graphical refers to the applications; the programming itself is mostly based on C. GRAPE was developed by the University of Bonn in Germany and is available for free for non-commercial purposes. It has not been developed actively since 1998.

qfix Grape

Another graphical programming environment called GRAPE is developed by qfix and the University of Ulm. Here, it is used as a graphical tool for developing object oriented programs for controlling autonomous mobile robots. After arranging graphical program entities to receive the desired flow chart, the graphical program can be translated to source code (e.g. C++). A modular interface makes the environment easy to extend, so additional classes can be integrated or different flowchart-to-code translator or compilers can be used.

gollark: Which are just endofunctors in the category of monads
gollark: It's for monoids.
gollark: Also strings, nils, and functions.
gollark: With `debug.setmetatable`, though, you can give *all numbers* custom metatables.
gollark: No.

References

  1. M. Rumpf, M. Wierse, Time-dependent flow. In Visualization Methods in High Performance Computing and Flow Simulation (1996)
  2. Introduction to GRAPE


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