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Fortran Reference Guide
FORTRAN REFERENCE GUIDE Version 2018 TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface............................................................................................................ xv Audience Description......................................................................................... xv Compatibility and Conformance to Standards............................................................ xv Organization................................................................................................... xvi Hardware and Software Constraints...................................................................... xvii Conventions................................................................................................... xvii Related Publications........................................................................................ xviii Chapter 1. Language Overview............................................................................... 1 1.1. Elements of a Fortran Program Unit.................................................................. 1 1.1.1. Fortran Statements................................................................................. 1 1.1.2. Free and Fixed Source............................................................................. 2 1.1.3. Statement Ordering................................................................................. 2 1.2. The Fortran Character Set.............................................................................. 3 1.3. Free Form Formatting.................................................................................. -
SPSS to Orthosim File Conversion Utility Helpfile V.1.4
SPSS to Orthosim File Conversion Utility Helpfile v.1.4 Paul Barrett Advanced Projects R&D Ltd. Auckland New Zealand email: [email protected] Web: www.pbarrett.net 30th December, 2019 Contents 3 Table of Contents Part I Introduction 5 1 Installation Details ................................................................................................................................... 7 2 Extracting Matrices from SPSS - Cut and Paste ................................................................................................................................... 8 3 Extracting Matrices from SPSS: Orthogonal Factors - E.x..c..e..l. .E..x..p..o..r.t................................................................................................................. 17 4 Extracting Matrices from SPSS: Oblique Factors - Exce.l. .E..x..p..o..r..t...................................................................................................................... 24 5 Creating Orthogonal Factor Orthosim Files ................................................................................................................................... 32 6 Creating Oblique Factor Orthosim Files ................................................................................................................................... 41 3 Paul Barrett Part I 6 SPSS to Orthosim File Conversion Utility Helpfile v.1.4 1 Introduction SPSS-to-Orthosim converts SPSS 11/12/13/14 factor loading and factor correlation matrices into the fixed-format .vf (simple ASCII text) files -
IBM Power® Systems for SAS® Empowers Advanced Analytics Harry Seifert, Laurent Montaron, IBM Corporation
Paper 4695-2020 IBM Power® Systems for SAS® Empowers Advanced Analytics Harry Seifert, Laurent Montaron, IBM Corporation ABSTRACT For over 40+ years of partnership between IBM and SAS®, clients have been benefiting from the added value brought by IBM’s infrastructure platforms to deploy SAS analytics, and now SAS Viya’s evolution of modern analytics. IBM Power® Systems and IBM Storage empower SAS environments with infrastructure that does not make tradeoffs among performance, cost, and reliability. The unified solution stack, comprising server, storage, and services, reduces the compute time, controls costs, and maximizes resilience of SAS environment with ultra-high bandwidth and highest availability. INTRODUCTION We will explore how to deploy SAS on IBM Power Systems platforms and unleash the full potential of the infrastructure, to reduce deployment risk, maximize flexibility and accelerate insights. We will start by reviewing IBM and SAS’s technology relationship and the current state of SAS products on IBM Power Systems. Then we will look at some of the infrastructure options to deploy SAS 9.4 on IBM Power Systems and IBM Storage, while maximizing resiliency & throughput by leveraging best practices. Next, we will look at SAS Viya, which introduces changes to the underlying infrastructure requirements while remaining able to be deployed alongside a traditional SAS 9.4 operation. We’ll explore the various deployment modes available. Finally, we’ll look at tuning practices and reference materials available for a deeper dive in deploying SAS on IBM platforms. SAS: 40 YEARS OF PARTNERSHIP WITH IBM IBM and SAS have been partners since the founding of SAS. -
POWER® Processor-Based Systems
IBM® Power® Systems RAS Introduction to IBM® Power® Reliability, Availability, and Serviceability for POWER9® processor-based systems using IBM PowerVM™ With Updates covering the latest 4+ Socket Power10 processor-based systems IBM Systems Group Daniel Henderson, Irving Baysah Trademarks, Copyrights, Notices and Acknowledgements Trademarks IBM, the IBM logo, and ibm.com are trademarks or registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation in the United States, other countries, or both. These and other IBM trademarked terms are marked on their first occurrence in this information with the appropriate symbol (® or ™), indicating US registered or common law trademarks owned by IBM at the time this information was published. Such trademarks may also be registered or common law trademarks in other countries. A current list of IBM trademarks is available on the Web at http://www.ibm.com/legal/copytrade.shtml The following terms are trademarks of the International Business Machines Corporation in the United States, other countries, or both: Active AIX® POWER® POWER Power Power Systems Memory™ Hypervisor™ Systems™ Software™ Power® POWER POWER7 POWER8™ POWER® PowerLinux™ 7® +™ POWER® PowerHA® POWER6 ® PowerVM System System PowerVC™ POWER Power Architecture™ ® x® z® Hypervisor™ Additional Trademarks may be identified in the body of this document. Other company, product, or service names may be trademarks or service marks of others. Notices The last page of this document contains copyright information, important notices, and other information. Acknowledgements While this whitepaper has two principal authors/editors it is the culmination of the work of a number of different subject matter experts within IBM who contributed ideas, detailed technical information, and the occasional photograph and section of description. -
IBM AIX Version 6.1 Differences Guide
Front cover IBM AIX Version 6.1 Differences Guide AIX - The industrial strength UNIX operating system AIX Version 6.1 enhancements explained An expert’s guide to the new release Roman Aleksic Ismael "Numi" Castillo Rosa Fernandez Armin Röll Nobuhiko Watanabe ibm.com/redbooks International Technical Support Organization IBM AIX Version 6.1 Differences Guide March 2008 SG24-7559-00 Note: Before using this information and the product it supports, read the information in “Notices” on page xvii. First Edition (March 2008) This edition applies to AIX Version 6.1, program number 5765-G62. © Copyright International Business Machines Corporation 2007, 2008. All rights reserved. Note to U.S. Government Users Restricted Rights -- Use, duplication or disclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract with IBM Corp. Contents Figures . xi Tables . xiii Notices . xvii Trademarks . xviii Preface . xix The team that wrote this book . xix Become a published author . xxi Comments welcome. xxi Chapter 1. Application development and system debug. 1 1.1 Transport independent RPC library. 2 1.2 AIX tracing facilities review . 3 1.3 POSIX threads tracing. 5 1.3.1 POSIX tracing overview . 6 1.3.2 Trace event definition . 8 1.3.3 Trace stream definition . 13 1.3.4 AIX implementation overview . 20 1.4 ProbeVue . 21 1.4.1 ProbeVue terminology. 23 1.4.2 Vue programming language . 24 1.4.3 The probevue command . 25 1.4.4 The probevctrl command . 25 1.4.5 Vue: an overview. 25 1.4.6 ProbeVue dynamic tracing example . 31 Chapter 2. File systems and storage. 35 2.1 Disabling JFS2 logging . -
Raiffeisenbank Speeds Data Warehouse, Cuts Costs with Red Hat Enterprise Linux
CUSTOMER CASE STUDY RAIFFEISENBANK SPEEDS DATA WAREHOUSE, CUTS COSTS WITH RED HAT ENTERPRISE LINUX Raiffeisenbank, a banking institution that provides a wide range of services to private and corporate clients in the Czech Republic, needed to replace the aging hardware and IBM AIX operating system that supported its data warehouse. By migrating to Red Hat Enterprise Linux running on cost-effective Hitachi servers with Intel processors, the bank has tripled system performance speed and maintained stability — while cutting total cost SOFTWARE AND of ownership (TCO) by 50%. SERVICES Red Hat® Enterprise Linux® HARDWARE Hitachi Unified Compute Platform for Oracle Database Hitachi Compute Blade 2500 Prague, Czech Republic FINANCIAL SERVICES (CB 2500) Hitachi Virtual Storage HEADQUARTERS 3,000 EMPLOYEES Platform G600 (VSP G600) 120 BRANCHES PARTNER “There are many benefits to using Red Hat MHM computer a.s. and Oracle solutions together, and also BENEFITS from moving from IBM to Intel. We feel • Achieved three times faster a combination of Red Hat and Oracle on system performance an Intel platform is a preferred solution • Anticipates 50% decrease for any company.” in total cost of ownership over five years JIŘÍ KOUTNÍK HEAD OF SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION, • Gained greater flexibility by RAIFFEISENBANK eliminating vendor lock-in facebook.com/redhatinc @redhatnews linkedin.com/company/red-hat redhat.com AGING UNIX SYSTEM TOO SLOW FOR MODERN BUSINESS Raiffeisenbank a.s. provides a wide range of banking services to private and corporate clients in the Czech Republic at more than 120 branches and business client centers. The bank offers corpo- rate and personal finance products and services related to savings, insurance, and leasing, including specialized mortgage centers and business advisors. -
ILE C/C++ Programmer's Guide
IBM i 7.2 Programming IBM Rational Development Studio for i ILE C/C++ Programmer's Guide IBM SC09-2712-07 Note Before using this information and the product it supports, read the information in “Notices” on page 441. This edition applies to version 7, release 2, modification 0 of IBM Rational Development Studio for i (product number 5770-WDS) and to all subsequent releases and modifications until otherwise indicated in new editions. This version does not run on all reduced instruction set computer (RISC) models nor does it run on CISC models. This document may contain references to Licensed Internal Code. Licensed Internal Code is Machine Code and is licensed to you under the terms of the IBM License Agreement for Machine Code. © Copyright International Business Machines Corporation 1993, 2013. US Government Users Restricted Rights – Use, duplication or disclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract with IBM Corp. Contents ILE C/C++ Programmer’s Guide..............................................................................1 PDF file for ILE C/C++ Programmer’s Guide............................................................................................... 3 About ILE C/C++ Programmer's Guide........................................................................................................5 Install Licensed Program Information................................................................................................... 5 Notes About Examples.......................................................................................................................... -
Developing Embedded SQL Applications
IBM DB2 10.1 for Linux, UNIX, and Windows Developing Embedded SQL Applications SC27-3874-00 IBM DB2 10.1 for Linux, UNIX, and Windows Developing Embedded SQL Applications SC27-3874-00 Note Before using this information and the product it supports, read the general information under Appendix B, “Notices,” on page 209. Edition Notice This document contains proprietary information of IBM. It is provided under a license agreement and is protected by copyright law. The information contained in this publication does not include any product warranties, and any statements provided in this manual should not be interpreted as such. You can order IBM publications online or through your local IBM representative. v To order publications online, go to the IBM Publications Center at http://www.ibm.com/shop/publications/ order v To find your local IBM representative, go to the IBM Directory of Worldwide Contacts at http://www.ibm.com/ planetwide/ To order DB2 publications from DB2 Marketing and Sales in the United States or Canada, call 1-800-IBM-4YOU (426-4968). When you send information to IBM, you grant IBM a nonexclusive right to use or distribute the information in any way it believes appropriate without incurring any obligation to you. © Copyright IBM Corporation 1993, 2012. US Government Users Restricted Rights – Use, duplication or disclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract with IBM Corp. Contents Chapter 1. Introduction to embedded Include files for COBOL embedded SQL SQL................1 applications .............29 Embedding SQL statements -
The UCSD P-System STATUT ORIL Y EX E:M PT
DOCfi!D(ov~ by NSA on 12-01-2011, Transparency Case# 5335]UNCLASSIFIED The UCSD p-System STATUT ORIL Y EX E:M PT This paper discusses the UCSD p-System, an operating system for small computers developed at the University of California at San Diego. The discussion includes the overall system, file managing, editing, and programming in Pascal on the system. INTRODUCTION The UCSD p-System was developed at the University of California at San Diego to support Pascal programming on microcomputers. Similar to MS-DOS, the p-System is an operating system for small computers but is, in many ways, very different. The p-System is written in Pascal and now supports not only Pascal, but also FORTRAN, COBOL, BASIC, and Modula-2. The concept was to have an operating system that, once it was implemented on a machine, allowed any program written under that operating system to be truly transportable from computer to computer. That is to say, the p-System compiler would not actually translate the program into a language that was specific for, say, an 8088 chip on the IBM-PC, but rather would translate it into a "pseudo" language that, when used with an operating system designed for the PC, would run correctly. Similarly, if the operating system were implemented on a Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) computer, this same pseudo code would still work properly with no modifications. The particular version of UCSD p-System tested was written for the IBM-PC and requires two single-sided double-density disk drives and at least 128K of memory. -
GSI Local Guide
UNIX Primer GSI Local Guide GSI Computing Center Version 2.0 This is draft version !!! Preface: More than one year ago, we published our ®rst version of the Unix primer, which has been used in the meantime by many people at GSI and even in the outside HEP community. Nowadays, as more and more physicists have access to a Unix computer either via a X-terminal or use their own workstation, and as the installed computing power has increased by a large factor, we have revised the ®rst version of our Unix primer. We tried to re¯ect the changes in the installedhardware, like the installationof the 11 machine AIX cluster, and the installationof new software products, as the batch system for job submission, new backup and restore products and the graphics system IDL. Almost all chapters have been revised, and some have undergone substantial changes like the introduction, the section about experimental data and tape handling and the chapter about the editors, where more editors are described in detail. Although many topics are still missing or could be improved, we decided to publishthe second edition of the Unix primer now in order to give a guide to the rapidly increasing Unix user community at GSI. As for the ®rst edition, many people again have contributed to this document: Wolfgang Ahner, Eliete Bertulani, Michael Dahlinger, Matthias Feyerabend, Ingo Giese, Horst GÈoringer, Eva Hocks, Peter Malzacher, Udo Meyer, Kerstin Schiebel, Kay Winkler and Heiko Weber. Preface for Version 1.0: In early summer 1991 the GSI Computing Center started a Unix Pilot Project investigating the hardware and software possibilities of centrally operated unix workstation systems. -
A FORTRAN 77 Program for a Nonparametric Item Response Model: the Mokken Scale Analysis
BehaviorResearch Methods, Instruments, & Computers 1988, 20 (5), 471-480 A FORTRAN 77 program for a nonparametric item response model: The Mokken scale analysis JOHANNES KINGMA University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah and TERRY TAERUM University ofAlberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada A nonparametric item response theory model-the Mokken scale analysis (a stochastic elabo ration of the deterministic Guttman scale}-and a computer program that performs this analysis are described. Three procedures of scaling are distinguished: a search procedure, an evaluation of the whole set of items, and an extension of an existing scale. All procedures provide a coeffi cient of scalability for all items that meet the criteria of the Mokken model and an item coeffi cient of scalability for every item. Four different types of reliability coefficient are computed both for the entire set of items and for the scalable items. A test of robustness of the found scale can be performed to analyze whether the scale is invariant across different subgroups or samples. This robustness test serves as a goodness offit test for the established scale. The program is writ ten in FORTRAN 77. Two versions are available, an SPSS-X procedure program (which can be used with the SPSS-X mainframe package) and a stand-alone program suitable for both main frame and microcomputers. The Mokken scale model is a stochastic elaboration of which both mainframe and MS-DOS versions are avail the well-known deterministic Guttman scale (Mokken, able. These programs, both named Mokscal, perform the 1971; Mokken & Lewis, 1982; Mokken, Lewis, & Mokken scale analysis. Before presenting a review of the Sytsma, 1986). -
IBM 1401 System Summary
File No. 1401-00 Form A24-1401-1 Systems Reference Library IBM 1401 System Summary This reference publication contains brief descriptions of the machine features, components, configurations, and special features. Also included is a section on pro grams and programming systems. Publications providing detailed information on sub jects discussed in this summary are listed in IB~I 1401 and 1460 Bibliography, Form A24-1495. Major Revision (September 1964) This publication, Form A24-1401-1, is a major revision of and obsoletes Form A24-1401-0. Significant changes have been made throughout the publication. Reprinted April 1966 Copies of this and other IBM publications can be obtained through IBM Branch Offices. Address comments concerning the content of this publication to IBM Product Publications, Endicott, New York 13764. Contents IBM 1401 System Summary . ........... 5 System Concepts . ................ 6 Card-Oriented System .... ......... 11 Physical Features. 11 Interleaving. .. .................................... 14 Data Flow.... ... ... ... ... .. ... ... .. ................... 14 Checking ................................................... 15 Word Mark.. ... ... ... ... ... ... .. ... ... ... ........... 15 Stored-Program Instructions. .................. 15 Operation Codes . .. 18 Editing. .. ............ 18 IBM 1401 Console ............................................ 19 IBM 1406 Storage Unit. ........................... 20 Magnetic-Tape-Oriented System . ........................... 22 Data Flow .................................................