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  2. Flattening transformation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flattening_transformation

    The flattening transformation is an algorithm that transforms nested data parallelism into flat data parallelism. It was pioneered by Guy Blelloch as part of the NESL programming language. [ 1 ] The flattening transformation is also sometimes called vectorization , but is completely unrelated to automatic vectorization .

  3. Js13kGames - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Js13kGames

    js13kGames (also referenced as JS13K) is a game jam competition, focused on creating browser games that are no larger than 13 kilobytes when compressed using ZIP. [1] [2] [3] Participants are not permitted to use external services or libraries, and all assets must also fit within the size limit. [4] Games are programmed in JavaScript and HTML5.

  4. Laravel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laravel

    An increase of Laravel's userbase and popularity lined up with the release of Laravel 3. [1] Laravel 4, codenamed Illuminate, was released in May 2013. It was made as a complete rewrite of the Laravel framework, migrating its layout into a set of separate packages distributed through Composer, which serves as an application-level package manager.

  5. Mode-k flattening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mode-k_flattening

    In multilinear algebra, mode-m flattening [1] [2] [3], also known as matrixizing, matricizing, or unfolding, [4] is an operation that reshapes a multi-way array into a matrix denoted by [] (a two-way array). Matrixizing may be regarded as a generalization of the mathematical concept of vectorizing.

  6. Template:Image array/sandbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Image_array/sandbox

    By default, clicking on an image will direct the viewer to the file page, which contains licensing and attribution information for the image. This is required for any non-public domain images. To change the link to the image, use |linkX=, where X is the image number. However, be careful to make sure that you only do this for public domain ...