Commercial Tools/Commercial software or in other words Payware, is a software product that stands for sale or serves commercial purposes. Commercial software is most often proprietary software, which means that it is licensed under exclusive legal right of the copyright holder, but even free software package may also be commercial software.
There are several usage patterns for domain-specific languages: ? processing with standalone tools, invoked via direct user operation, often on the command line or from a Makefile (e.g., the GraphViz tool set) ? domain-specific languages which are implemented using programming language macro systems, and which are converted or expanded into a host general purpose language at compile-time or read-time ? embedded (or internal) domain-specific languages, implemented as libraries which exploit the syntax of their host general purpose language or a subset thereof, while adding domain-specific language elements (data types, routines, methods, macros etc.).
The concept isn't new—special-purpose programming languages and all kinds of modeling/specification languages have always existed, but the term has become more popular due to the rise of domain-specific modeling. Examples of domain-specific languages include Logo for children, Verilog and VHSIC hardware description languages, R and S languages for statistics, Mata for matrix programming,
The primary purpose to calibrate a set automation tools is to perform data driven automated testing applications on Android.
Start with setting up the environment using following tools: Install JDK, Eclipse 3.4 (Ganymede) or greater and Android Development Tools plug-in.
Next install Android Emulator from the eclipse window menu select Android SDK and AVD Manager.
After the environment was setup successfully, I started with creating a very simple temperature convertor application to better understand the architecture & UI interfaces of the Android SDK.
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