(formerly NASDAQ: TCNO) | |
Industry | Software |
---|---|
Fate | Acquired by UGS Corporation in 2005 |
Founded | 1993; 26 years ago |
Defunct | 2005 |
Headquarters | , |
Products | Manufacturing Process Management solutions Product lifecycle management solutions |
Revenue | $100.6 million (2004)[1] |
Parent | Siemens |
Website | Tecnomatix: Siemens PLM Software |
下载 Free eBook:Siemens Tecnomatix Plant Simulation 14.0.2 (x64) Multilingual - 免费下载 chm, pdf 电子书,rapidshare等下载链接, ebook torrents,电子书bt种子下载. Library and object management Genetics algorithm for optimization. 下载 Free eBook:Siemens Tecnomatix Plant Simulation 14.0.2 (x64) Multilingual - 免费下载 chm, pdf 电子书,rapidshare等下载链接, ebook torrents,电子书bt种子下载.
Tecnomatix Technologies, Ltd. (formerly NASDAQ: TCNO) is a leading provider of Manufacturing Process Management and Product lifecycle management software to the electronics, automotive, aerospace and heavy equipment industries, currently owned by Siemens AG. Tecnomatix's eMPower is a suite of end-to-end Manufacturing Process Management solutions for the collaborative development and optimization of manufacturing processes across the extended enterprise and supply chain.[2]
Rapid Library. Rapid Library says it has more than 14,000,000 files in their database, and you will see the last 200 searches on its homepage, all the search results can be sorted by file types. Once you find your Rapidshare file, you can download it without registration, but you need to enter the vilification code before downloading. Tecnomatix Technologies, Ltd. (formerly NASDAQ: TCNO) is a leading provider of Manufacturing Process Management and Product lifecycle management software to the electronics, automotive, aerospace and heavy equipment industries, currently owned by Siemens AG. Tecnomatix's eMPower is a suite of end-to-end Manufacturing Process Management.
![Netbeans ide 8 2 Netbeans ide 8 2](/uploads/1/2/4/7/124734776/207338549.jpg)
History[edit]
Founded in Israel in 1983, the Tecnomatix Corporation provided Manufacturing Process Management (MPM) solutions for the automotive, electronics, aerospace and other manufacturing and processing industries. The Tecnomatix products suite offered software and services in all process monitoring and control, production management and execution.
Shlomo Dovrat was the founder of Tecnomatix and served as CEO and President from its inception until 1995. In 1993, Dovrat led Tecnomatix's IPO on the NASDAQ (TCNO). He served as Chairman of the Board of Directors from 1995 until December 2001.[3][4] In 1994, Dovrat was succeeded as CEO by Harel Beit-On (also the company's President. In 2001 Beit-On was appointed Chairman of the Board of Directors [5], and served as Chairman until the company's acquisition in 2005.
In 1999, Tecnomatix acquired Unicam Software Inc., a provider of production engineering software to the printed circuit board (PCB) assembly market.[6]
In 2003, Tecnomatix acquired USDATA Corporation. USDATA was the creator of the supervisory-level control (SCADA) product FactoryLink, and the manufacturing execution systems (MES) product Xfactory.[7]
In 2005, Tecnomatix was acquired by the UGS Corporation and the Tecnomatix product was combined with UGS' existing MPM solutions. The current Tecnomatix software line includes Part Manufacturing, Assembly Planning, Resource Planning, Plant Simulation, Human Performance, Quality, Production Management, Manufacturing Data Management.
In January 2007 UGS was purchased by Siemens AG, and today the Tecnomatix solutions are available from Siemens PLM Software. Siemens PLM Software announced Tecnomatix version 9 in June 2009.[8]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^Cohen, Omri (4 February 2005). 'UGS Corp. finalizes acquisition of Tecnomatix for $228 million'. TheMarker.
- ^'Tecnomatix Technologies Ltd. - Company Profile'. Business Week.
- ^'VPartners'. Vpartnersfund.com. Retrieved 2011-06-02.
- ^'AllBusiness.com'. AllBusiness.com. Retrieved 2011-06-02.
- ^'Tecnomatix Announces Appointment of Harel Beit-On as Chairman of the Board of Directors'. The Free Library. Retrieved 2001-12-04.
- ^'AllBusiness.com'. AllBusiness.com. Retrieved 2011-06-02.
- ^'Automation.com'. Automation.com. Retrieved 2011-06-02.
- ^'Tecnomatix 9 Press Release'. Plm.automation.siemens.com. 2009-06-23. Retrieved 2011-06-02.
External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tecnomatix&oldid=813958936'
Active1 year, 4 months ago
There is an external workflow that executes C# scripts and is able to work with DLL files(my class library).
Is it possible to attach debug to my class library project so breakpoint will hit once this WF will call it?
Thanks
Sean Cline6,06811 gold badge2727 silver badges4646 bronze badges
Netbeans Ide 8 2
SergejsSergejs1,21744 gold badges2424 silver badges4747 bronze badges
4 Answers
Yes, you can do this with Visual Studio. You have two options:
Configure your project to start the external program
- Open your DLL project.
- On the properties for the project, go to the Debug tab.
- Choose Start external program and give the path of the external program that will call your DLL, along with any command-line arguments you may need to supply, and the working directory if that's relevant.This appears to be sent as plain data without any type of encryption or obfuscation. Iptv hack for samsung tv 2. Things get a lot more interesting when he discovers that filenames from a USB drive connected to the television are being broadcast as well. The server address they’re being sent to is a dead link — which makes us think this is some type of debugging step that was left in the production firmware — but it is still a rather sizable blunder when it comes to personal privacy.
- Save the project.
- Set breakpoints in your code where you want them.
- Press F5 to start debugging. (At this point, your breakpoints will say that they won't be hit because the symbols aren't loaded. Don't worry about that for now.)
- Do whatever you do to make the external application load your library and run your code.
Visual Studio will detect the module load, load the symbols, and stop on the breakpoint.
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Attach to an existing process
If you can't start the process but instead have to attach to a process that's already running, you can do that too:
(Side note: If you're using the 'Express' edition of Visual Studio, I don't think it has this feature, but I'm not certain about that. It's easy enough to tell: You'll either have the menu item mentioned on Step 4 below or not.)
8.2 Jailbreak
- Make sure the process is running.
- Open your DLL project.
- Set your breakpoints, etc.
- From the Debug menu, choose Attach to process..
- In the resulting dialog box, find the process in the list, highlight it, and click Attach.
- Visual Studio will go into debug mode. (At this point, your breakpoints will say that they won't be hit because the symbols aren't loaded. Don't worry about that for now.)
- Do whatever you do to make the external process load and run your code.
Visual Studio will detect the module load in the external process, load your symbols, and stop on your breakpoint.
Tecnomatix 8 2 Rapidshare Library
N.B. In both cases, if the external process loads your DLL from somewhere other than the
T.J. CrowderT.J. Crowderbin/Debug
folder of your project, you must make sure you copy the DLL to that other location every time you build it (you can set that up to happen automatically in the project options). Otherwise, Visual Studio won't be able to detect that the DLL being loaded is the one you're trying to debug.732k134134 gold badges13321332 silver badges13971397 bronze badges
You can use the Attach to process from the Debug menu for debugging your DLL project. You may be required to use mixed mode debugging if debugging does not happen with native code. This can be done by selecting Managed and Native code type from the window that appears when you click on Select button inside the Attach to process window.
If the edition of Visual Studio that you are using supports macros, then you can create a new macro with the following code to automate all this:
The above macro tries to build your project, launches the external application and then attaches your DLL to that program automatically. You can get the QualifierName for your system from the Attach to process window. Also, the version of managed code('Managed (v4.0)' in this case) depends on the version of .NET framework that you use.
Manas JogManas Jog
If you don't want/can't use external app - you can call the class library directly from Visual Studio:
Ctrl+Alt+I
to show 'Immediate'
widow, then you can call any method from your class library from there (use breakpoints). You'll have to type fully-qualified names (i.e. namespaces).alexkovelskyalexkovelsky
8/2 Wire
I think nowadays is more actual to create a Unit test project for executing your library code. Thus you will kill two birds with one stone: will able to debug your project in the same solution and by the way start to cover your code by tests.
rock_walkerrock_walker