Works on: Windows 10 | Windows 8.1 | Windows 8 | Windows 7 | Windows XP | Windows 2000 | Windows 2003 | Windows 2008 | Windows 98 | Windows ME | Windows NT | Windows 95 | Windows Vista | Windows 2012 SHA1 Hash: 1f5ff5194a73be43d0641f658b62931faaeae066 Size: 696.44 KB File Format: zip
Rating: 2.434782608
out of 5
based on 23 user ratings
Publisher Website: External Link Downloads: 1005 License: Demo / Trial Version
GIPALS32 - Linear Programming Library is a demo software by Optimalon Software and works on Windows 10, Windows 8.1, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows 2003, Windows 2008, Windows 98, Windows ME, Windows NT, Windows 95, Windows Vista, Windows 2012.
You can download GIPALS32 - Linear Programming Library which is 696.44 KB in size and belongs to the software category Components Libraries. GIPALS32 - Linear Programming Library was released on 2011-02-15 and last updated on our database on 2017-04-22 and is currently at version 3.5.
Thank you for downloading from SoftPaz! Your download should start any moment now. It would be great if you could rate and share:
Rate this software:
Share in your network:
GIPALS32 - Linear Programming Library Description
GIPALS32 is a linear programming library that incorporates the power of linear programming solver and simplicity of integration to any software tools like MS Visual C++, MS Visual Basic, Borland Delphi and other that support a DLL import. The maximum number of constraints and variables is unlimited. The linear program solver is based on Interior-Point method (Mehrotra predictor-corrector algorithm) and optimized for large sparse linear programs by implementing the state-of-art algorithm to order the constraints matrix.
The user can specify the linear program using a set of exported DLL functions. Also GIPALS32 provides an import of linear programs from Mathematical Programming System (MPS) data format that is an industry standard for the description of a variety of linear programs.
Where to buy?
Last updated price and discount information 8 years agoupdate now