Aneesh P U (@aneeshpu)
  • Stars
    star
    31
  • Global Rank 479,903 (Top 17 %)
  • Followers 15
  • Following 15
  • Registered over 15 years ago
  • Most used languages
    Java
    72.7 %
    Python
    9.1 %
    C#
    4.5 %
    Ruby
    4.5 %
    Shell
    4.5 %
    JavaScript
    4.5 %
  • Location 🇮🇳 India
  • Country Total Rank 18,215
  • Country Ranking
    Ruby
    2,325
    Java
    2,620
    C#
    2,642
    Shell
    3,614

Top repositories

1

NRadixTree

A radix tree in C#
C#
2
star
2

minime

information miner
JavaScript
1
star
3

VanHelsing

A Spam filter for android
Java
1
star
4

RadixTree

Just a simple and stupid implementation of a Radix tree
Ruby
1
star
5

CardGame

Just a coding exercise
Java
1
star
6

SimpleAOPExample

This is a simple working example of Spring AOP
Java
1
star
7

WAYTest

Test project for WAY
Java
1
star
8

Sleep

Changes android display timeout settings to a small value so it sleeps faster
Java
1
star
9

WAYRemote

Remote brain for WAY
Python
1
star
10

Java-s-Linking-Model

A small example to show how java's linking model works
Java
1
star
11

Foo

foobar
1
star
12

WAYRemoteTest

A Test project for WAYRemote
Python
1
star
13

MoneyTracker

Andriod Application
1
star
14

spring-on-GAE

working example of spring 3.0 on Google App Engine
Java
1
star
15

MessageSpamTest

Test project for the MoneyDroid application
Java
1
star
16

AutoDox

Generates documentation from test (idea very similar to TestDox)
Java
1
star
17

VanHelsingTest

test for VanHelsing
Java
1
star
18

WAY

Where are you
Java
1
star
19

LearningAndroid

A sandbox project for learning android stuff
Java
1
star
20

VanHelsingIntegrationTest

Integration tests for Vanhelsing
Java
1
star
21

Misc

Miscellaneous scripts
Shell
1
star
22

AutoDoxTest

Test for auto dox
Java
1
star
23

spring-2.5-mvc-working

Just a working example of spring mvc
Java
1
star
24

Quine

A Quine is a program that generates its own source code as output. This is not the smallest quine that you could generate. But I was inspired to write one when i started reading Ken Thompson's reflections on trusting trust.
Java
1
star