Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_J - J Programming

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 1     1-20 of 183    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         J Programming:     more books (100)
  1. The Elements of Programming Style by Brian W. Kernighan, P. J. Plauger, 1978-01-01
  2. Java Programming: Comprehensive Concepts and Techniques, Third Edition (Shelly Cashman) by Gary B. Shelly, Thomas J. Cashman, et all 2005-10-03
  3. Parallel Programming in C with MPI and OpenMP by Michael J. Quinn, 2003-09-01
  4. Principles of Programming Languages: Design, Evaluation, and Implementation by Bruce J. MacLennan, 1999-03-25
  5. Professional J2EE Programming with BEA WebLogic Server by Paco Gomez, Peter Zadrozny, 2000-10
  6. Programming Microsoft Web Forms (Pro Developer) by J. Reilly Douglas, 2005-11-02
  7. Professional Java Server Programming J2EE Edition by ###############################################################################################################################################################################################################################################################, 2000-08-31
  8. Programming MicrosoftSQL Server 2005 by Andrew J Brust, Stephen Forte, 2006-06-21
  9. Java ME Game Programming by John P Flynt, Martin J. Wells, 2007-09-10
  10. Portable C and Unix System Programming (Prentice-Hall Signal Processing Series) by J. E. Lapin, 1987-01
  11. Object-Oriented Programming: An Evolutionary Approach by Brad J. Cox, Andrew J. Novobilski, 1991-05
  12. An Introduction to Programming with Mathematica, Third Edition by Paul R. Wellin, Richard J. Gaylord, et all 2005-01-31
  13. Professional Java Server Programming J2EE, 1.3 Edition by Subrahmanyam Allamaraju, Cedric Beust, et all 2001-08-31
  14. Computing for Scientists: Principles of Programming with Fortran 90 and C++ by R. J. Barlow, A. R. Barnett, et all 1998-09-09

1. P And J Programming 101 - Sequencing And Dependencies Tutorial - PHP Freaks.com
P and j programming 101 Sequencing and Dependencies Tutorial - PHP Freaks.comis a PHP and MySQL resource website for website design that has php tutorials
http://www.phpfreaks.com/tutorials/53/0.php
Search:
Username Password Use Cookie? Lost Your Password?
Join Now!

There are 4600 Participating Members
- Index

- Articles / News

- Submit News!

- Tutorials
...
- PHP Web Chat
New!!
- Live Help

- Advertise
- Apache Manual - PHP Manual ... - PEAR Manual New!! - PHP-GTK Manual New!! - MySQL Manual - PostgreSQL Manual - Javascript Manual - HTML 4.01 Manual ... Forum Notes (9) - Visitors Online: 115 - Members Online: 3 - Total Hits: 1966113 - Total Members: 4612 - Executed in 0.251 Secs Vote For Us! PHPTop.com P and J Programming 101 - Sequencing and Dependencies Author: Ron Gould Tutorial Submitted: 2003-02-14 This tutorial has been read 1235 times. (Examples from real life)
Sequencing and Dependencies
This tutorial was one of the most enlightening for new programmers. They seem to have common problems with: What comes first? What order does this have to be in? Where do you set variable values? This tutorial should begin to illustrate answers to some of those questions.
The Basics
Almost everyone understands how to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, so it serves as the perfect example to illustrate some concepts of software development. For the sake of simplicity in this example, we will assume that we already have all of the materials at hand and ready for use. We can consider how to instruct a robotic helper to fetch those materials and perform the task for us at a later time.
Assumptions
Let's assume we have bread, peanut butter, jelly, and a couple of table knives for spreading materials. Follow these instructions and we will observe some dependencies, which is the point of the first lesson.

2. J Programming Language - Wikipedia
j programming language. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Thecontent from this page was removed. See talk page for exaplanation
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/J_programming_language
Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Older versions Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles Interlanguage links All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk
Log in
Help
J programming language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. The content from this page was removed. See talk page for exaplanation, and please replace with an actual article on J J is a more recently developed version of APL. It's good for mathematical programming, especially where you are concerned with operations on matrices. Check out http://www.jsoftware.com for free downloads and more information.
Edit this page
Discuss this page Older versions What links here ... Recent changes
It was last modified 03:03 Oct 24, 2002. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License Main Page
Recent changes

Random page
...
Bug reports

3. Talk:J Programming Language - Wikipedia
Talkj programming language. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.I deleted the content from the main page. The only content here
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:J_programming_language
Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Older versions Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles Interlanguage links All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk
Log in
Help
Talk:J programming language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. I deleted the content from the main page. The only content here was a C program designed to spawn a huge number of threads, presumably with the intent of crashing the computer it was run on. Robert Merkel
Edit this page
View article Older versions ... Recent changes
It was last modified 05:48 Aug 19, 2002. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License Main Page
Recent changes

Random page
...
Bug reports

4. CSC 121-J: Programming & Problem Solving
CSC 121j programming Problem Solving Spring, 2003. Instructor StephenDavis. Tue/Thu, 1000-1115 am Chambers 301. For more information
http://www.davidson.edu/math/davis/courses/csc121/

Spring, 2003
Instructor: Stephen Davis
Tue/Thu, 10:00-11:15 a.m.
Chambers 301
For more information about this course, click on the topic of interest:

5. Functional Programming And The J Programming Language
Functional Programming and the j programming Language. John E. HowlandDepartment or functions. 5 j programming Examples. In functional
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~jhowland/math-talk/functional1/
Functional Programming and the J Programming Language
John E. Howland
Department of Computer Science
Trinity University
715 Stadium Drive
San Antonio, Texas 78212-7200
Voice: (210) 999-7364
Fax: (210) 999-7477
E-mail: jhowland@Ariel.CS.Trinity.Edu
Web: http://WWW.CS.Trinity.Edu/~jhowland/
Abstract:
A brief introduction to functional programming is given using the J programming language for examples. Several examples show the expressive power of functional languages and their application to topics in mathematics. Use of the J language as a substitute for mathematical notation is discussed. Subject Areas: Functional Programming, J Programming Language. Keywords: Functional Programming, J Programming Lanugage.
1 Introduction
A computer is a mechanism for interpreting a language. Computers interpret (perform the actions specified in) sentences in a language which is known as the computer's machine language. It follows, therefore, that a study of the organization of computers is related to the study of the organization of computer languages. Computer languages are classified in a variety of ways. Machine languages are rather directly interpreted by computers. Higher level computer languages are often somewhat independent from a particular computer and require translation (compilation) to machine language before programs may be interpreted (executed). Languages are also classified as being

6. Mainframeforum - Fun APL/J Programming Problem
Paul Chapman, Fun APL/j programming Problem, 12th Jan 2003 0200. Fun APL/j programmingProblem The following was posted within the last hour on comp.theory.
http://www.mainframeforum.com/t513540.html

Mainframeforum
Systems Engineering and Programming Programming APL ... Next Thread Author Thread Paul Chapman Fun APL/J Programming Problem 12th Jan 2003 Paul Chapman
Guest
Registered: Not Yet
Location:
Posts: N/A Fun APL/J Programming Problem The following was posted within the last hour on comp.theory. Seems to = me a perfect candidate for
an APL or J solution. My J is rusty, so I'm = handing it over to you guys, and meanwhile heading for
the coffee shop = to scratch out the answer.
Cheers, Paul
comp.theory Sent: Saturday, January 11, 2003 1:31 PM [UT] Subject: tree numbering schemes
scheme. numbers like this: of the as=20 tree, I'd introductions with of the Report this post to a moderator Logged 12th Jan 2003 Roger Hui Re: Fun APL/J Programming Problem 12th Jan 2003 Roger Hui Guest Registered: Not Yet Location: Posts: N/A Re: Fun APL/J Programming Problem I'll generate the pre-order traversal sequence for a k-ary tree of depth m: (k^) integers (i.) m. Salient parts of the solution: k^i.m 1 2 4 8 16 i. each k^i.m Programming Problem The following was posted within the last hour on comp.theory. Seems to me a perfect candidate for an

7. Dictionary Of Programming Languages
Like APL, j programming is normally conducted as an interactive session (this isnot surprising when you consider that a single line of APL or J can be the
http://cgibin.erols.com/ziring/cgi-bin/cep/cep.pl?_key=J

8. Re: Jforum: Re: Fun APL/J Programming Problem - K Listbox Archive - Kx Systems
Re Jforum Re Fun APL/j programming Problem. Subject Re Jforum ReFun APL/j programming Problem; From stevan apter sa@nsl.com ;
http://www.kx.com/listbox/k/msg06497.html
K Listbox Archive - Kx Systems Message Prev Message Next Thread Prev ... Thread Index
Re: Jforum: Re: Fun APL/J Programming Problem
  • Subject Re: Jforum: Re: Fun APL/J Programming Problem From sa@nsl.com Date: Wed, 22 Jan 2003 21:10:03 -0500
mailto:gheil@scn.org http://www.scn.org/tl/anvil

9. Re: Jforum: Re: Fun APL/J Programming Problem - K Listbox Archive - Kx Systems
Re Jforum Re Fun APL/j programming Problem. Subject Re JforumRe Fun APL/j programming Problem; From greg heil gheil@scn.org ;
http://www.kx.com/listbox/k/msg06496.html
K Listbox Archive - Kx Systems Message Prev Message Next Thread Prev ... Thread Index
Re: Jforum: Re: Fun APL/J Programming Problem
  • Subject Re: Jforum: Re: Fun APL/J Programming Problem From gheil@scn.org Date: Wed, 22 Jan 2003 16:58:01 -0800
mailto:gheil@scn.org http://www.scn.org/tl/anvil - The K list is managed by majordomo@listbox.com Send a message there, containing the word 'help', for assistance, e.g. unsubscribing.

10. Oreilly.com -- Online Catalog: Java Programming With Oracle SQLJ
3. Fundamental SQL j programming SQL J Programs Database Connections Simple SQLJ Statements Transactions Queries That Return Multiple Rows Nested Cursors PL
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/orasqlj/toc.html
Books Articles Conferences
O'Reilly Home
Press Room Jobs Resource Centers Perl Java Python C/C++ ... Bioinformatics Book Series Hacks Cookbooks In a Nutshell CD Bookshelves ... The Missing Manuals Online Publications MacDevCenter.com ONDotnet.com ONJava.com ONLamp.com ... XML.com Special Interest Events Meerkat News Ask Tim tim.oreilly.com ... Learning Lab Inside O'Reilly About O'Reilly International Media Kit Contact Us ...
see larger cover
Java Programming with Oracle SQLJ
By Jason Price
August 2001
0-596-00087-1, Order Number: 0871
This book is out of print, but is available on Safari Bookshelf
Buy from O'Reilly:
Table of Contents
Preface 1. Introduction
Comparing SQL J and JDBC
SQL J Components
Requirements for Using SQL J
Configuring Your Environment A "Hello World" Program for SQL J The sqlj Command-Line Utility Oracle JDeveloper 2. Relational Databases, SQL, and PL/SQL Relational Databases Structured Query Language (SQL) PL/SQL 3. Fundamental SQL J Programming SQL J Programs Database Connections Simple SQL J Statements Transactions Queries That Return Multiple Rows Nested Cursors PL/SQL in SQL J 4. Database Objects

11. Free Taipei Download At Heuse.com
Programming Languages J. Sample Program Get it from CNET Download.com!Sample Program. J - Derivative and redesign of APL. Purely
http://www.heuse.com/programming-j.htm
Free Taipei Download
Mahjongg Solitaire featuring 120 Layouts, 24 Tile Sets, 36 Backgrounds, 15 relaxing music tracks
screen displaying 10 statistics along with graph showing all ranks in all 120 Layouts for each player.
The layouts range from 72 tiles to 288 tiles size. Has Undo, Pair, Peek, and Shuffle features as well. Main Options Layouts Profile ... Scores Free Taipei Download Free Taipei Download
Programming Languages - J
J3 - Dialect of JOVIAL. "Military Standard JOVIAL (J3)", MIL-STD-1588 (USAF), June 1976. J73 - Yep, another JOVIAL dialect. "Military Standard JOVIAL (J73)", MIL-STD-1589 (USAF), Feb 1977. Jade - 1. U Washington, late 80's. A strongly-typed language, object-oriented but without classes. For type research. The compiler output is Smalltalk. [Submitter claimed that Jade has exactly one user!] 2. Implicit coarse-grained concurrency. The constructs 'with', 'withonly' and 'without' create tasks with specified side effects to shared data objects. Implemented as a C preprocessor. "Coarse-Grain Parallel Programming in Jade", M.S. Lam et al, SIGPLAN Notices 26(7):94-105 (Jul 1991). Janus - JAZ - Early system on LGP-30. Listed in CACM 2(5):16 (May 1959).

12. Mathematical Programming Glossary
Mathematical programming Glossary©. by Harvey J. Greenberg. (Click on my name to contact me.)
http://www.cudenver.edu/~hgreenbe/glossary/glossary.html
Frames are being used (if you should get a supporting browser), but you should still be able to use the glossary. Please report problems to me... click here

13. A Management Perspective Of The "J" Programming Language
A management perspective of the J programming language. Summary TheJ language is a powerful interpretive language with a concise syntax.
http://www.island.net/~gordon/jmanage.htm
A management perspective of the "J" programming language
Summary: The J language is a powerful interpretive language with a concise syntax. Its very power and conciseness makes it difficult for a novice to master, but also makes it of interest to a manager because little code and effort is required to achieve results. This article discuses the features of J which make it applicable to typical commercial processing tasks. It provides simple code examples to illustrate for a manager how little code may be required to implement powerful data manipulation capabilities. Hopefully the article will be of value to those evaluating high level languages suitable for commercial processing in a client/server or mainframe environment.
Management Overview
If maximum advantage is taken of code reusability, use of the language in commercial applications removes code development and maintenance as a constraint in the IS function. The conciseness, reusability, data independence, modularity, and ease of extension with a problem specific syntax, means very little code is needed to run a business. In many ways, J should be part of the analysts tool kit, since a programmer is potentially bypassed in the development process. While not all analysts or programmers are adept at the type of thinking required to master J, this is compensated for by the fact that its use greatly reduces the numbers needed. As stated by one programmer who must have liked sitting at a keyboard, "it's OK if you want a quick solution". Right. But I have yet to encounter a manager that wanted a slow solution.

14. Perlisisms - "Epigrams In Programming" By Alan J. Perlis
EPIGRAMS IN programming. 1. One man's constant is another man's Moral Structure data late in the programming process. 8. A programming language is low level when its programs
http://www.cs.yale.edu/homes/perlis-alan/quotes.html
EPIGRAMS IN PROGRAMMING
1. One man's constant is another man's variable. 2. Functions delay binding; data structures induce binding. Moral: Structure data late in the programming process. 3. Syntactic sugar causes cancer of the semicolon. 4. Every program is a part of some other program and rarely fits. 5. If a program manipulates a large amount of data, it does so in a small number of ways. 6. Symmetry is a complexity-reducing concept (co-routines include subroutines); seek it everywhere. 7. It is easier to write an incorrect program than understand a correct one. 8. A programming language is low level when its programs require attention to the irrelevant. 9. It is better to have 100 functions operate on one data structure than 10 functions on 10 data structures. 10. Get into a rut early: Do the same process the same way. Accumulate idioms. Standardize. The only difference(!) between Shakespeare and you was the size of his idiom list - not the size of his vocabulary. 11. If you have a procedure with ten parameters, you probably missed some. 12. Recursion is the root of computation since it trades description for time.

15. ACM SIG - APL E.J. Friedman-Hill's Tcl Course
FriedmanHill's Tcl/Tk Course Tcl/Tk programming in Five Easy Lessons Tcl is an easy-to-learn, portable, powerful and extensible scripting language. Tk is an easy and flexible graphics toolkit for Tcl.
http://www.acm.org/sigapl
Welcome to the ACM
Special Interest Group on the APL and J languages
What are APL and J? A Programming Language and a close relative...
Why APL?
SIGAPL Membership ACM application form (online version)
ACM application form (print version)
Contacting SIGAPL Executive Committee: sigapl-bd@acm.org
Executive Committee plus those assisting it: sigapl-bdplus@acm.org
Publishers of APL newsletters/information: apl-announce@acm.org Officers Executive Committee
Publications Quote Quad (Quarterly)
Current Issue:Quote Quad Volume 33 Number 1

Conference Proceedings (Annual)

Submitting material for publication (including templates)
Awards Kenneth E. Iverson Award for Outstanding Contribution to APL Conference Information
APL 2003: Call For Participation

Wednesday, June 11 - Saturday June 14, 2003 Local SIG Information APL BUG: APL Bay Area Users' Group October 14, 2002: Tibor Horvath on APL in course bidding system at Stanford October 26, 2002: Zbigniew Stachniak on APL in the MCM/70 microcomputer at Vintage Computer Festival 5.0 in Santa Clara APL Community Organizations and User Groups The APL White Pages The APL Skills Database APL and J Software Library ... APL Online Resources Guide - Links to APL and J related Internet sites Documents SIGAPL Annual Report July 2000 - June 2001 Letter From the Chairman (February 2000) SIGAPL Annual Report July 1997 - June 1998 APL98 Open Forum Led by David E. Siegel, Chairman (31 July 98)

16. Amit's Game Programming Information
Includes articles and references on genetic algorithms, and AI in game simulation and virtual reality games. Amit's Game programming Information. shortest Smart Tags. . . . Game programming. Sections -Shortest Paths collect links to game programming information about specific topics
http://www-cs-students.stanford.edu/~amitp/gameprog.html
Amit's Game Programming Information
- shortest paths - ai - design - tiles - scripting - hexagons - objects - adventure - economics -
Amit's Home Page

Research

Friends

Personal
...
Smart Tags

Game Programming
Sections:
Shortest Paths

Tile Based Games

Hexagonal Grids
Artificial Intelligence ... Rants Search: About this page: I collect links to game programming information about specific topics that I find useful in my own games , but I don't try to cover all topics. ( New: I've started working on a new game (screenshot 1) (screenshot 2) . I'm keeping a blog diary of what I'm currently working on.) I try to avoid topics specific to one platform, such as graphics, sound, compilers, and specific libraries. I prefer ideas to source code, because I find it easier to go from an idea to code than from code to an idea. Common questions I get are answered on other sites
  • How do I make games? (for non-programmers)
  • How do I make games? (for programmers)
  • How much money can I make by writing games?
  • How much fun is game programming? Key to the bullets (implemented with style sheets):
    • Link within this site
    • Link to another site
    Shortest Paths
    Determining how to walk around on a map is an interesting problem. There are many different approaches, ranging from simple (
  • 17. Java Programming, Main Index
    Author David J. Eck (eck@hws.edu). WELCOME TO Introduction to programming Using Java, the fourth edition of a free, online
    http://math.hws.edu/javanotes
    Please Note: This is the new Fourth Edition of this textbook. Many applets in this version require Java 1.3 or higher.
    The Third Edition, which only requires Java 1.1, is still available at:
    http://math.hws.edu/eck/cs124/javanotes3/
    Introduction to Programming Using Java
    Version 4.0, July 2002
    Requires Java 1.3 or higher
    Author: David J. Eck eck@hws.edu
    W ELCOME TO Introduction to Programming Using Java, the fourth edition of a free, on-line textbook on introductory programming, which uses Java as the language of instruction. Previous versions have been used as a textbook for an introductory programming class at Hobart and William Smith Colleges. See http://math.hws.edu/eck/cs124/ for information about this course. This on-line book contains Java applets, many of which require Java 1.3 or higher. To see these applets, you will need a Web browser that uses a recent version of Java. To learn more, please read the preface Links for downloading copies of this text can be found at the bottom of this page. Search this Text: Although this book does not have a conventional index, you can search it for terms that interest you. Note that this feature searches the book at its on-line site, so you must be working on-line to use it.

    18. Andrew Cooke: An Introduction To Programming Languages
    A page for people who know one language and are wondering about learning another.
    http://www.acooke.org/andrew/writing/lang.html
    previous latest addition here
    An Introduction to Programming Languages
    home
    • Introduction top
      Introduction
      Target Audience
      This web page is for people who know one language and are wondering about learning another. It describes some of the differences between common programming languages and considers why and how a new language should be learnt. It is not a detailed, scholarly exploration of all programming languages, nor does it describe the latest developments in computer science - I simply do not know enough to attempt that. Instead, I have tried to write something that is clear, unbiased, and useful to someone with no knowledge of the theory of computing. If you're not that interested in actually writing code and are looking for a more general article, focusing on the "philosophical" aspects of programming languages, then you will be much happier with this book review
      Initial Questions
      Why are there so many different programming languages? What is the difference between them? How do people learn them? Which should people learn? Should they learn more than one?

    19. Microsoft Visual J#: Programming With Designers In Microsoft Visual J# .NET
    the Web Forms designer and write programs with the eventbased programming model. Studio,Visual Basic, Visual J .NET, Visual C , Visual J++, J/Direct, ActiveX
    http://msdn.microsoft.com/vjsharp/techinfo/articles/programming.asp
    All Products Support Search microsoft.com Guide ... Visual J# Home Search This Site
    Advanced Search
    Visual Studio Home Visual J# Home Product Information ... Technical Articles
    Programming with Designers in Microsoft Visual J# .NET
    Posted: November 09, 2001 On this page Introduction Designers and Components Windows Applications in Microsoft Visual J# .NET XML Web Services in Microsoft J# .NET ... Deploying Web Applications Created with Visual J# .NET
    Introduction
    What Is Microsoft Visual J# .NET?
    Since Visual J# .NET integrates with the Visual Studio .NET integrated development environment (IDE), J# programmers can use Visual Studio .NET designers to create XML Web services, Web Forms, and Windows Forms applications. This document introduces rapid application development using Visual J# .NET.
    Shared Integrated Development Environment
    Microsoft Visual Studio .NET is the shared integrated development environment (IDE) for all the languages within it. It was designed to help developers build their solutions faster and with all of the available tools regardless of which language you use in the IDE. With Visual J# .NET, the Java-language joins the other languages supported in Visual Studio .NET. For an introduction to the features of Visual Studio .NET, see the Microsoft Visual Studio .NET documentation

    20. Teamwork In Programming Contests: 3 * 1 = 4
    Tips and observations from a team of programmers who have regularly won in the ACM programming contests. Published in ACM Crossroads, the student magazine of the ACM.
    http://www.acm.org/crossroads/xrds3-2/progcon.html
    ACM Crossroads Student Magazine
    The ACM's First Electronic Publication Crossroads Home
    Join the ACM!

    Search Crossroads

    crossroads@acm.org
    ... Crossroads / Teamwork in Programming Contests: 3 * 1 = 4
    Links Go Key Resource
    Programming Contests Topic
    Awarded July 10, 2000 Press Release
    Teamwork in Programming Contests: 3 * 1 = 4
    by Fabian Ernst
    Jeroen Moelands
    , and Seppo Pieterse
    Introduction
    Every year since 1977, the ACM has organized the ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest . This contest, which consists of a regional qualifying contest and the Finals, provides college students with the opportunity to demonstrate and sharpen their programming skills. During this contest, teams consisting of three students and one computer are to solve as many of the given problems as possible within 5 hours. The team with the most problems solved wins, where ``solved'' means producing the right outputs for a set of (secret) test inputs. Though the individual skills of the team members are important, in order to be a top team it is necessary to make use of synergy within the team. As participants in the 1995 Contest Finals (two of us also participated in the 1994 Finals), we have given a lot of thought to strategy and teamwork. In this article we summarize our observations from various contests, and we hope that if you ever participate in this contest (or any other) that this information will be valuable to you.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 1     1-20 of 183    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20

    free hit counter