Existing Tools
- AgentSheets – graphically programmed tool for creating web-based The Sims-like simulation games, and for teaching beginner students programming.
- AnyLogic – a graphically programmed tool that generates Java code for discrete event simulation, system dynamics and agent-based models
- Easy Java Simulations – a tool for modelling and visualization of physical phenomenons, that automatically generates Java code from mathematical expressions.
- ExploreLearning Gizmos – a large library of interactive online simulations for math and science education in grades 3–12.
- GNU Octave web interfaces – MATLAB compatible open-source software
- Google Chart API – for the generation of embedded charts in web pages
- Lanner Group Ltd L-SIM Server - Java-based discrete event simulation engine which supports model standards such as BPMN 2.0
- Nanohub – web 2.0 in-browser interactive simulation of nanotechnology
- NetLogo – a multi-agent programming language and integrated modeling environment that runs on the Java Virtual Machine
- OpenPlaG – PHP-based function graph plotter for the use on websites
- OpenEpi – web-based packet of tools for biostatistics
- Recursive Porous Agent Simulation Toolkit (Repast) – agent-based modeling and simulation toolkit implemented in Java and many other languages
- SAGE – open source numerical analysis software with web-interface, based on the Python programming language
- Simulation123 – a tool supporting web-based simulation documentation, a category of web-based simulation
- Social simulation – review of computational sociology and agent based systems.
- StarLogo – agent-based simulation language written in Java.
- VisSim viewer – graphically programmed data flow diagrams for simulation of dynamical systems
- webMathematica and Mathematica Player – a computer algebra system and programming language.
Read more about this topic: Web-based Simulation
Famous quotes containing the words existing and/or tools:
“For the existing world is not a dream, and cannot with impunity be treated as a dream; neither is it a disease; but it is the ground on which you stand, it is the mother of whom you were born.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“Machinery is aggressive. The weaver becomes a web, the machinist a machine. If you do not use the tools, they use you. All tools are in one sense edge-tools, and dangerous.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)