Showing posts with label MCA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MCA. Show all posts

17 November 2014

Download VTU MCA Old Question papers - Sem 5

Download Old Question Papers of VTU MCA Semester 5

[Download Topics In Enterprise Architecture - II Question Papers]
[Download System Simulation And Modeling Question Papers]

Topics In Enterprise Architecture - II Question paper set includes following question papers:
Jan-2013 (3).pdf

System Simulation and Modeling Question paper set includes following question papers:
jan-2009 (2).pdf  
july-2008 (1).pdf
Questionpaper074450040_-_SYSTEM_SIMULATION_AND_MODELING390.pdf__.pdf
SMS June - July 2011.pdf
Jan-2013 (2).pdf
System Modeling and Simulation dec 2012.pdf
System Modelling and Simulation june 2012.pdf


OOMD & Design Patterns Question paper set includes following question papers:
jan-2009.pdf  
july-2009.pdf
Jan-2013 (1).pdf

Data mining & Warehousing Question paper set includes following question papers:
jan-2007.pdf  
july-2007.pdf
jan-2008.pdf  
july-2008.pdf
jan-2009 (1).pdf  
july-2009 (1).pdf

Download VTU MCA Old Question papers - Sem 4

Download Old Question Papers of VTU MCA Semester 4



SE Question paper set includes following question papers:
CameraZOOM-20130405135945502.jpg
CameraZOOM-20130405135953651.jpg
CameraZOOM-20130405140001772.jpg
CameraZOOM-20130405140009086.jpg
CameraZOOM-20130405140016697.jpg
CameraZOOM-20130405140031827.jpg
CameraZOOM-20130405140045570.jpg
CameraZOOM-20130405153002531.jpg
jun-2012.pdf

Web Programming Question paper set includes following question papers:
Jan-2013.pdf
jun-2012.pdf

USP Question paper set includes following question papers:
July_2006.pdf
Dec06_Jan07_2007.pdf
June_July_2008.pdf
Dec08_Jan09_2009.pdf
January_February_2006.pdf
July_2007.pdf
Dec07_Jan08_2008.pdf
July_August_2005.pdf
June_July_2009
UNIX_SYSTEM_PROGRAMMING

J2EE Question paper set includes following question papers:
Jan-2013.pdf  
jun-2012.pdf

ADA Question paper set includes following question papers:
Jan-2013.pdf  
jun-2012.pdf

Download VTU MCA Old Question papers - Sem 3

Download Old Question Papers of VTU MCA Semester 3


[Download SS - System Software Question Papers]
[Download OS - Operating Systems Question Papers]
[Download JAVA Question Papers]
[Download DBMS Question Papers]
[Download CN - Computer Networks Question Papers]

SS Question paper set includes following question papers:
DEC08-JAN09.pdf
DEC09-JAN10.pdf
Dec2005_1.jpg
Dec2005_2.jpg
DEC2010.jpg
Jan-Feb2004_1.jpg
Jan-Feb2004_2.jpg
Jan-Feb2005_1.jpg
Jan-Feb2005_2.jpg
Jul-Aug2004.jpg
July2006.jpg
July2007_1.jpg
July2007_2.jpg
JUNE-JULY-2009.pdf
SP_Dec-09-10_old.pdf
SP_Dec-2005-06_old.pdf
SP_Dec-2006-07.pdf
SP_Dec-2007-08.pdf
SP_Dec-2008-09.pdf
SP_July-2002-03.pdf
SP_July-2003-04.pdf
SP_July-2003-04_old.pdf
SP_July-2005-06.pdf
SP_July-2006-07.pdf
SP_June-2008-09.pdf
SS_Dec-09-10.pdf
SS_Dec-2008-09.pdf
SS_June-2008-09.pdf
SS_June-July2011.jpg
100questions-SS-Dr.AD.pdf
_ss100qbanknew.pdf


OS Question paper set includes following question papers:
DEC08-JAN09.pdf
DEC08-JAN09_.pdf
DEC09-JAN10.pdf
Dec2005_1.jpg
Dec2005_2.jpg
Jan-Feb2005_1.jpg
Jan-Feb2005_2.jpg
JULY2007.pdf
JUNE-JULY2009.pdf
OS_Dec-2005-06.pdf
OS_Dec-2005-06_old.pdf
OS_Dec-2006-07.pdf
OS_Dec-2008-09.pdf
OS_Dec-2011_1.jpg
OS_Dec-2011_2.jpg
OS_July-2002-03.pdf
OS_July-2003-04.pdf
OS_July-2003-04_old.pdf
OS_July-2005-06.pdf
OS_July-2006-07.pdf
OS_June-2007-08.pdf
OS_June-2008-09.pdf
OS_June-July2011.jpg
_100_questions-OS.pdf


JAVA Question paper set includes following question papers:
Dec-2010.pdf
Dec07-Jan08.jpg
JAVA_Feb-2002-03.pdf
Jun-Jul2009.jpg
June-July2007.pdf
May-Jun2008.jpg
May-June2010.pdf
May2007.jpg
Topics-in-Enterprise-Architecture-Dec09-Jan10.jpg
Topics-in-Enterprise-Architecture-June-July-2009.jpg
_JAVA_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-12/Java_T3_Solutions.doc
_JAVA_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-12/schema.doc
_JAVA_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-12/t1-java.doc
_JAVA_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-12/T2-QP-programming
_JAVA_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-12/TEST-II_QP-solution.doc
_JAVA_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-12/test1.doc
Java_Dec-2011.jpg
_JAVA_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-12


DBMS Question paper set includes following question papers:
Database_June-July2011.jpg
DBMS_Dec-09-10.pdf
DBMS_Dec-2005-06.pdf
DBMS_Dec-2005-06_old.pdf
DBMS_Dec-2007-08.pdf
DBMS_Dec-2008-09_2.pdf
DBMS_Dec-2011.jpg
DBMS_Jan-2004-05.pdf
DBMS_July-2002-03_old.pdf
DBMS_July-2003-04_old.pdf
DBMS_July-2005-06_old.pdf
DBMS_July-2006-07.pdf
DBMS_June-2008-09.pdf
DBMS_May-2007-08.pdf
DEC08-JAN09.pdf
DEC09-JAN10.pdf
Dec2010_1.jpg
Dec2010_2.jpg
Jan-Feb2005_1.jpg
Jan-Feb2005_2.jpg
Jul-Aug2005_1.jpg
Jul-Aug2005_2.jpg
July2006_1.jpg
July2006_2.jpg
July2007_1.jpg
July2007_2.jpg
Jun-Jul2009.jpg
JUNE-JULY2009.pdf
may-jun-08.tif
May-Jun2010_1.jpg
May-Jun2010_2.jpg
_100Q.pdf
_IIISEM_DBMS_100questions_AK.pdf


CN Question paper set includes following question papers:
CN_Dec-09-10.pdf
CN_Dec-2005-06_old.pdf
CN_Dec-2006-07.pdf
CN_Dec-2008-09.pdf
CN_Dec-2008-09_2.pdf
CN_Dec-2011.jpg
CN_Jan-2004-05.pdf
CN_July-2003-04.pdf
CN_July-2003-04_old.pdf
CN_July-2003-04_old_2.pdf
CN_July-2004-05.pdf
CN_July-2005-06.pdf
CN_July-2006-07.pdf
CN_June-2007-08.pdf
CN_June-2008-09.pdf
CN_June-2008-09_2.pdf
CN_June-July2011.jpg
CN_June_July2011.jpg
DEC08-JAN09.pdf
DEC09-JAN10.pdf
Dec2005_1.jpg
Dec2005_2.jpg
Dec2010.jpg
Jul-Aug2004.jpg
Jul-Aug2005_1.jpg
Jul-Aug2005_2.jpg
July2006_1.jpg
July2006_2.jpg
July2007.jpg
Jun-Jul-08.tif
JUNE-JULY-2009.pdf
_CN-10MCA32-100Questions-Dr.KSJ.pdf
_CN_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-123
_CN_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-123
_CN_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-123
_CN_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-123
_CN_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-123
_CN_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-123
_CN_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-123
_CN_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-123
_CN_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-123
_CN_Model_QP,Scheme,Soln-123

Download VTU MCA Old Question papers - Sem 2

Download Old Question Papers of VTU MCA Semester 2


[Download OR Question Papers]

OR Question paper set includes following question papers:
OR_Dec-09-10_old.pdf
OR_July-2003-04.pdf
OR_June-July-2009.pdf
OR_July-2003-04 (1).pdf
OR_June-2007-08.pdf


[Download MIS Question Papers]

MIS Question paper set includes following question papers:
MIS_Dec-09-10_old.pdf
MIS_Dec-2008-09_old.pdf
MIS_July-2006-07.pdf
MIS_Dec-09-10.pdf    
MIS_jan-2004-05.pdf    
MIS_June-2007-08.pdf
MIS_Dec-2006-07.pdf  
MIS_Jul-2003-04.pdf    
MIS_June-2008-09.pdf
MIS_Dec-2007-08.pdf  
MIS-July-2005-06.pdf    
MIS_June-2009.pdf

[Download DS Question Papers]

DS Question paper set includes following question papers:
_10mca23_DSC.pdf        
DSC_Dec-2008-09.pdf
DSC-July-2005-06.pdf
DSC_Dec-09-10.pdf      
DSC_jan-2004-05.pdf
DSC_July-2006-07 (1).pdf
DSC_Dec-2006-07.pdf    
DSC_Jul-2003-04.pdf
DSC_July-2006-07.pdf
DSC_Dec-2008-09_old.pdf
DSC_July-2003.pdf  
DSC_June-2007-08.pdf

[Download C++ Question Papers]

C++ Question paper set includes following question papers:
C++_Dec-2005-06 (1).pdf  
C++_Dec-2008-09_old.pdf  
C++_July-2006-07.pdf
C++_Dec-2005-06.pdf      
C++_Dec-2008-09.pdf      
C++_June-2007-08.pdf
C++_Dec-2006-07.pdf      
C++_Jan-2004-05.pdf      
C++_June-2008-09_old.pdf
C++_Dec-2007-08 (1).pdf  
C++_July-2003-04.pdf     
C++_June-2008-09.pdf
C++_Dec-2007-08.pdf      
C++_July-2005-06.pdf

14 October 2013

29 May 2013

Download VTU MCA 10MCA47 Web Programming Laboratory All Programms

Hello friends,

Today I'm sharing all LAB Programs of Web Programming,

Following is the list of all problems:
1. Develop and demonstrate a XHTML file that includes Javascript script for the following problems:
a) Input: A number n obtained using prompt
Output: The first n Fibonacci numbers

b) Input: A number n obtained using prompt
Output: A table of numbers from 1 to n and their squares using alert

2. a) Develop and demonstrate, using Javascript script, a XHTML document that collects the USN ( the valid format is: A digit from 1 to 4 followed by two upper-case characters followed by two digits followed by two upper-case characters followed by three digits; no embedded spaces allowed) of the user. Event handler must be included for the form element that collects this information to validate the input. Messages in the alert windows must be produced when errors are detected.

b) Modify the above program to get the current semester also (restricted to be a number from 1 to 8)

3. a) Develop and demonstrate, using Javascript script, a XHTML document that contains three short paragraphs of text, stacked on top of each other, with only enough of each showing so that the mouse cursor can be placed over some part of them. When the cursor is placed over the exposed part of any
paragraph, it should rise to the top to become completely visible.

b) Modify the above document so that when a paragraph is moved from the top stacking position, it returns to its original position rather than to the bottom.

4. a) Design an XML document to store information about a student in an engineering college affiliated to VTU. The information must include USN, Name, Name of the College, Brach, Year of Joining, and e-mail id. Make up sample data for 3 students. Create a CSS style sheet and use it to display the document.

b) Create an XSLT style sheet for one student element of the above document and use it to create a display of that element.

5. a) Write a Perl program to display various Server informations like Server Name, Server Software, Server protocol, CGI Revision etc.

b) Write a Perl program to accept UNIX command from a HTML form and to display the output of the command executed.

6. a) Write a Perl program to accept the User Name and display a greeting message randomly chosen from a list of 4 greeting messages.

b) Write a Perl program to keep track of the number of visitors visiting the web page and to display this count of visitors, with proper headings.

7. Write a Perl program to display a digital clock which displays the current time of the server.

8. Write a Perl program to insert name and age information entered by the user into a table created using MySQL and to display the current contents of this table.

9. Write a PHP program to store current date-time in a COOKIE and display the ‘Last visited on’ date-time on the web page upon reopening of the same page.

10. Write a PHP program to read student data from an XML file and store into the MYSQL database. Retrieve and display.

11. Create a XHTML form with Name, Address Line 1, Address Line 2, and E-mail text fields. On submitting, store the values in MySQL table. Retrieve and display the data based on Name.

12. Build a Rails application to accept book information viz. Accession number, title, authors, edition and publisher from a web page and store the information in a database and to search for a book with the title specified by the user and to display the search results with proper headings
Click to DOWNLOAD

04 March 2013

OxyTech 2013 - The Oxford College Of Engineering Techno-Cultural Fest

Hello friends,
The Oxford College of Engineering is organizing OxyTech - National Level Techno-cultural fest for 2 days on 18th and 19th March, 2013.

You can visit the official website for more information regarding events and schedule of each events at OxyTech-2013 (http://www.theoxford.edu/oxytech )

You can also download Brochure and Registration form.

13 December 2012

Download JAVA The Complete Reference - 7th edition by Herbert Schildt

Hello friends,
Here is the link to download e-book of "JAVA The Complete Reference - 7th" edition by Herbert Schildt

10 December 2012

VTU MCA, MBA third sem Result 2012

Hello friends,
VTU announced MCA II,III,IV & V Semester Results Announced for All Region of Dec 2012/Jan 2013 Examinations results and MBA I,II,III & IV Semester Results Announced for All Region of Dec 2012/Jan 2013 Examinations results, checkout here http://results.vtu.ac.in/

Thank you and congratulations to all of you...!!!

Regards,
KV Group Team

06 December 2012

JAVA RMI (Remote Method Invocation) basic tutorial

Hello friends,
Today I'm giving you link to download my presentation which I gave in college. That presentation contains to the information that How RMI works and steps to do RMI in JAVA.

I have also included the source files of programs so that it will be easy for you to understand.

Download Presentation and Source Files

Computer Networks: How Email Really Works

In this diagram, the sender is a human being using their company account to send an email to someone at a different company.

Step A: Sender creates and sends an email

The originating sender creates an email in their Mail User Agent (MUA) and clicks 'Send'. The MUA is the application the originating sender uses to compose and read email, such as Eudora, Outlook, etc.

Step B: Sender's MDA/MTA routes the email

The sender's MUA transfers the email to a Mail Delivery Agent (MDA). Frequently, the sender's MTA also handles the responsibilities of an MDA. Several of the most common MTAs do this, including sendmail and qmail (which Kavi uses).
The MDA/MTA accepts the email, then routes it to local mailboxes or forwards it if it isn't locally addressed.
In our diagram, an MDA forwards the email to an MTA and it enters the first of a series of "network clouds," labeled as a "Company Network" cloud.

Step C: Network Cloud

An email can encounter a network cloud within a large company or ISP, or the largest network cloud in existence: the Internet. The network cloud may encompass a multitude of mail servers, DNS servers, routers, lions, tigers, bears (wolves!) and other devices and services too numerous to mention. These are prone to be slow when processing an unusually heavy load, temporarily unable to receive an email when taken down for maintenance, and sometimes may not have identified themselves properly to the Internet through the Domain Name System (DNS) so that other MTAs in the network cloud are unable to deliver mail as addressed. These devices may be protected by firewalls, spam filters and malware detection software that may bounce or even delete an email. When an email is deleted by this kind of software, it tends to fail silently, so the sender is given no information about where or when the delivery failure occurred.
Email service providers and other companies that process a large volume of email often have their own, private network clouds. These organizations commonly have multiple mail servers, and route all email through a central gateway server (i.e., mail hub) that redistributes mail to whichever MTA is available. Email on these secondary MTAs must usually wait for the primary MTA (i.e., the designated host for that domain) to become available, at which time the secondary mail server will transfer its messages to the primary MTA.

Step D: Email Queue

The email in the diagram is addressed to someone at another company, so it enters an email queue with other outgoing email messages. If there is a high volume of mail in the queue—either because there are many messages or the messages are unusually large, or both—the message will be delayed in the queue until the MTA processes the messages ahead of it.

Step E: MTA to MTA Transfer

When transferring an email, the sending MTA handles all aspects of mail delivery until the message has been either accepted or rejected by the receiving MTA.
As the email clears the queue, it enters the Internet network cloud, where it is routed along a host-to-host chain of servers. Each MTA in the Internet network cloud needs to "stop and ask directions" from the Domain Name System (DNS) in order to identify the next MTA in the delivery chain. The exact route depends partly on server availability and mostly on which MTA can be found to accept email for the domain specified in the address. Most email takes a path that is dependent on server availability, so a pair of messages originating from the same host and addressed to the same receiving host could take different paths. These days, it's mostly spammers that specify any part of the path, deliberately routing their message through a series of relay servers in an attempt to obscure the true origin of the message.
To find the recipient's IP address and mailbox, the MTA must drill down through the Domain Name System (DNS), which consists of a set of servers distributed across the Internet. Beginning with the root nameservers at the top-level domain (.tld), then domain nameservers that handle requests for domains within that .tld, and eventually to nameservers that know about the local domain.
DNS resolution and transfer process
  • There are 13 root servers serving the top-level domains (e.g., .org, .com, .edu, .gov, .net, etc.). These root servers refer requests for a given domain to the root name servers that handle requests for that tld. In practice, this step is seldom necessary.
  • The MTA can bypass this step because it has already knows which domain name servers handle requests for these .tlds. It asks the appropriate DNS server which Mail Exchange (MX) servers have knowledge of the subdomain or local host in the email address. The DNS server responds with an MX record: a prioritized list of MX servers for this domain.
    An MX server is really an MTA wearing a different hat, just like a person who holds two jobs with different job titles (or three, if the MTA also handles the responsibilities of an MDA). To the DNS server, the server that accepts messages is an MX server. When is transferring messages, it is called an MTA.
  • The MTA contacts the MX servers on the MX record in order of priority until it finds the designated host for that address domain.
  • The sending MTA asks if the host accepts messages for the recipient's username at that domain (i.e., username@domain.tld) and transfers the message.

Step F: Firewalls, Spam and Virus Filters

The transfer process described in the last step is somewhat simplified. An email may be transferred to more than one MTA within a network cloud and is likely to be passed to at least one firewall before it reaches it's destination.
An email encountering a firewall may be tested by spam and virus filters before it is allowed to pass inside the firewall. These filters test to see if the message qualifies as spam or malware. If the message contains malware, the file is usually quarantined and the sender is notified. If the message is identified as spam, it will probably be deleted without notifying the sender.
Spam is difficult to detect because it can assume so many different forms, so spam filters test on a broad set of criteria and tend to misclassify a significant number of messages as spam, particularly messages from mailing lists. When an email from a list or other automated source seems to have vanished somewhere in the network cloud, the culprit is usually a spam filter at the receiver's ISP or company. This explained in greater detail in Virus Scanning and Spam Blocking.

Delivery

In the diagram, the email makes it past the hazards of the spam trap...er...filter, and is accepted for delivery by the receiver's MTA. The MTA calls a local MDA to deliver the mail to the correct mailbox, where it will sit until it is retrieved by the recipient's MUA.

RFCs

Documents that define email standards are called "Request For Comments (RFCs)", and are available on the Internet through the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) website. There are many RFCs and they form a somewhat complex, interlocking set of standards, but they are a font of information for anyone interested in gaining a deeper understanding of email.

02 January 2012

EBook: Computer Organisation (MCA Sem 1 - VTU)

Hello, Friends...

Now you can download Ebook for Computer Organisation, which is there in MCA Sem 1 (VTU) syllabus.



DOWNLOAD

PASSWORD for .rar or .zip file is ==>  kvgroup4all

 
Hope.. you'll like dis... :)

26 December 2011

Timer Concept Using Preprocessor


#include <time.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
clock_t startm, stopm;
#define START if ( (startm = clock()) == -1) {printf("Error calling clock");exit(1);}
#define STOP if ( (stopm = clock()) == -1) {printf("Error calling clock");exit(1);}
#define PRINTTIME printf( "%6.3f seconds used by the processor.", ((double)stopm-startm)/CLOCKS_PER_SEC);




Usage:

main() {
     START;
     // Do stuff you want to time
     STOP;
     PRINTTIME;
}

15 November 2011

C Programm: Perform multiplication of two matrices using dynamic Array.



#include
#include
//function prototypes
void print_mat(int**,int,int);
void mul(int**,int**,int**,int,int,int,int);
void main()
{
    //double pointer for two dimentional array
    int **a,**b,**c,r1,c1,r2,c2,i,j,k,sum;
    clrscr();
    printf("Enter Matrix A information:\n");
    printf("Row 1:");
    scanf("%d",&r1);
    printf("Column 1:");
    scanf("%d",&c1);
    printf("Enter Matrix B information:\n");
    printf("Row 2:");
    scanf("%d",&r2);
    printf("Column 2:");
    scanf("%d",&c2);
    if(c1!=r2)
    {
        printf("Multiplication can not performed.");
        getch();
        return;
    }
    //memory allocation
    a=(int **)malloc(sizeof(int*)*r1);
    b=(int **)malloc(sizeof(int*)*r2);
    c=(int **)malloc(sizeof(int*)*r1);//r1xc2
    for(i=0;i
    {
        a[i]=(int *)malloc(sizeof(int)*c1);
        c[i]=(int *)malloc(sizeof(int)*c2);
    }
    for(i=0;i
    {
        b[i]=(int *)malloc(sizeof(int)*c2);
    }
    //http://kvGroup4all.blogspot.com
    for(i=0;i
    {
        for(j=0;j
        {
            printf("Enter A[%d][%d]=",i,j);
            scanf("%d",&a[i][j]);
        }
    }
    for(i=0;i
    {
        for(j=0;j
        {
            printf("Enter B[%d][%d]=",i,j);
            scanf("%d",&b[i][j]);
        }
    }
    //function calling
    mul(a,b,c,r1,c1,r2,c2);
    printf("Matrix A:\n");
    print_mat(a,r1,c1);
    printf("\nMatrix B:\n");
    print_mat(b,r2,c2);
    //printing answer
    printf("Matrix C:\n");
    print_mat(c,r1,c2);
    getch();
}
//http://kvGroup4all.blogspot.com
void print_mat(int **a,int r,int c)
{
    int i,j;
    for(i=0;i
    {
        for(j=0;j
        {
            printf("%d\t",a[i][j]);
        }
        printf("\n");
    }
}
//user defined function for multiplication
void mul(int **a,int **b,int **c,int r1,int c1,int r2,int c2)
{
    int i,j,k,sum;
    for(i=0;i
    {
        for(j=0;j
        {
            sum=0;
            for(k=0;k
            {
                  sum+=a[i][k]*b[k][j];
            }
            c[i][j]=sum;
        }
    }
}
//http://kvGroup4all.blogspot.com

11 July 2010

Redhat Linux Shell FULL version (Windows Platform)

this is the full version... you need to download only this... and then install it...

kvGroup_RedHat_on Windows.exe

===========================
Installation Steps.....
===========================
1. After download this kvGroup_RedHat_on Windows.exe (119 MB) >> Extranct to your HDD
2. Then run rhsetup.exe and click on Next button
3. Then Select 3rd option i.e. Install From Local Directory.
4. Then write the root directory location to where you want to install Linux Shell. then click on Next button.
5. Then brows Local Package directory where you extract thiese installation files.
6. then select option "Curr" for most Recommonded packages installation... and click on Next button.
7. After all Extractation and installation completed run...  "Cygwin.bat" file from your root directory (set in Step#4)

Install Redhat LINUX Shell on Windows platform

here is the link to Download Redhat LINUX Shell....

this version also includes VI editor to write shell scripts...

===========================
Installation Steps.....
===========================
1. After download this rhsetup.exe (1.5MB) run it.
2. Then click on next button
3. Then Select 1st option i.e. Install From Internet.
4. Then write the root directory location to where you want to install Linux Shell. then click on Next button.
5. Then write Local Package directory to store downloaded files.
6. Then select your Internet connection type.
7. After some time it will show you Avilable download sites...
8. click on Next button in will find packages to install
9. then select option "Curr" for most Recommonded packages installation... and click on Next button.
10. After all downloads and installation completed run...  "Cygwin.bat" file from your root directory (set in Step#4)

cheer$$$$$...!!!!!

you have done installation... now Njoy the Linux commands on your windows platform....

(soooon we will uploads full version of this Application i.e. 115MB)...

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