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ExperiJ is a neat little piece of kit that does an oddly specific job, but thankfully, it does it well. If you don't work in a Java environment (haven't tested other JVM languages, so it might work with them, but it's undocumented.), then you're going to find nothing of value here. For those that are still reading, and therefore, work within a Java, you need to realise this library has even still a very specific use case, and a number of rules before you start using it.
ExperiJ acts as coordinating software for "experiments". These experiments are run together, and the output and speed of each, calculated and stored. These experiment results can be easily retrieved and viewed.
This lays the groundwork for the most difficult thing imaginable.
While the usage is fairly simple: // TODO
// TODO