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Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Complex Event Processing RSS News Unus per utilitas ut fulsi perspicuus ero laurifer Post 302138122 by Linux Bot on Saturday 29th of September 2007 04:40:33 AM
Old 09-29-2007
Unus per utilitas ut fulsi perspicuus ero laurifer

John Trigg
Fri, 28 Sep 2007 15:46:44 -0500
The GartnerCEP show in Orlando last week demonstrated a number of interesting things about CEP platforms
1. The story of core CEP is commonacross all vendors
2. Aside from the nature of how CEP isexpressed within a platform, true differentiation starts to emerge in toolingand user constituencies that are using CEP
3. Future state as described by DrLuckham indicates that CEP logic becomes available inside reusablelibraries/repositories that can be folded into applications.

The premiseof Apama has always been that you must embrace the full spectrum of users- encompassing IT, business analyst, end user,and senior management, to gain true productivity and applicationacceleration with CEP development. Perhaps that is true for anyapplication development platform. But this has been a core tenet of theApama platform since day 1 when the idea of having a platform thatincorporates both a core event language aimed at programmers, as wellas a metaphor for expressing & implementing event logic for thenon-programmer who owns the core IP of the process. Being able to expressthis information graphically - thus making it accessible andunderstandable, and then take action, completes the user stack we aimfor with our Apama platform.

We haveblogged about this before here and here, but what got my interest this time isthe pitching of pure CEP programming approaches that aresupposedly open to the core business user. To construct a complete CEPapplication within a comprehensive platform you should be able to exercise theskills and knowledge of different users in a collaborative environment.Iterative and componentized development of interfaces, business logic,presentation and action come from the minds of many and in CEP all 4 elements arecore to rapid, real time execution and adaptiveness.

The pointthat Dr Luckham makes about the accessibility and reuse of CEP components inCEP application construction as a future state is one which can be realizednow. The use of Smartblocks within Apama allows for the encapsulation ofreusable logic that can subsequently be incorporated in other CEPprocessing. For instance, logic to represent common trading algorithms orknown air traffic congestion patterns or network intrusion patterns or supplychain metrics or internally developed analytic - all can be expressedas a CEP pattern. Creating any of these as an Apama Smartblock,organizing them into meaningful catalogs for analysts to interrogate and selectfrom, speeds application development and eliminates replication of core CEPlogic within a larger implementation.

Themainstream adoption of CEP won't be based solely on it being cool technology(it is, but then again so was this). Being able to accelerate and redefine application construction in a real timeworld will further its adoption. And maybe so will a solid and wellthought out set of standards. But that is for another time ...


Source...
 
DateTime::Locale::en_BZ(3)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				DateTime::Locale::en_BZ(3)

NAME
DateTime::Locale::en_BZ SYNOPSIS
use DateTime; my $dt = DateTime->now( locale => 'en_BZ' ); print $dt->month_name(); DESCRIPTION
This is the DateTime locale package for English Belize. DATA
This locale inherits from the DateTime::Locale::en locale. It contains the following data. Days Wide (format) Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Abbreviated (format) Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Narrow (format) M T W T F S S Wide (stand-alone) Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Abbreviated (stand-alone) Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Narrow (stand-alone) M T W T F S S Months Wide (format) January February March April May June July August September October November December Abbreviated (format) Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Narrow (format) J F M A M J J A S O N D Wide (stand-alone) January February March April May June July August September October November December Abbreviated (stand-alone) Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Narrow (stand-alone) J F M A M J J A S O N D Quarters Wide (format) 1st quarter 2nd quarter 3rd quarter 4th quarter Abbreviated (format) Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Narrow (format) 1 2 3 4 Wide (stand-alone) 1st quarter 2nd quarter 3rd quarter 4th quarter Abbreviated (stand-alone) Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Narrow (stand-alone) 1 2 3 4 Eras Wide Before Christ Anno Domini Abbreviated BC AD Narrow B A Date Formats Full 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 05 February 2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22 December 1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15 September -10 Long 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 05 February 2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22 December 1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15 September -10 Medium 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 05-Feb-2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22-Dec-1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15-Sep--10 Short 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 05/02/08 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22/12/95 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15/09/-10 Default 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 05-Feb-2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22-Dec-1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15-Sep--10 Time Formats Full 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 18:30:30 UTC 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 09:05:02 UTC -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 04:44:23 UTC Long 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 18:30:30 UTC 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 09:05:02 UTC -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 04:44:23 UTC Medium 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 18:30:30 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 09:05:02 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 04:44:23 Short 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 18:30 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 09:05 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 04:44 Default 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 18:30:30 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 09:05:02 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 04:44:23 Datetime Formats Full 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 05 February 2008 18:30:30 UTC 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22 December 1995 09:05:02 UTC -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15 September -10 04:44:23 UTC Long 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 05 February 2008 18:30:30 UTC 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22 December 1995 09:05:02 UTC -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15 September -10 04:44:23 UTC Medium 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 05-Feb-2008 18:30:30 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22-Dec-1995 09:05:02 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15-Sep--10 04:44:23 Short 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 05/02/08 18:30 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22/12/95 09:05 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15/09/-10 04:44 Default 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 05-Feb-2008 18:30:30 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22-Dec-1995 09:05:02 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15-Sep--10 04:44:23 Available Formats d (d) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 5 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15 EEEd (d EEE) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 5 Tue 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22 Fri -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15 Sat Hm (H:mm) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 18:30 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 9:05 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 4:44 hm (h:mm a) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 6:30 PM 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 9:05 AM -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 4:44 AM Hms (H:mm:ss) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 18:30:30 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 9:05:02 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 4:44:23 hms (h:mm:ss a) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 6:30:30 PM 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 9:05:02 AM -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 4:44:23 AM M (L) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 2 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 12 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 9 Md (M/d) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 2/5 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 12/22 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 9/15 MEd (E, M/d) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = Tue, 2/5 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = Fri, 12/22 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = Sat, 9/15 MMdd (dd/MM) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 05/02 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 22/12 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 15/09 MMM (LLL) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = Feb 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = Dec -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = Sep MMMd (MMM d) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = Feb 5 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = Dec 22 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = Sep 15 MMMEd (E, MMM d) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = Tue, Feb 5 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = Fri, Dec 22 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = Sat, Sep 15 MMMMd (MMMM d) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = February 5 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = December 22 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = September 15 MMMMEd (E, MMMM d) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = Tue, February 5 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = Fri, December 22 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = Sat, September 15 ms (mm:ss) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 30:30 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 05:02 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 44:23 y (y) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = -10 yM (M/yyyy) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 2/2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 12/1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 9/-010 yMEd (EEE, M/d/yyyy) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = Tue, 2/5/2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = Fri, 12/22/1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = Sat, 9/15/-010 yMMM (MMM y) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = Feb 2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = Dec 1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = Sep -10 yMMMEd (EEE, MMM d, y) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = Tue, Feb 5, 2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = Fri, Dec 22, 1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = Sat, Sep 15, -10 yMMMM (MMMM y) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = February 2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = December 1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = September -10 yQ (Q yyyy) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = 1 2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = 4 1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = 3 -010 yQQQ (QQQ y) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = Q1 2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = Q4 1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = Q3 -10 yyyyMMMM (MMMM y) 2008-02-05T18:30:30 = February 2008 1995-12-22T09:05:02 = December 1995 -0010-09-15T04:44:23 = September -10 Miscellaneous Prefers 24 hour time? Yes Local first day of the week Monday SUPPORT
See DateTime::Locale. AUTHOR
Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2008 David Rolsky. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. This module was generated from data provided by the CLDR project, see the LICENSE.cldr in this distribution for details on the CLDR data's license. perl v5.18.2 2017-10-06 DateTime::Locale::en_BZ(3)
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