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Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Complex Event Processing RSS News CEP in 2011 and Beyond.... Post 302479381 by Linux Bot on Friday 10th of December 2010 01:00:01 PM
Old 12-10-2010
CEP in 2011 and Beyond....

John Bates
12-10-2010 01:52 PM
As we approach the end of 2010 and we begin to see a tiny crack of light at the end of the financial crisis tunnel, there are many theories as to which technologies will lead us into the next phase of advancement in financial markets. Stubborn issues with latency, high frequency trading, real-time risk management, and market gaming/fraud continue to dog the industry and provide fertile ground in which new and existing technologies can innovate. In fact, technology consultancy Ovum said in its 2011 Trends to Watch report for financial markets (http://tinyurl.com/2vv42sh) noted thatComplex Event Processing is one technology to watch. 

CEP will be the lifeblood for financial services as regulation increases, markets further fragment, and algorithmic trading becomes engrained in all asset classes. A recent Progress Software survey across industries showed that only eight per cent of enterprises globally are able to report business information in real-time. Without instant visibility into business activity organisations cannot possibly determine what is or is not working and then set the right course of action.

In financial markets, in particular, a lack of visibility between exchanges, ECNs, dark pools, brokers, banks, buyside and trading firms is causing breakdowns in the system. When you see increasingly frequent events setting markets on their ear such as the May 6th flash crash, insider trading activity, fat fingered errors and rogue algorithms, it becomes crystal clear that something needs to be done. 

Progress, with its Apama products, is committed to financial markets along with other, newer markets such as aviation and telecommunications that are opening up to CEP. If you would like further information about the future of CEP and would like to speak to one of the two founders of Progress Apama- yours truly or my colleague Dr. Giles Nelson-then please contact us. 

 



Source...
 
Regexp::Common::balanced(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation			     Regexp::Common::balanced(3pm)

NAME
Regexp::Common::balanced -- provide regexes for strings with balanced parenthesized delimiters or arbitrary delimiters. SYNOPSIS
use Regexp::Common qw /balanced/; while (<>) { /$RE{balanced}{-parens=>'()'}/ and print q{balanced parentheses }; } DESCRIPTION
Please consult the manual of Regexp::Common for a general description of the works of this interface. Do not use this module directly, but load it via Regexp::Common. $RE{balanced}{-parens} Returns a pattern that matches a string that starts with the nominated opening parenthesis or bracket, contains characters and properly nested parenthesized subsequences, and ends in the matching parenthesis. More than one type of parenthesis can be specified: $RE{balanced}{-parens=>'(){}'} in which case all specified parenthesis types must be correctly balanced within the string. If we are using C{-keep} (See Regexp::Common): $1 captures the entire expression $RE{balanced}{-begin => "begin"}{-end => "end"} Returns a pattern that matches a string that is properly balanced using the begin and end strings as start and end delimiters. Multiple sets of begin and end strings can be given by separating them by "|"s (which can be escaped with a backslash). qr/$RE{balanced}{-begin => "do|if|case"}{-end => "done|fi|esac"}/ will match properly balanced strings that either start with do and end with done, start with if and end with fi, or start with case and end with esac. If -end contains less cases than -begin, the last case of -end is repeated. If it contains more cases than -begin, the extra cases are ignored. If either of -begin or -end isn't given, or is empty, -begin => '(' and -end => ')' are assumed. If we are using C{-keep} (See Regexp::Common): $1 captures the entire expression SEE ALSO
Regexp::Common for a general description of how to use this interface. AUTHOR
Damian Conway (damian@conway.org) MAINTAINANCE
This package is maintained by Abigail (regexp-common@abigail.be). BUGS AND IRRITATIONS
Bound to be plenty. For a start, there are many common regexes missing. Send them in to regexp-common@abigail.be. LICENSE and COPYRIGHT This software is Copyright (c) 2001 - 2009, Damian Conway and Abigail. This module is free software, and maybe used under any of the following licenses: 1) The Perl Artistic License. See the file COPYRIGHT.AL. 2) The Perl Artistic License 2.0. See the file COPYRIGHT.AL2. 3) The BSD Licence. See the file COPYRIGHT.BSD. 4) The MIT Licence. See the file COPYRIGHT.MIT. perl v5.14.2 2010-02-23 Regexp::Common::balanced(3pm)
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