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Table 1: UK eScience Testbed Hosts Site Hostname Mcast
"... In PAGE 6: ... Figure 4 illustrates the geographical connections. Figure 4: The UK eScience Network Table1 lists the eScience Centre hosts used. As the table shows, many of these sites have functional multicast connec- tivity.... ..."
Table 1. Tools identified to support teachers, learners and experts in distributed e-Science collaborations
"... In PAGE 3: ... Thus ensuring a set of readily-available resources for time pressured teachers, whilst providing the scope for creative development of their own resources tailored to other curriculum goals. To support these four aims we present an initial set of tool requirements and indicate who would be the main users of these tools alongside the ways in which we prototyped and simulated these services in our e- Science projects ( Table1 ). These tools support both within group and cross group review and reflection activities.... ..."
Table 3: Grid View of e-Science Features Feature Grid Approach 1: Community
Table 14.1: Summary of Services, Tools and Utilities............................................................ 97 Tabular Classification of UK e-Science Services Tools and Utilities .............................................. 97
2003
Table 2: Web 2.0 View of e-Science Features Feature Web 2.0 Approach
Table 2: The number of joumal articles that cited Lirt/e Science, Big Science from 1963 to 1983, ranked in
Table 3: Journals in the SCF, SSCF, andA amp;HCITM that cited Lift/e Science, Big Science Irom 19b3 to
Table 5-8 The Dictionary Type Functionalities
"... In PAGE 30: ... CorbaScript December 1998 5 The description of CorbaScript grammar uses a syntax notation that is similar to Extended Backus-Naur Format (EBNF). Table5 -1 lists the symbols used in this format and their meaning. 5.... In PAGE 31: ...2.4 Keywords The identifiers listed in Table5 -3 are reserved for use as keywords and may not be used otherwise. Keywords obey the rules for identifiers (see quot;Identifiers quot; on page 5-25) and must be written exactly as shown in the above list.... In PAGE 31: ... For example, quot;class quot; is correct ; quot;Class quot; refers to an identifier and can produce an interpretation error. CorbaScript scripts use the characters shown in Table5 -3 as punctuation. 5.... In PAGE 32: ...able 3-5 on page 3-5 in the CORBA 2.2 specification). The meaning of all other characters is implementation-dependent. Nongraphic characters must be represented using escape sequences as defined below in Table5 -4. Note that escape sequences must be used to represent single quote and backslash characters in character literals.... In PAGE 43: ... It allows programmers to check typing information for instance to check argument types of a procedure. Table5 -5 enumerates the set of functionalities which are supported by all CorbaScript objects and types. 5.... In PAGE 45: ... Strings support a set of attributes, methods and operators. All these functionalities are enumerated in Table5 -6 and they never modify the target string. When indexes are out of the string bounds, an exception BadIndex is raised (see Section 5.... In PAGE 47: ... Moreover, array objects provide a set of operators, attributes and methods. All these functionalities are enumerated in Table5 -7. When indexes are out of the array bounds, a CorbaScript internal exception BadIndex is raised.... In PAGE 49: ... Dictionary objects provide a set of operators, attributes and methods. All these functionalities are enumerated in Table5 -7. Searching a key that is not contained by a dictionary raises a CorbaScript internal NotFound exception.... In PAGE 50: ...7.6 Predefined Internal Procedures CorbaScript provides some predefined internal procedures, see Table5 -9, respectively named by the following identifiers: eval, exec, getline, print, and println. The eval function provides the classical powerful evaluation function: it takes a stringified script, executes it, and returns the result of this evaluation.... ..."
Table 5-8 The Dictionary Type Functionalities
"... In PAGE 34: ... IDLscript December 1999 5 The description of IDLscript grammar uses a syntax notation that is similar to Extended Backus-Naur Format (EBNF). Table5 -1 lists the symbols used in this format and their meaning. 5.... In PAGE 35: ...2.4 Keywords The identifiers listed in Table5 -3 are reserved for use as keywords and may not be used otherwise. Keywords obey the rules for identifiers (see quot;Identifiers quot; on page 5-27) and must be written exactly as shown in the above list.... In PAGE 35: ... For example, quot;class quot; is correct ; quot;Class quot; refers to an identifier and can produce an interpretation error. IDLscript scripts use the characters shown in Table5 -3 as punctuation. 5.... In PAGE 36: ...able 3-5 on page 3-6 in the CORBA 2.3 specification). The meaning of all other characters is implementation-dependent. Nongraphic characters must be represented using escape sequences as defined below in Table5 -4. Note that escape sequences must be used to represent single quote and backslash characters in character literals.... In PAGE 47: ... It allows programmers to check typing information for instance to check argument types of a procedure. Table5 -5 enumerates the set of functionalities which are supported by all IDLscript objects and types. 5.... In PAGE 49: ... Strings support a set of attributes, methods and operators. All these functionalities are enumerated in Table5 -6 and they never modify the target string. When indexes are out of the string bounds, an exception BadIndex is raised (see Section 5.... In PAGE 51: ... Moreover, array objects provide a set of operators, attributes and methods. All these functionalities are enumerated in Table5 -7. When indexes are out of the array bounds, an IDLscript internal exception BadIndex is raised.... In PAGE 54: ...7.6 Predefined Internal Procedures IDLscript provides some predefined internal procedures, see Table5 -9, respectively named by the following identifiers: eval, exec, getline, print, and println. The eval function provides the classical powerful evaluation function: it takes a stringified script, executes it, and returns the result of this evaluation.... ..."
Table 2: WAN RTTs amp; Bandwidth Site RTT (ms) B/W (Mb/s)
"... In PAGE 6: ... Others are smaller and older departmental machines with poorer connectivity. Table2 shows the average round-trip times and transfer rates seen from Cambridge to other sites around the net- Table 1: UK eScience Testbed Hosts Site Hostname Mcast Belfast gridmon.... ..."
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