scholarly journals Predicting application run times using historical information

Author(s):  
Warren Smith ◽  
Ian Foster ◽  
Valerie Taylor
Author(s):  
Дмитрий Евгеньевич Афиногенов

Публикуемая часть «Амфилохий» представляет собой собрание кратких сочинений, в которых рассматриваются темы, уже затрагивавшиеся патриархом в более пространных трактатах: и экзегетические, и чисто богословские. В некоторых случаях свт. Фотий старается дать максимально сжатое изложение уже разобранного вопроса, но иногда и уточняет и пересматривает свои взгляды. В этот раздел попали учебные материалы (например, трактат 225) и сведения историко-этиологического характера (например, трактат 242). The part of «Amphilochia» published here is a collection of mostly short works, which treat the topics, both exegetical and theological, previously developed by the patriarch in more expanded form. In some cases St Photios strives to provide a most concise summary of the already investigated problem, but sometimes he expounds his views more precisely or even revises certain points. The section includes also educational materials (for instance, treatise № 225) and pieces of historical information, such as treatise № 242.


2020 ◽  
pp. 288-293
Author(s):  
E.Ch. Dyzhitova ◽  
N.Ch. Budaeva

The article, based on materials extracted from the fonds of the State Archive of the Zabaikal'sky krai, presents historical information about the Khori-Buryats of the Khoatsai volost. A linguistic analysis of proper names is carried out, revealing the presence of the names of the Tibet-Mongolian language anthroponymic system.


Author(s):  
Peter Behnstedt ◽  
Manfred Woidich

This chapter deals with the sedentary dialects of Egypt, excluding the bedouin dialects of Sinai and the Libyan bedouin dialects on the Mediterranean coast. It attempts to combine historical information on the settlement of Arabic tribes in Egypt with accounts of present-day Egyptian dialects and those of the regions from which those tribes came, initially Yemen and the Levant, later Hejaz, and then the Maghreb. The diversity of the Egyptian Arabic dialect area is partly explained by external factors, namely different layers of arabization over centuries. It is also explained by internal factors, namely dialect contact, which implies phenomena such as hyperdialectisms. Egypt is seen as a dialect area in its own right, but one that shows phenomena of a transitional area between the Arab East and West. A case study of Alexandria deals with dialect death. The role of substrata is discussed, but is considered negligible.


2011 ◽  
Vol 55 (13) ◽  
pp. 2954-2975 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juliano Araujo Wickboldt ◽  
Luís Armando Bianchin ◽  
Roben Castagna Lunardi ◽  
Lisandro Zambenedetti Granville ◽  
Luciano Paschoal Gaspary ◽  
...  

1993 ◽  
Vol 02 (01) ◽  
pp. 47-70
Author(s):  
SHARON M. TUTTLE ◽  
CHRISTOPH F. EICK

Forward-chaining rule-based programs, being data-driven, can function in changing environments in which backward-chaining rule-based programs would have problems. But, degugging forward-chaining programs can be tedious; to debug a forward-chaining rule-based program, certain ‘historical’ information about the program run is needed. Programmers should be able to directly request such information, instead of having to rerun the program one step at a time or search a trace of run details. As a first step in designing an explanation system for answering such questions, this paper discusses how a forward-chaining program run’s ‘historical’ details can be stored in its Rete inference network, used to match rule conditions to working memory. This can be done without seriously affecting the network’s run-time performance. We call this generalization of the Rete network a historical Rete network. Various algorithms for maintaining this network are discussed, along with how it can be used during debugging, and a debugging tool, MIRO, that incorporates these techniques is also discussed.


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