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timer High-level timer service for both user and supervisor actors. This feature uses the concept of a timer object in the actor environment. Timers are created and deleted dynamically. All high-level timer operations such as setting, modifying, querying, or canceling pending timeouts, refer to timer objects.
Ãâó: www.jaluna.com/doc/c5/html/Overview/g18068.html
time The term ``time'' is used in the sense of ``simulation time'' and expresses an elapsed time since a reference date. These time values follow the convention for time coordinates supported by the COARDS [2] and CF [3] metadata conventions.
Ãâó: www.ccsm.ucar.edu/models/atm-cam/docs/time-manager...
time The times used in Part I are in Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST). AEST is the mean solar time on the meridian of longitude of 150 degrees East. For Australian Central Standard Time (ACST) subtract 30 minutes from the times given. For other time zones make the appropriate adjustments. No adjustments have been made in this book for Daylight Saving, also known as 'Summer Time'. When daylight saving is in force, the time is one hour ahead of AEST. ...
Ãâó: www.quasarastronomy.com.au/article08.htm
time-out A period of time after which some condition becomes true if some event has not occurred. For example, a session that is terminated because its state has been inactive for a specified period of time is said to
Ãâó: www.oasis-open.org/committees/wsia/glossary/wsia-d...
timer A clock used to trigger a regeneration cycle at a predetermined time, much like an alarm clock.
Ãâó: www.capwater.com/glossary.html
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