00906nam0-22003491i-450-990002026140403321200210100-19-854016-7000202614FED01000202614(Aleph)000202614FED0100020261420021010d--------km-y0itay50------baita<<The >>Hemiptera.W.R. DollingOxfordBritish Museum1991274 p.25 cm2 copieHeteropteraHomopteraRincoti Vari595.754595.752Dolling,W. R.86003ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK99000202614040332161 IV E.5/104398 (19/10/93)DAGEN61 IV E.3/104398 (19/10/93)DAGENDAGENHemiptera404732UNINAING0103799nam 2200745 a 450 991045305630332120200520144314.03-11-026179-010.1515/9783110261790(CKB)2550000001096599(EBL)893921(OCoLC)826479637(SSID)ssj0000823074(PQKBManifestationID)11482177(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000823074(PQKBWorkID)10760042(PQKB)10691886(MiAaPQ)EBC893921(DE-B1597)171937(OCoLC)1002251901(OCoLC)1004883704(OCoLC)1011469941(OCoLC)828738628(OCoLC)979588822(OCoLC)984688083(OCoLC)987953200(OCoLC)992472406(OCoLC)999374200(DE-B1597)9783110261790(Au-PeEL)EBL893921(CaPaEBR)ebr10649273(CaONFJC)MIL503133(EXLCZ)99255000000109659920130201d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrProsody and meaning[electronic resource] /edited by Gorka Elordieta, Pilar PrietoBerlin De Gruyter Mouton20121 online resource (390 p.)Interface Explorations [IE] ;25Interface explorations,1861-4167 ;25Description based upon print version of record.3-11-026007-7 1-299-71882-5 Includes bibliographical references and index. Frontmatter -- Contents -- Introduction -- A multi-level approach to focus,phrasing and intonation in French / D'Imperio, Mariapaola / German, James / Michelas, Amandine -- Syntax-prosody mapping, topic-comment structure and stress-focus correspondence in Hungarian / Surányi, Balâzs / Ishihara, Shinichiro / Schubö, Fabian -- On the prosody of German wh-questions / Truckenbrodt, Hubert -- Referential and lexical givenness: Semantic, prosodic and cognitive aspects / Baumann, Stefan / Riester, Arndt -- A focus intonational morpheme in European Portuguese: Production and perception / Frota, Sónia -- Meanings, shades of meanings and prototypes of intonational categories / Gili Fivela, Barbara -- Information structural expectations in the perception of prosodic prominence / Bishop, Jason -- Can intonation contours be lexicalised? Implications for discourse meanings / Calhoun, Sasha / Schweitzer, Antje -- Prosody in context: The effect of sequential relationships between speaker turns / Wichmann, Anne -- Prosody in German Sign Language / Herrmann, Annika -- Subject indexBased on the Workshop on Prosody and Meaning in Barcelona on September 17-18, 2009, this volume brings together researchers working on issues of the prosodic encoding and expression of sentence-level meaning.The contributions to the book resultfroma vivid exchange ofresearch ideas and research methodologies on issues related to the relationship between prosody and meaning andfrom stimulating discussions and collaborative work between researchers coming from different perspectives.Interface explorations;25.Prosodic analysis (Linguistics)Electronic books.Prosodic analysis (Linguistics)401.43EC 3080rvkElordieta Gorka1048814Prieto Pilar317569MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910453056303321Prosody and meaning2477345UNINA05481nam 2200733Ia 450 991102011460332120251116150005.0978661036752897812803675261280367520978047024051904702405129780471464112047146411297804712006420471200646(CKB)111056485580852(EBL)152034(OCoLC)475871758(SSID)ssj0000080425(PQKBManifestationID)11312305(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000080425(PQKBWorkID)10095809(PQKB)10193683(MiAaPQ)EBC152034(Perlego)2768273(EXLCZ)9911105648558085220010306d2001 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrFundamentals of distributed object systems the CORBA perspective /Zahir Tari, Omran BukhresNew York Wileyc20011 online resource (419 p.)Wiley series on parallel and distributed computingDescription based upon print version of record.9780471351986 0471351989 Includes bibliographical references (p. 371-376) and index.FUNDAMENTALS OF DISTRIBUTED OBJECT SYSTEMS; Contents; FOREWORD; PREFACE; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; ACRONYMS; PART I BASICS OF CORBA; 1. Introduction to Distributed Systems; 1.1 Basics of Distributed Systems; 1.1.1 Architectures; 1.1.2 Characteristics; 1.1.3 Advantages and Disadvantages; 1.2 Distributed System Technologies; 1.2.1 Socket; 1.2.2 Remote Procedure Call; 1.2.3 Remote Method Invocation; 1.2.4 Distributed Computing Environment; 1.2.5 Distributed Component Object Model; 1.3 Summary; 1.4 Review Questions; 1.5 Exercises; 2. Introduction to CORBA; 2.1 Overall Picture2.2 CORBA 1, CORBA 2, and CORBA 32.3 Object Management Group; 2.3.1 Reference Object Model; 2.3.2 Object Management Architecture; 2.4 Common Object Request Broker Architecture; 2.4.1 ORB Core; 2.4.2 Interface Definition Language; 2.4.3 Interface and Implementation Repositories; 2.4.4 Object Adaptors; 2.4.5 CORBA Interoperability; 2.5 CORBA Binding; 2.5.1 Binding of Transient IORs; 2.5.2 Binding Persistent IORs; 2.6 CORBA and Existing Technologies; 2.6.1 DCE vs. CORBA; 2.6.2 DCOM vs. CORBA; 2.6.3 RMI vs. CORBA; 2.7 Summary; 2.8 Review Questions; 2.9 Exercises; 3. CORBA Programming3.1 Overall Picture3.2 Basic CORBA Programming; 3.2.1 Interface Definition Language; 3.2.2 Static Invocation Interface; 3.2.3 Static Skeleton Interface; 3.3 Dynamic Types; 3.3.1 TypeCode; 3.3.2 Type Any; 3.4 Advanced CORBA Programming; 3.4.1 Dynamic Invocation Interface; 3.4.2 Dynamic Skeleton Interface; 3.4.3 Interface and Implementation Repositories; 3.5 Summary; 3.6 Review Questions; 3.7 Exercises; PART II ADVANCED CORBA; 4. Object Adaptors; 4.1 Overall Picture; 4.2 Architectures; 4.2.1 Basic Object Adaptor; 4.2.2 Portable Object Adaptor; 4.3 Technical Issues; 4.3.1 Overview4.3.2 Basic Object Adaptor4.3.3 Portable Object Adaptor; 4.4 Database Adaptors; 4.5 Summary; 4.6 Review Questions; 4.7 Exercises; 5. CORBA Interoperability; 5.1 Overall Picture; 5.2 Domain; 5.3 Bridge; 5.4 Interoperability Protocols; 5.4.1 Internet Inter-ORB Protocol; 5.4.2 Environment Specific Inter-ORB Protocol; 5.5 Interoperable Object Reference; 5.6 Summary; 5.7 Review Questions; 5.8 Exercises; 6. CORBA Caching; 6.1 Overall Picture; 6.2 Caching Issues and Techniques; 6.3 Cache Replacement; 6.3.1 Caching Consistency Algorithms; 6.3.2 Other Issues; 6.4 The Caching Approach; 6.5 Architecture6.6 Caching Model6.7 Design; 6.8 Testing; 6.9 Summary; 6.10 Review Questions; 6.11 Exercises; PART III CORBA SERVICES; 7. Naming Service; 7.1 Background; 7.1.1 Naming; 7.1.2 Case Studies; 7.2 Functions; 7.2.1 Name Resolution; 7.2.2 Binding and Unbinding Names; 7.2.3 Creating and Deleting Naming Contexts; 7.2.4 Listing the Context of a Naming Context; 7.3 Summary; 7.4 Review Questions; 7.5 Exercises; 8. Trading Object Service; 8.1 Overall Picture; 8.1.1 Basic Concepts; 8.1.2 OMG vs. ODP; 8.2 An Illustrative Example with JTrader; 8.2.1 Definition of a Service Offer; 8.2.2 Service Export8.2.3 Service ImportDistributed Object Computing teaches readers the fundamentals of CORBA, the leading architecture for design of software used in parallel and distributed computing applications. Since CORBA is based on open standards, it is the only effective way to learn object-oriented programming for distributed systems. This language independent book allows material to be taught using Java, C++ or other Object Oriented Programming Languages.Wiley series on parallel and distributed computing.Object-oriented methods (Computer science)CORBA (Computer architecture)Object-oriented methods (Computer science)CORBA (Computer architecture)004.22004/.36Tari Zahir1961-1354857Bukhres Omran1842694MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911020114603321Fundamentals of distributed object systems4533093UNINA