DatesSelectorpublic class BurstSelector extends Object implements DatesSelector
The dates can be aligned to whole steps in some time scale. So for example
if a rest period of 3600s is used and the alignment time scale is set to
UTC, the earliest date of
each burst will occur at whole hours in UTC time.
This class stores internally the last selected dates, so it is not thread-safe. A separate selector should be used for each thread in multi-threading context.
| Constructor | Description |
|---|---|
BurstSelector(int maxBurstSize,
double highRateStep,
double burstPeriod,
TimeScale alignmentTimeScale) |
Simple constructor.
|
| Modifier and Type | Method | Description |
|---|---|---|
List<AbsoluteDate> |
selectDates(AbsoluteDate start,
AbsoluteDate end) |
Select dates within an interval.
|
public BurstSelector(int maxBurstSize,
double highRateStep,
double burstPeriod,
TimeScale alignmentTimeScale)
The burstPeriod ignores the duration of the burst itself. This
means that if burst of maxBurstSize=256 dates each separated by
highRateStep=100ms should be selected with burstPeriod=300s,
then the first burst would contain 256 dates from t0 to t0+25.5s
and the second burst would start at t0+300s, not at
t0+325.5s.
If alignment to some time scale is needed, it applies only to the first date in each burst.
maxBurstSize - maximum number of selected dates in a bursthighRateStep - step between two consecutive dates within a burst (s)burstPeriod - period between the start of each burst (s)alignmentTimeScale - alignment time scale for first date in burst
(null is alignment is not needed)public List<AbsoluteDate> selectDates(AbsoluteDate start, AbsoluteDate end)
The start and end date may be either in direct or reverse
chronological order. The list is produced in the same order as start
and end, i.e. direct chronological order if start is earlier
than end or reverse chronological order if start is later
than end.
The ordering (direct or reverse chronological order) should not be changed between calls, otherwise unpredictable results may occur.
selectDates in interface DatesSelectorstart - interval startend - interval endCopyright © 2002-2019 CS Systèmes d'information. All rights reserved.