Glossary entry (derived from question below)
German term or phrase:
Schaltbereitschaft
English translation:
readiness to fire [enabled state]
Added to glossary by
Stephen Sadie
Sep 3, 2006 06:22
18 yrs ago
German term
Schaltbereitschaft
German to English
Tech/Engineering
Computers: Systems, Networks
Petri nets
Wenn mindestens zwei Transitionen in einem Petri-Netz schaltbereit sind und das Schalten einer Transition die Schaltbereitschaft der anderen aufheben würde, stehen diese Transitionen in einem Konflikt
Any help much appreciated
TIA
Stephen
Any help much appreciated
TIA
Stephen
Proposed translations
(English)
3 | readiness to fire [enabled state] | Steffen Walter |
3 | operational readiness | Raghunathan Rajagopalan |
3 | stand-by (readiness) | Сергей Лузан |
Proposed translations
2 hrs
Selected
readiness to fire [enabled state]
"Ready to fire" and "enabled" seem to be the terms of art used for transitions in Petri nets.
See http://www.project-open.org/product/modules/workflow/petri-n...
"It's important to differentiate between the time a transition is enabled (meaning it's ***ready to fire***) and the time it actually fires. A transition is enabled when there is at least one token in each of its input places. Firing the transition is the act of actually moving the tokens."
The glossary quoted below contains the following entries:
token = Marke
Basic element of a Petri net's marking. The ***readiness to fire*** of a transition requires that the transition's input places contain sufficient tokens.
enabled = schaltbereit
A transition in a petri net is enabled (ready to fire), if it meets two requirements:
(1) Each input place of the transition contains as many tokens as the arc weight specifies.
(2) Each output place of the transition can still accept as many tokens as the arc weight specifies.
See http://www.project-open.org/product/modules/workflow/petri-n...
"It's important to differentiate between the time a transition is enabled (meaning it's ***ready to fire***) and the time it actually fires. A transition is enabled when there is at least one token in each of its input places. Firing the transition is the act of actually moving the tokens."
The glossary quoted below contains the following entries:
token = Marke
Basic element of a Petri net's marking. The ***readiness to fire*** of a transition requires that the transition's input places contain sufficient tokens.
enabled = schaltbereit
A transition in a petri net is enabled (ready to fire), if it meets two requirements:
(1) Each input place of the transition contains as many tokens as the arc weight specifies.
(2) Each output place of the transition can still accept as many tokens as the arc weight specifies.
Reference:
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "thanks Steffen, the most professional and best answer..."
44 mins
1 hr
stand-by (readiness)
nur ein Vorschlag.
Reference:
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22Stand-by+readiness%22+&hl=en&lr=&as_qdr=all&start=0&sa=N
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