1 / 22

FM 94 BUFR and FM 95 CREX

FM 94 BUFR and FM 95 CREX. Table Driven Code Forms (or “Self-descriptive” Code Forms). The term "self-descriptive" means that the form and content of the data contained within a BUFR or CREX message are described within the BUFR or CREX message itself.

trumble
Download Presentation

FM 94 BUFR and FM 95 CREX

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FM 94 BUFRandFM 95 CREX Table Driven Code Forms (or “Self-descriptive” Code Forms). The term "self-descriptive" means that the form and content of the data contained within a BUFR or CREX message are described within the BUFR or CREX message itself. In addition, BUFR offers condensation, or packing, while the alphanumeric code CREX provides human readability.

  2. BUFR (Binary Universal Form for Representation meteorological data) – binary data format • CREX (Character form for Representation and EXchange of data) – character data format

  3. BUFR was first approved for operational use in 1988. Since that time, it has been used for satellite, aircraft, wind profiler, and tropical cyclone observations, as well as for archiving of all types of observational data. ============================================== • In 1994, CREX was approved as an experimental code form by the WMO Commission on Basic Systems (CBS Ext.94). In 1998, CBS (CBS-Ext. 98) recommended CREX be approved as an operational data representation code form as from 3 May 2000. In 1999, this recommendation was endorsed by the WMO Executive Council (EC-LI (1999)). CREX is already used among centres for exchange of ozone, radiological, hydrological, tide gauge, tropical cyclone, and soil temperature data. ============================================== • BUFRshould always be the first choice for the international exchange of observational data. CREXshould be used only when BUFR cannot. ============================================== • BUFR and CREX are the only code forms the WMO needs for the representation and exchange of observational data and are recommended for all present and future WMO applications.

  4. Differences • BUFR offers data packing. Therefore, voluminous data (e.g., satellites, ACARS, wind profilers,…) will require fewer resources for transmission and storage than CREX. BUFR also permits the transmission of quality information with the original observational data. However, BUFR data is not human readable. Because it is not human readable, BUFR processing assumes the availability of well designed computer programs to process (decode or encode) the messages. • CREX is simpler than BUFR and consequently easy to understand, to code and, because it is an alphanumeric code form, to read with only several hours of explanation. It is therefore particularly useful where computer equipment is not available. However, CREX does not offer packing, and has much less comprehensive capability for including quality information than BUFR.

  5. Main Advantages • Partial self-description • Universality • Expandability • Data packing (forBUFR) • Data readability (forCREX) ================================= BUFR andCREX are recommended for all current and future WMO applications

  6. Structure of BUFR report

  7. Содержание секций формата BUFR

More Related