Book Image

Hands-On Azure Digital Twins

By : Alexander Meijers
Book Image

Hands-On Azure Digital Twins

By: Alexander Meijers

Overview of this book

In today’s world, clients are using more and more IoT sensors to monitor their business processes and assets. Think about collecting information such as pressure in an engine, the temperature, or a light switch being turned on or off in a room. The data collected can be used to create smart solutions for predicting future trends, creating simulations, and drawing insights using visualizations. This makes it beneficial for organizations to make digital twins, which are digital replicas of the real environment, to support these smart solutions. This book will help you understand the concept of digital twins and how it can be implemented using an Azure service called Azure Digital Twins. Starting with the requirements and installation of the Azure Digital Twins service, the book will explain the definition language used for modeling digital twins. From there, you'll go through each step of building digital twins using Azure Digital Twins and learn about the different SDKs and APIs and how to use them with several Azure services. Finally, you'll learn how digital twins can be used in practice with the help of several real-world scenarios. By the end of this book, you'll be confident in building and designing digital twins and integrating them with various Azure services.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
1
Section 1: Azure Digital Twin Essentials
4
Section 2: Getting Started with Azure Digital Twins
11
Section 3: Digital Twins Advanced Techniques
19
Section 4: Digital Twin Implementations in Real-world Scenarios

Primitive schemas

There is a clear list of available primitive schemas. These schemas can be directly applied as values. This allows you to define values in all formats within the digital twin interface. The following table shows a list of all the available primitives for version 2 of the DTDL:

Table 6

RFC 3339 is a widely used standard for date-time formats. All primitive schemas related to date and time use this standard. The exception is duration. duration uses the ISO 8601 standard, which represents the format of dates and time in the Gregorian calendar.

The IEEE Standard for Floating-Point Arithmetic is used with the double and float primitive schemas. UTF-8 is used for string. This is a widely used standard for variable width encoded character formats.

With that, you have learned about primitive schemas. In the next section, you will learn about complex schemas and their underlaying data types.