Sunday, November 1, 2015

Islamic Culture

Outline: Definition - salient features – development of the whole race - practical religion – rational - a complete social system - conclusion.

Culture means the cultivation and development of human mind. Islamic Culture differs from other Cultures. The aim of other cultures is to cultivate the mind of an individual or some group. Islamic Culture is the kind of Culture prescribed by Islam. It aims at nothing less than the success of mankind as a whole. The origin of Islamic Culture lies in the Holy Quran.

Islamic Culture is very different form other cultures in many ways. The salient features of Islamic Culture are four. Firstly, Islamic Culture is universal in its aim and object. It does not aim at the progress of an individual or a group of individual. Its objective is the development of the whole race intellectually, spiritually, socially and economically. It provides the guidance in both the worlds, material and spiritual.

Secondly, it is a practical religion. The teachings of Islam are practicable. Islam means to surrender to the will of God. It teaches and preaches to us in practical, material, social and spiritual life. Islamic Culture has no place for those who only believe and do not act.

Thirdly, Islamic Culture is rational. It appeals to men to use their reason. It does not prohibit its believers to shun the learning of worldly education. It does not maintain any distinction between the religious education and secular education. In glorious days of Islam, the Muslims learned science subjects side by side with Quran, Hadith and Fiqha.

Fourthly, Islam gives a complete political and social system as alternative to other systems. It promotes brotherhood and equality. There is no priesthood in Islam. Every Muslim man and woman has been urged to learn knowledge. It promises peace and stability in the whdle world.


The Muslims are backward today because they do not follow the principles of Islam, in true spirit. They regain their lost status in the world by following the tenets of Islam. Now they must awake and act upon the principles of Islam.

Status of Women in Islam

Outline: Introduction           - her role in different spheres of life - relation with husband - to bring up the children - equal rights - conclusion.

In Islam women enjoy an exalted and dignified position which can never be found in any other religion of the world. Islam bestows women a very respectable place. Islam is the only religion that recognizes a woman to be a loving daughter of a kind father, a polite wife of a loving husband a kind-hearted mother of a good son and a polite sister ef a livable brother. It recognises the position of women to be the same as that of men. It claims that both come from the same essence.

The position of the mother is very much exalted in Islamic tradition. Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him) has gone so far as to say, "Paradise lies underneath the feet of your mothers." As regards the position of a woman as wife, the saying of the Prophet (Peace be upon him) is categorical, "The best among you is the one who is best towards his family." With regards to women as a daughter, the Islamic attitude can be realised from the reproaches which the Holy Quran makes against the pagan pre-Islamic behaviour at the birth of daughters. Islam abolished all types of such disgraces.

Moharrum

Outline: An important festival - story of Yazid - death of Imam Hussain is mourned – Taziahs - conclusion.

The Moharrum is an important and interesting religious festival of the Muslims. It celebrates the martyrdom of Imam Hussain (A.S.), the grandson of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H).

The story is that Yazid, the Caliph of Damascus, was an ambitious man and he did not like to see the direct descendants of the Holy Prophet claiming any rival position to him. He troubled Imam Hussain in many ways, till a war broke out which lasted a long time. Eventually, Imam Hussain died in the field of Karbala. He was kept without food and drink for several days, and this makes the tragedy more painful.

The festival lasts for ten days, in which the death of Imam, the hero, is mourned by pious Muslims. They sing funeral songs, elegies, lamenting the death of Hussain, and spend their time in weeping and wailing. Alms are distributed among the poor, and cold sweetened drinks are specially supplied to the thirsty.

On the tenth day, huge bamboo structures covered with coloured papers of various designs are carried in solemn procession through the town, and buried outside, where a big meal is held. The structures called Taziahs are sometimes made of wood and ivory also, and are very costly. They represent the tomb of Imam Hussain at Karbla.' The procession is composed of mourners, who remembering the martyrdom of the holy hero, are filled with great spiritual anguish. They revere the Taziahs or Taboots. The worshippers follow or precede these Taziahs, repeating in a very excited manner the name of 'Hussain' (A.S).

It is a great pity that on those occasions when there should be peace and good-will among all, riots break out as a result of religious fanaticism. Though the mourning in honour of Imam Hussain is observed by all sections of Muslims, yet the Taziahs are the symbols of worship only among the Shias. Quarrels break out among Shias and Sunnis. and Ahl-i-Hadith, Shias riots, also, occur in some places on those occasions. People should learn religious toleration, and help one another in observing all religious ceremonies. Mutual concord and sympathy are very necessary for our national well-being.

A Mosque

Outline: Introduction - carefully maintained - honest supervisor - picturesque scene on gatherings - conclusion.

It is the common place of worship, open to all. Usually the temple is the most beautiful building in the whole town, and is scrupulously kept clean. It is the centre of attraction for all. It stands for the embodiment of the religious fervour of the people, and hence on such buildings neither money nor attention is spared to make them grand and noble.

The Holy Prophet Hazrat Muhammad (Peace be upon him)

Outline: Introduction - Hazrat Haleema looked after - a fine man - message of God – preaching - many battles were fought.

Hazrat Muhammad (peace he upon him) was born at Makkah in 571 A.D. His father. Abdullah had died before he was born. He was brought up by his mother Amena. Then he was brought up by his loving grandfather Abdul Muttalib a chief of the Quraish. But when he died after eight years, his uncle. Abu Talib, under took to look after him. He looked after him more lovingly than his own children.

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

How to count the number of any day / days between two dates

Hi every one ... If we want to count the number of Saturdays and Sunday between two dates, how would we do that ? !

Dates are ( 01-Oct-2015) to (31-Oct-2015)

how to do it in SQL

SELECT TO_CHAR(dat,'DY'),COUNT(*) FROM
    (select TO_DATE('01-Oct-2015') + num dat from
    (SELECT level - 1 num
    FROM dual
    CONNECT BY level <= ABS((TO_DATE('01-Oct-2015') - TO_DATE('31-Oct-2015'))-1)))
    WHERE TO_CHAR(dat,'DY') IN ('SAT','SUN')
    GROUP BY TO_CHAR(dat,'DY')

This query helps me a lot of in my requirement, hope it helps you and fulfill your requirement as well. Also, i if you have any best solution do not forget to share as well.
Regards



AVG: What does it Mean?

AVG is an aggregate function in SQL to compute the "average" of a set of values. More precisely, it computes the mean of those values. And even more precisely, AVG computes what is known as the arithmetic mean. The underlying math is so deceptively simple, it's easy to believe one understands the result and how to apply it. But keep reading! Learning about "average" is like uncovering an iceberg. There's more to it than meets the eye.
SQL Statistic Series: You are reading part of an ongoing series covering the statistical functions available in the Oracle Database implementation of SQL.

Measure of Central Tendency

The arithmetic mean is considered a measure of central tendency. Computing such a measure is an attempt to come up with a single value through which to conveniently characterize, discuss, and compare different data sets.
Figure 1 shows the math. It's very simple: Just sum the values and divide by their quantity. The first three examples show higher values dragging the mean upward. The final example piles on some low values to drag the mean downward. What you see is characteristic of the arithmetic mean. Any value added above or below the mean will move the mean in the direction of the new value. The move may be slight, or it may be large, but it will be non-zero.
Figure 1. Examples of computing the arithmetic mean

Mean as Representative Value

An ideal use of arithmetic mean is to provide a single representative to stand in for a collection values, and you're using that representative value in some calculations. You want the math to work out as if you had looked at each value individually, but you don't want the tedium of showing each separate computation.
Example Data: Download and execute avgExamples.sql to create the example tables and data used in this article.
Pretend you're managing a combination gas station and convenience store. You're open 24 hours a day, seven days per week. It is January 2013. Your target revenue goal for the month is $500,000. Divide by 31 days in January, and you must push at least $16,129 in sales per day. The following table tracks your daily sales progress:
SELECT *
FROM daily_sales
WHERE daily_date >= DATE '2013-01-01'
  AND daily_date < DATE '2013-02-01'
ORDER BY daily_date;

DAILY_DATE          SALES_AMT
------------------ ----------
01-JAN-13               17032
02-JAN-13               15043
03-JAN-13               16783
04-JAN-13               23343
05-JAN-13               25703
06-JAN-13               19538
07-JAN-13               18001
08-JAN-13               17154
09-JAN-13               26235
10-JAN-13               14983
11-JAN-13               16010
12-JAN-13                4300
13-JAN-13                2874
Your numbers look good until the 12th, when they fall off a cliff. Freezing rain struck your area that day. Ice has played havoc on tree limbs and power lines, leaving you without power for most of two days. Gasoline has stayed in the underground tanks unpumped. Coffee pots have been cold. For two days all you've sold are potato chips and soda pop. You are worried. Your early numbers are good, but have these two days without power been enough to put you below where you need to be?
Knowing you need to average $16,129 per day for the month, you sit down at your computer and type in a query:
SELECT ROUND(AVG(sales_amt))
FROM daily_sales
WHERE daily_date >= DATE '2013-01-01'
  AND daily_date < DATE '2013-02-01';

ROUND(AVG(SALES_AMT))
---------------------
16692
Whew! This is good news. Even with those two very bad days, you're still trending above your $16,129 target. Your hard work at exceeding plan is paying off by providing you a buffer in these difficult circumstances.
Looking for even more reassurance, you query your prior two months sales:
SELECT EXTRACT (MONTH FROM daily_date) AS "Month", 
       ROUND(AVG(sales_amt)) AS "Avg Sales"
FROM daily_sales
WHERE daily_date >= DATE '2012-11-01'
  AND daily_date < DATE '2013-01-01'
GROUP BY EXTRACT (MONTH FROM daily_date)
ORDER BY EXTRACT (MONTH FROM daily_date);

     Month Avg Sales
---------- ----------
        11      18817
        12      18803
These numbers are great news. You're current mean daily sales is just barely above the line at $16,692, but your track record from the prior two months indicates significant upside potential.
For one last bit of reassurance, you decide query a running average for the month of December. You want to see how the mean daily sales changed as the month progressed. Figure 2 illustrates. Notice how each day's mean sales amount takes into account the sales history from all the prior days.
Figure 2. The concept of a running average
SQL window functions make running (and moving too) averages fairly easy. Following is a query making use ofAVG...OVER to compute the running mean daily sales for December 2012. See my article You've Got Framing! if you're unfamiliar with the OVER clause and want more detail on how it works in this scenario.
SELECT daily_date, 
       sales_amt, 
       ROUND(AVG(sales_amt) OVER (ORDER BY daily_date)) AS "Running Avg"
FROM daily_sales
WHERE daily_date >= DATE '2012-12-01'
  and daily_date < DATE '2013-01-01'
ORDER BY daily_date;

DAILY_DATE          SALES_AMT Running Avg
------------------ ---------- -----------
01-DEC-12               14530       14530
02-DEC-12               14230       14380
03-DEC-12               15830       14863
...
22-DEC-12               19235       17610
23-DEC-12               20133       17720
24-DEC-12               22839       17933
25-DEC-12               21833       18089
26-DEC-12               20593       18185
27-DEC-12               20001       18252
28-DEC-12               19848       18309
29-DEC-12               23134       18476
30-DEC-12               22783       18619
31-DEC-12               24323       18803
These results are excellent news! They show a clear and sharp movement upwards in the running average toward the end of the month. Querying for November sales, you see the very same pattern in that month. There's every reason to believe you can repeat the pattern for January. You confidently report to your regional manager that the power loss is a minor blip and nothing to be concerned about. Your daily mean sales remain above the mark; you are on track to end the month ahead of plan.
Note: Means can be useful in communicating the big picture swiftly. Recite a list of daily sales numbers and a busy manager's eyes will glaze over. Give him a single number instead, such as the mean daily sales so far in the month, and you've conveyed the big picture without burying the manager in the details.

Nulls and their Effect

SQL's AVG function ignores nulls. This is by design, and it's a good decision. If you must, you can apply a function such as COALESCE to coerce a null to some other value such as zero. Here's a trivial example to illustrate:
SELECT AVG(sales_amt) AS "Normal",
       AVG(COALESCE(sales_amt, 0)) AS "Coerced"
FROM null_demo;

    Normal    Coerced
---------- ----------
         3        1.2
And here is the underlying data:
SET NULL "NULL"
SELECT * FROM null_demo;

DAILY_DATE          SALES_AMT
------------------ ----------
01-FEB-13                   2
02-FEB-13                   4
03-FEB-13                NULL
04-FEB-13                NULL
05-FEB-13                NULL
The normal invocation of AVG takes only the non-null values 2 and 4 into account. It returns the mean as (2 + 4) / 2 = 3. The second implementation treats nulls as if they were zeros. The rather odd effect is to return a mean that does not fall between the values in the table. That mean has no meaning either. What possible business meaning can the value 1.2 convey in this scenario? None at all. Think about the following two statements:
  • Average sales are $3.00 dollars per day, but we are missing data for three of the five days.
  • Average sales are $1.20 dollars per day, and I'm going to leave you with the impression that no data is missing.
Which of these would help you make a better business decision? Would you rather hear the truth? Or bury your head in the proverbial sand?

Weighted Means

Sometimes it's not enough to simply take the average of a single column. Picture yourself a fleet manager responsible for a small fleet of delivery trucks. You're responsible for managing fuel costs to an average of $3.50 or less per gallon for the month. Fail, and you lose your bonus pay. Wanting to get a quick sense of how things are going, you execute the following query:
SELECT ROUND(AVG(PRICE),2) AS "Avg Per Gal"
FROM fleet_fuel
WHERE buy_date >= DATE '2013-01-01'
  AND buy_date < DATE '2013-02-01';

Avg Per Gal
-----------
       3.46
This result looks great. Doesn't it? You've applied the AVG function. You've gotten a result. You're well under the mark. You feel your bonus is secure. Except you're wrong.
You've forgotten to factor in the number of gallons purchased at each price. Each per-gallon purchase price needs to be weighted by the number of gallons purchased at that price. The AVG function doesn't help here. You can apply SUM instead, and do the weighting math yourself. Here's how:
  1. Begin with gallons * price to weight each price by the number of gallons sold.
  2. Apply the SUM function, as in SUM(gallons * price) to give a total off all you've spent on fuel so far during the month.
  3. Divide by the number of gallons to get the mean price per gallon.
Figure 3 illustrates this logic and why it works. Callout #1 shows the data for two fuel purchases. Callout #2 shows a naive and incorrect approach to computing the mean. You do a get mean of two values, but that mean does not mean what it should mean. Callout #3 highlights the correct approach. Multiplying each price by the number of gallons purchased at that price gives the effect of having a record for each individual gallon purchased. The resulting mean is then truly the mean price per gallon.
Figure 3. Weighting the mean
Fortunately, the needed SQL expression is far easier to write than Figure 3 was to draw. Here's a query implementing the logic from Figure 3 for a weighted mean:
SELECT ROUND(SUM(gallons * price)/SUM(gallons),2) AS "Avg Per Gal"
FROM fleet_fuel
WHERE buy_date >= DATE '2013-01-01'
  AND buy_date < DATE '2013-02-01';

Avg Per Gal
-----------
       3.52
This result's more worrisome, isn't it? Your target is $3.50 per gallon. Your current, weighted mean is $3.52 per gallon. That bonus isn't so secure after all. Fortunately, you have time left in the month to act. Good thing you knew about weighted means. You may be able to salvage that bonus yet.

When Median and Mode are Better

Say that you have a friend planning a visit to Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Your friend plans to drive across region, and asks you for some intelligence on fuel prices. Here is a situation in which the goal is not really to make the math work out accounting-style as in the examples so far. Instead, you're trying to distill a complex picture into just a few numbers that you and your friend can get a grip on. The arithmetic mean might not be your best choice here.
It may in fact be reasonable to provide the mean per-gallon fuel price. After all, gasoline is a competitive market and prices tend to cluster tightly around a center. There aren't likely to be many outliers. You could tell your friend:
"The mean fuel price in the region is $3.55 per gallon."
However, an even more meaningful statement is:
"Half the gas stations charge less than $3.50 per gallon, and half charge more."
Here you are giving what is known as the median: $3.50 per gallon in this case. This is useful information, and I plan a follow-up article soon on how to compute the median and apply it. Your friend can reasonably decide to treat $3.50 as the maximum he'll pay per gallon. Knowing that half the fuel stations charge less, and presuming a reasonably even geographic distribution, your friend should be able to make the trip and hold out for the less-expensive gas stations.
But wait! There's more. Perhaps you can provide the mode as well, also a planned future topic. The mode refers to the most commonly observed value. You investigate and find the fuel prices in your region to bebimodal. That means two prices are tied for being most commonly observed. The two prices are $3.46 and 3.52. Now you can paint a more detailed picture for your friend, and with just a very few numbers:
"Half the gas stations charge less than $3.50 per gallon, and half charge more."
"The two most common prices are $3.46 per gallon, and $3.52 per gallon."
With this information, your friend might decide to hold out for $3.46 per gallon or less. Again, that's presuming a not-too-uneven geographic distribution. (There is only so much you can convey, after all, with just three numbers).
Choosing the correct statistic isn't just about the data you're working with. You can't look at a data set and say arbitrarily that the median applies, or that the mean is a better choice. Choose your statistics based upon the intelligence you're trying to derive, the decisions you're hoping to make, the picture you want to paint.
Note: Median is in many cases more useful or desirable than the arithmetic mean. Yet SQL has a history of poor support for computing the median. (Oracle Database does currently support a MEDIANfunction). You'll find plenty of convoluted techniques in older books on SQL for computing the median, some that work well and others that work mostly – except for some corner cases. It's always been trivial to compute the mean though, and sometimes the mean has been chosen only for that reason. It's the "when all you have is a hammer" effect.

Circular Data

Watch out for circular number systems when computing the mean, or any other measure of central tendency. Look at Figure 4 showing several times clustered around midnight. A naive approach to computing the mean would put it at 12:02:15, twelve hours opposite where it ought to be. In this particular example, the mean as a measure of central tendency is correctly placed at 00:02:15, two minutes and 15 seconds past midnight.
Figure 4. Mean in a circular number system

Wall-clock time and compass direction are two examples of circular systems in which care is needed when computing the mean. Various methods exist. The United States Environmental Protection Agency employs the so-called Yamartino method developed in 1984 by Robert J. Yamartino in their studies involving wind direction. That's just the tip of the iceberg. At least one book, Statistical analysis of Circular Data by N. I. Fisher, has been written on the topic.

Non-Additive Data

The arithmetic mean is based around addition. Remember the daily sales example early in this article? Each day of the month you sell a certain amount, and you add those amounts together for a monthly total. For example:
14530 + 14230 + 15830 ... 23134 + 22783 + 24323
Two other common patterns you'll encounter involve rates and products. It's useful to know how to spot them so that you don't apply AVG when it shouldn't be applied.
Rates often involve the word "per", as in "miles per gallon" and "kilometers per hour". Imagine if I made the same 60 km trip twice in the same day. First I drove it at 60 kph. Then I returned home at a slower, 40 kph. Here's how that looks:
60km at 60kph + 60km at 40kph
This is not the simple, additive pattern to which arithmetic mean applies. The correct mean speed is not 50 kph like you might expect. It's actually 48 kph, because you spend more time (more hours) driving the slower trip. Another type of mean, the harmonic mean, will give the correct answer and should generally be applied to situations like this involving rates. The math behind the harmonic mean, and especially why that math works, is really interesting and I plan a future article on the topic.
The other commonly encountered pattern involves products – values multiplied together instead of being added. Remember during the runup to the year 2000 how all of us in the computing field would get big raises each year as the industry frantically worked to save the world from six-digit date meltdown? Those were good times. Imagine three yearly raises in pay of 10%, 20%, and 30%. Let your starting salary be N, and here's what you have:
 N * 1.10 * 1.20 * 1.30
Once again, this is not an additive sequence. Rather, it's a series of products. The mean pay raise is not 20%. The geometric mean applies here, and the mean increase in pay works out to 19.72% per year. You can prove that by working through some math:
N * 1.10 * 1.20 * 1.30 = N * 1.1972 * 1.1972 * 1.1972
1.10 * 1.20 * 1.30 = 1.7160, 
and 1.1972 * 1.1972 * 1.1972 = 1.7159,
and finally...N * 1.7160 ≈ N * 1.7159
Rounding accounts for the difference of 0.0001 in the result. Geometric mean is also a topic I plan for a future article.

The Sum of it All

Choose your average carefully depending upon what it is you're trying to convey. Arithmetic mean is ideal when you need the math to work out accounting-style, as in the daily sales and fuel cost examples. Watch for non-additive cases that might require other types of mean, such as the harmonic and geometric.
Arithmetic mean is prone to what is termed skew. A small number of outlying values can give a false impression of central tendency. Figure 1 hints at how this may be so. A future article on standard deviation will delve into this topic more closely.
The potential for skew is one reason the median is often favored over the mean. This is why the U.S. Census Bureau tracks and reports a median  annual household income rather than a mean income. Median is often more appropriate than the mean in cases where you are working to promote understanding  by painting a picture of the current state of things.
Finally, it isn't possible to look at a data set and declare authoritatively that just one statistic applies, or that only one type of average should be used. It may be perfectly reasonable to look at multiple statistics together, such as mean and mode in the example of an automobile trip across the Upper Peninsula. The bottom line is to choose the statistic that best conveys the message, and that best helps you manage to your desired result.

Dates in Range

Posing the Question

Arturo was after a solution encompassing more than a single month. Following is the question he put to me:
"What if you had two different ranges?
   beg_date        end_date
   01-Jan-2013     15-Jan-2013
   15-Mar-2013     02-Apr-2013
How do you generate individual rows for each day between 01/01 to 01/15, and between 03/15 to 04/02?"
An excellent question! Arturo's question forces me to gereralize the solution from my previous article that is specific to days in a single month, and make it work to cover any date range, even one spanning many months.

Getting Started

Following is my starting point, the solution from my prior article. It's a query that returns one row for each day in the current month.
SELECT LEVEL, LAST_DAY(SYSDATE)-LEVEL+1
FROM dual
WHERE ROWNUM <= EXTRACT(DAY FROM LAST_DAY(SYSDATE))
CONNECT BY LEVEL=ROWNUM;
The query makes creative use of LEVEL and CONNECT BY to form a row-generator giving incremental values beginning with 1. Following are some aspects to consider:
  • The LEVEL column counts upward toward the number of days in the month.
  • The starting date is implicitly the first of the month.
  • The EXTRACT expression generates a value marking the end of the range.
The solution logic is based around integers returned by LEVEL and EXTRACT that represent day numbers. That logic limits the solution to generating rows for only a single month.

Generalizing the Solution

My first need is to generalize the query by making it possible to specify any two dates to denote the range of interest. Before doing that, I want to get rid of ROWNUM from the WHERE clause and use LEVEL instead. It may be lack of coffee, but my use of ROWNUM is making it harder for me to think clearly about the query and how it works. The fix is a trivial, one-word change to the WHERE clause:
SELECT LEVEL, LAST_DAY(SYSDATE)-LEVEL+1
FROM dual
WHERE LEVEL <= EXTRACT(DAY FROM LAST_DAY(SYSDATE))
CONNECT BY LEVEL=ROWNUM;
Now I can get on with solving the problem at hand. I want to specify beginning and ending dates explicitly. There are two date ranges, so I'll create and initialize four bind variables in SQL*Plus:
VARIABLE beg1_date CHAR(11);
VARIABLE end1_date CHAR(11);
VARIABLE beg2_date CHAR(11);
VARIABLE end2_date CHAR(11);

EXECUTE :beg1_date := '1-Jan-2013'; 
EXECUTE :end1_date := '15-Jan-2013';
EXECUTE :beg2_date := '15-Mar-2013';
EXECUTE :end2_date := '2-Apr-2013';
My solution query shown earlier generates dates in reverse order, beginning from the end of the month as given by LAST_DAY(SYSDATE). It's an easy modification to reference end2_date as the end of the range. Just specify TO_DATE(:end2_date) instead. For example:
From: SELECT LEVEL, LAST_DAY(SYSDATE)-LEVEL+1
To: SELECT LEVEL, TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
I'll simplify the WHERE clause to restrict output to ten rows. Let's see how things go:
SELECT LEVEL, TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
FROM dual
WHERE LEVEL <= 10
CONNECT BY LEVEL=ROWNUM;

     LEVEL TO_DATE(:END2_DATE
---------- ------------------
         1 02-APR-13
         2 01-APR-13
         3 31-MAR-13
         4 30-MAR-13
         5 29-MAR-13
         6 28-MAR-13
         7 27-MAR-13
         8 26-MAR-13
         9 25-MAR-13
        10 24-MAR-13
These results are promising. Next I can modify the WHERE clause to terminate execution at the beginning of the range. I'll specify beg1_date, because I want the query to generate a wide enough range of dates to encompass both the desired, smaller ranges. Here's the query and its results:
SELECT LEVEL, TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
FROM dual
WHERE TO_DATE(:beg1_date) <= TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
CONNECT BY LEVEL=ROWNUM;

     LEVEL TO_DATE(:END2_DATE
---------- ------------------
         1 02-APR-13
         2 01-APR-13
         3 31-MAR-13
...
        90 03-JAN-13
        91 02-JAN-13
        92 01-JAN-13
The query is now generating an extended range of dates covering both the smaller ranges that I'm after.

Punching a Hole

All that's left is to "punch a hole" in the results by getting of the unwanted rows. Here is my first attempt, which is to add two predicates to the WHERE clause:
SELECT LEVEL, TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
FROM dual
WHERE TO_DATE(:beg1_date) <= TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
  AND NOT (
        TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1 > TO_DATE(:end1_date)
    AND TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1 < TO_DATE(:beg2_date)
    )
CONNECT BY LEVEL=ROWNUM;

     LEVEL TO_DATE(:END2_DATE
---------- ------------------
         1 02-APR-13
         2 01-APR-13
         3 31-MAR-13
...
        17 17-MAR-13
        18 16-MAR-13
        19 15-MAR-13
Bummer! The CONNECT BY logic falls into the hole and terminates. Results are good until the desired gap is encountered. Then query execution ends.

Playing the Crazy Card

What's needed is a second WHERE clause. The HAVING clause can serve that purpose if you group by all the columns. The result is a fun query that you should probably not ever use in a production setting:
SELECT LEVEL, TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
FROM dual
WHERE TO_DATE(:beg1_date) <= TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
CONNECT BY LEVEL=ROWNUM
GROUP BY LEVEL, TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
HAVING NOT (
        TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1 > TO_DATE(:end1_date)
    AND TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1 < TO_DATE(:beg2_date)
    )
ORDER BY LEVEL;

     LEVEL TO_DATE(:END2_DATE
---------- ------------------
         1 02-APR-13
         2 01-APR-13
         3 31-MAR-13
...
        17 17-MAR-13
        18 16-MAR-13
        19 15-MAR-13
        78 15-JAN-13
        79 14-JAN-13
        80 13-JAN-13
...
        90 03-JAN-13
        91 02-JAN-13
        92 01-JAN-13
The ORDER BY clause I've added this time is irrelevant to the logic. It merely undoes the effects of the grouping operation so the results are displayed in a comprehensible order.

Finding Some Sanity

While clever, the preceding approach is pretty awful. The grouping operation is likely to force a partial sorting of the data. It surely must be better to avoid the GROUP BY processing. To that end, take a query and subquery approach:
SELECT day_of_range FROM (
SELECT LEVEL AS range_counter, 
       TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1 AS day_of_range
FROM dual
WHERE TO_DATE(:beg1_date) <= TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
CONNECT BY LEVEL=ROWNUM
) WHERE NOT (
        day_of_range > TO_DATE(:end1_date)
    AND day_of_range < TO_DATE(:beg2_date)
    );
The inner query generates the extended range of dates. The outer query's WHERE clause punches the desired hole in that range. The results are dates covering just the two, smaller ranges.

Pondering an Alternative

If the desired gap is large enough, then you may prefer to attack the problem as a union of two queries. Be sure to use the UNION ALL operator to avoid the overhead of unneeded elimination of duplicate rows; there won't be any. For example:
SELECT LEVEL, TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
FROM dual
WHERE TO_DATE(:beg2_date) <= TO_DATE(:end2_date)-LEVEL+1
CONNECT BY LEVEL=ROWNUM
UNION ALL
SELECT LEVEL, TO_DATE(:end1_date)-LEVEL+1
FROM dual
WHERE TO_DATE(:beg1_date) <= TO_DATE(:end1_date)-LEVEL+1
CONNECT BY LEVEL=ROWNUM;
The first query in this union generates the latter range. The second query generates the earlier range.