slovodefinícia
query
(mass)
query
- požiadavka, otázka
query
(encz)
query,dotaz n: [it.] např. v SQL databázi
query
(encz)
query,otázka n: mamm
query
(encz)
query,otazník n: Zdeněk Brož
Query
(gcide)
Query \Que"ry\, n.; pl. Queries. [L. quaere, imperative sing.
of quaerere, quaesitum to seek or search for, to ask,
inquire. Cf. Acquire, Conquer, Exquisite, Quest,
Require.]
1. A question; an inquiry to be answered or solved.
[1913 Webster]

I shall conclude with proposing only some queries,
in order to a . . . search to be made by others.
--Sir I.
Newton.
[1913 Webster]

2. A question in the mind; a doubt; as, I have a query about
his sincerity.
[1913 Webster]

3. An interrogation point [?] as the sign of a question or a
doubt.
[1913 Webster]
Query
(gcide)
Query \Que"ry\, v. i.
1. To ask questions; to make inquiry.
[1913 Webster]

Each prompt to query, answer, and debate. --Pope.
[1913 Webster]

2. To have a doubt; as, I query if he is right.
[1913 Webster]
Query
(gcide)
Query \Que"ry\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Queried; p. pr. & vb. n.
Querying.]
1. To put questions about; to elicit by questioning; to
inquire into; as, to query the items or the amount; to
query the motive or the fact.
[1913 Webster]

2. To address questions to; to examine by questions.
[1913 Webster]

3. To doubt of; to regard with incredulity.
[1913 Webster]

4. To write " query" (qu., qy., or ?) against, as a doubtful
spelling, or sense, in a proof. See Qu[ae]re.
[1913 Webster]
query
(wn)
query
n 1: an instance of questioning; "there was a question about my
training"; "we made inquiries of all those who were
present" [syn: question, inquiry, enquiry, query,
interrogation] [ant: answer]
v 1: pose a question [syn: question, query]
query
(foldoc)
query

1. A user's (or agent's)
request for information, generally as a formal request to a
database or search engine.

SQL is the most common database query language.

2. question mark.

(1997-04-09)
podobné slovodefinícia
grotesquery
(encz)
grotesquery, n:
query language
(encz)
query language, n:
querying
(encz)
querying,dotazující se Zdeněk Brožquerying,pokládající dotazy adj: IvČa
Equery
(gcide)
Equery \Eq"ue*ry\, n.
Same as Equerry.
[1913 Webster]
grotesquery
(gcide)
grotesquery \gro*tesqu"er*y\, n. [Written also grotesquerie.]
[From Grotesque.]
Grotesque action, speech, or manners; grotesque doings;
ludicrous or incongruous unnaturalness or distortion. "The
sustained grotesquery of Feather-top." --K. L. Bates.

Syn: grotesqueness.
[Webster 1913 Suppl. + WordNet 1.5]

Vileness, on the other hand, becomes grotesquerie,
wonderfully converted into a subject of laughter.
--George
Gissing.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]
Query
(gcide)
Query \Que"ry\, n.; pl. Queries. [L. quaere, imperative sing.
of quaerere, quaesitum to seek or search for, to ask,
inquire. Cf. Acquire, Conquer, Exquisite, Quest,
Require.]
1. A question; an inquiry to be answered or solved.
[1913 Webster]

I shall conclude with proposing only some queries,
in order to a . . . search to be made by others.
--Sir I.
Newton.
[1913 Webster]

2. A question in the mind; a doubt; as, I have a query about
his sincerity.
[1913 Webster]

3. An interrogation point [?] as the sign of a question or a
doubt.
[1913 Webster]Query \Que"ry\, v. i.
1. To ask questions; to make inquiry.
[1913 Webster]

Each prompt to query, answer, and debate. --Pope.
[1913 Webster]

2. To have a doubt; as, I query if he is right.
[1913 Webster]Query \Que"ry\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Queried; p. pr. & vb. n.
Querying.]
1. To put questions about; to elicit by questioning; to
inquire into; as, to query the items or the amount; to
query the motive or the fact.
[1913 Webster]

2. To address questions to; to examine by questions.
[1913 Webster]

3. To doubt of; to regard with incredulity.
[1913 Webster]

4. To write " query" (qu., qy., or ?) against, as a doubtful
spelling, or sense, in a proof. See Qu[ae]re.
[1913 Webster]
Querying
(gcide)
Query \Que"ry\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Queried; p. pr. & vb. n.
Querying.]
1. To put questions about; to elicit by questioning; to
inquire into; as, to query the items or the amount; to
query the motive or the fact.
[1913 Webster]

2. To address questions to; to examine by questions.
[1913 Webster]

3. To doubt of; to regard with incredulity.
[1913 Webster]

4. To write " query" (qu., qy., or ?) against, as a doubtful
spelling, or sense, in a proof. See Qu[ae]re.
[1913 Webster]
grotesquery
(wn)
grotesquery
n 1: ludicrous or incongruous unnaturalness or distortion [syn:
grotesqueness, grotesquery, grotesquerie]
query language
(wn)
query language
n 1: a source language consisting of procedural operators that
invoke functions to be executed [syn: command language,
query language, search language]
473l query
(foldoc)
473L Query

An English-like query language for the US Air
Force 473L system.

[Sammet 1969, p. 665].

["Headquarters USAF Command and Control System Query
Language", Info Sys Sci, Proc 2nd Congress, Spartan Books
1965, pp.57-76].

(1994-10-31)
database query language
(foldoc)
database query language

A language in which users of a database can
(interactively) formulate requests and generate reports. The
best known is SQL.

(1998-04-15)
knowledge query and manipulation language
(foldoc)
Knowledge Query and Manipulation Language
KQML

(KQML) A
language and protocol, based on SGML, for exchanging
information and knowledge, proposed in 1993(?).

Work on KQML is led(?) by Tim Finin of the
University of Maryland Baltimore County, Lab for Advanced
Information Technology. It is part of the ARPA {Knowledge
Sharing Effort}.

The KQML message format and protocol can be used to interact
with an intelligent system, either by an {application
program}, or by another intelligent system. KQML's
"performatives" are operations that agents perform on each
other's knowledge and goal stores. Higher-level
interactions such as contract nets and negotiation are built
using these. KQML's "communication facilitators" coordinate
the interactions of other agents to support knowledge sharing.

Experimental prototype systems support concurrent engineering,
intelligent design, intelligent planning, and scheduling.

(http://cs.umbc.edu/kqml/).

(1999-09-28)
query by example
(foldoc)
Query By Example
QBE

(QBE) A user-friendly query language
developed by Moshé Zloof of IBM in 1975.


(http://informatik.uni-trier.de/~ley/db/indices/a-tree/z/Zloof:Mosh=eacute=_M=.html).

[Moshé M. Zloof, "Query By Example", AFIPS NCC 1975: 431-438].

[Moshé M. Zloof, "Query-by-Example: A Data Base Language", IBM
Systems Journal 16(4): 324-343, 1977].

["QBE/OBE: A Language for Office and Business Automation",
M.M. Zloof, Computer pp.13-22, May 1981].

(2001-03-25)
query by image content
(foldoc)
content-based information retrieval
CBIR
CBVIR
content-based visual information retrieval
QBIC
query by image content

(CBIR, query by image content, QBIC,
content-based visual information retrieval, CBVIR) A general
term for methods using image analysis to try to identify
objects and features in images to allow them to indexed and
searched.

This contrasts with the use of image metadata such as
keywords or tags associated with (and possibly stored in) the
image.

[IEEE Computer, September 1995].

(2017-12-12)
query expansion
(foldoc)
query expansion

Adding search terms to a user's
search. Query expansion is the process of a search engine
adding search terms to a user's weighted search. The
intent is to improve precision and/or recall. The
additional terms may be taken from a thesaurus. For example
a search for "car" may be expanded to: car cars auto autos
automobile automobiles.

The additional terms may also be taken from documents
that the user has specified as being relevant; this is the
basis for the "more like this" feature of some search engines.

The extra terms can have positive or negative weights.

(1999-08-27)
structured query language
(foldoc)
SQL
Structured Query Language

/S Q L/ An industry-standard
language for creating, updating and, querying {relational
database management systems}.

SQL was developed by IBM in the 1970s for use in System R.
It is the de facto standard as well as being an ISO and
ANSI standard. It is often embedded in general purpose
programming languages.

The first SQL standard, in 1986, provided basic language
constructs for defining and manipulating tables of data; a
revision in 1989 added language extensions for {referential
integrity} and generalised integrity constraints. Another
revision in 1992 provided facilities for schema manipulation
and data administration, as well as substantial enhancements
for data definition and data manipulation.

Development is currently underway to enhance SQL into a
computationally complete language for the definition and
management of persistent, complex objects. This includes:
generalisation and specialisation hierarchies, {multiple
inheritance}, user defined data types, triggers and
assertions, support for knowledge based systems,
recursive query expressions, and additional data
administration tools. It also includes the specification of
abstract data types (ADTs), object identifiers, methods,
inheritance, polymorphism, encapsulation, and all of the
other facilities normally associated with object data
management.

The emerging SQL3 standard is expected to be complete in
1998.

According to Allen G. Taylor, SQL does __not__ stand for
"Structured Query Language". That, like "SEQUEL" (and its
pronunciation /see'kw*l/), was just another unofficial name
for a precursor of SQL. However, the IBM SQL Reference manual
for DB2 and Craig Mullins's "DB2 Developer's Guide" say SQL
__does__ stand for "Structured Query Language".

SQL Standards (http://jcc.com/sql_stnd.html).

{An SQL parser
(ftp://ftp.ora.com/published/oreilly/nutshell/lexyacc/)} is
described in "Lex & Yacc", by Levine, Mason & Brown published
by O'Reilly.

{The 1995 SQL Reunion: People, Projects, and Politics
(http://mcjones.org/System_R/SQL_Reunion_95/)}.

["A Guide to the SQL Standard", C.J. Date, A-W 1987].

["SQL for Dummies", Allen G. Taylor, IDG Books Worldwide].

(2005-11-17)

Nenašli ste slovo čo ste hľadali ? Doplňte ho do slovníka.

na vytvorenie tejto webstránky bol pužitý dictd server s dátami z sk-spell.sk.cx a z iných voľne dostupných dictd databáz. Ak máte klienta na dictd protokol (napríklad kdict), použite zdroj slovnik.iz.sk a port 2628.

online slovník, sk-spell - slovníkové dáta, IZ Bratislava, Malé Karpaty - turistika, Michal Páleník, správy, údaje o okresoch V4