podobné slovo | definícia |
hierarchical classification system (encz) | hierarchical classification system, n: |
hierarchical data structure (encz) | hierarchical data structure, n: |
hierarchical menu (encz) | hierarchical menu, n: |
hierarchical structure (encz) | hierarchical structure, n: |
hierarchically (encz) | hierarchically,hierarchicky Hynek Hanke |
nonhierarchical (encz) | nonhierarchical, adj: |
Hierarchically (gcide) | hierarchic \hi`er*arch"ic\, hierarchical \hi`er*arch"ic*al\, a.
[Cf. F. hi['e]rarchique.]
Of or pertaining to a hierarchy; ordered in a hierarchy. --
Hi`er*arch`ic*al*ly, adv.
Syn: hierarchical, hierarchal.
[1913 Webster]
2. Pertaining to a transitive relation between objects by
which they may be ordered into a hierarchy; as, a
hierarchical relation.
[PJC] |
nonhierarchical (gcide) | nonhierarchic \nonhierarchic\ nonhierarchical
\nonhierarchical\adj.
Not arranged in a hierarchy. Opposite of hierarchical.
[Narrower terms: ungraded, unordered, unranked]
[WordNet 1.5] |
hierarchical classification system (wn) | hierarchical classification system
n 1: a classification system where entries are arranged based on
some hierarchical structure |
hierarchical data structure (wn) | hierarchical data structure
n 1: a structure of data having several levels arranged in a
treelike structure [syn: hierarchical structure,
hierarchical data structure] |
hierarchical menu (wn) | hierarchical menu
n 1: a secondary menu that appears while you are holding the
cursor over an item on the primary menu [syn: {hierarchical
menu}, cascading menu, submenu] |
hierarchical structure (wn) | hierarchical structure
n 1: a structure of data having several levels arranged in a
treelike structure [syn: hierarchical structure,
hierarchical data structure] |
hierarchically (wn) | hierarchically
adv 1: in a hierarchical manner; "hierarchically organized" |
nonhierarchical (wn) | nonhierarchical
adj 1: not classified hierarchically [syn: nonhierarchical,
nonhierarchic] [ant: hierarchal, hierarchic,
hierarchical] |
hierarchical data format (foldoc) | Hierarchical Data Format
HDF
(HDF) A library and multi-object file
format for the transfer of graphical and numerical data
between computeres. The freely available HDF distribution
consists of the library, command line utilities, test suite
source, Java interface, and the Java-based HDF Viewer (JHV).
HDF supports several different data models, including
multidimensional arrays, raster images, and tables. Each
defines a specific aggregate data type and provides an API
for reading, writing, and organising the data and metadata.
New data models can be added by the HDF developers or users.
HDF is self-describing, allowing an application to interpret
the structure and contents of a file without any outside
information.
One HDF file can hold a mixture of related objects which can
be accessed as a group or as individual objects. Users can
create their own grouping structures called "vgroups".
HDF files can be shared across most common platforms,
including many workstations and high performance computers.
An HDF file created on one computer can be read on a different
system without modification.
(http://hdf.ncsa.uiuc.edu/).
(2001-07-02)
|
hierarchical database (foldoc) | hierarchical database
A kind of database management system that links
records together like a family tree such that each record type
has only one owner, e.g. an order is owned by only one
customer. Hierarchical structures were widely used in the
first mainframe database management systems. However, due
to their restrictions, they often cannot be used to relate
structures that exist in the real world.
|
hierarchical design methodology (foldoc) | Hierarchical Design Methodology
HDM
(HDM) A method for specifying software and
systems using hierarchies of abstract machines, developed by
Larry Robinson at SRI International circa 1975-1976. The
specifications were written in SPECIAL.
(2012-07-08)
|
hierarchical file system (foldoc) | hierarchical file system
A file system in which the files are
organised into a hierarchy. The nodes of the hierarchy are
called directories while the leaves are the files
themselves.
See also root directory. Compare flat file system.
(1996-11-21)
|
hierarchical music specification language (foldoc) | Hierarchical Music Specification Language
HMSL
(HMSL) A programming language for
experimental music composition and performance. It is a set
of object-oriented extensions to Forth. (Its near-total
unintelligibility to people unfamiliar with Forth has led
some to expand "HMSL" as "Her Majesty's Secret Language".)
Phil Burk (who also later developed pForth), Larry Polansky,
and David Rosenboom started developing HMSL in 1980 while
working at the {Mills College Center for Contemporary Music
(http://mills.edu/LIFE/CCM/CCM.homepage.html)}. As of
June 1998, development is ongoing.
(http://softsynth.com/hmsl/).
(1998-09-07)
|
hierarchical navigation (foldoc) | hierarchical navigation
On a web page, any type of menu whose
hierarchical structure matches that of the site to which the
page belongs. A hierarchical navigation menu allows the user
to jump ("navigate") directly to a section of the site several
levels below the top. The menu may present only a fixed
number of levels rather than the whole structure.
(2003-10-01)
|
hierarchical object oriented design (foldoc) | Hierarchical Object Oriented Design
HOOD
(HOOD) An architectural design method, primarily
for Ada, leading to automated checking, documentation and
source code generation.
(2009-01-14)
|
hierarchical routing (foldoc) | hierarchical routing
A way of simplifying routing a large network
like the Internet by breaking it into a hierarchy of
smaller networks where each level is responsible for its own
routing. The Internet has three levels: backbone networks,
mid-level networks (or transit networks) and {stub
networks}. The backbones know how to route between the
mid-levels, the mid-levels know how to route between
autonomous systems (sites) and each site knows how to route
internally.
Routers at each level cooperate by exchanging routing
information. Typically, between mid-level networks this is
via Exterior Gateway Protocol and within sites via {Interior
Gateway Protocol}.
(2017-12-02)
|
programmers hierarchical interactive graphics system (foldoc) | Programmers Hierarchical Interactive Graphics System
PHIGS
(PHIGS) An ANSI/ISO standard. Worked on by the
ISO/IEC group JTC1/SC24.
[More detail?]
(1995-01-04)
|