slovo | definícia |
output (mass) | output
- výstupný, výstup |
output (encz) | output,celková výroba Mgr. Dita Gálová |
output (encz) | output,objem výroby n: IvČa |
output (encz) | output,produkce Pavel Machek; Giza |
output (encz) | output,produkt n: Zdeněk Brož |
output (encz) | output,výkon n: Zdeněk Brož |
output (encz) | output,vyrábět v: tata |
output (encz) | output,výroba n: Zdeněk Brož |
output (encz) | output,výsledek n: Zdeněk Brož |
output (encz) | output,výstup [eko.] Materiál nebo energie, které vystupují z
jednotkového procesu. Poznámka: pod pojmem materiály jsou zahrnuty
suroviny, meziprodukty, výrobky, emise a odpady. RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
output (encz) | output,výstup (systému) [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
output (encz) | output,výstupní Zdeněk Brož |
output (encz) | output,výtěžek n: Zdeněk Brož |
Output (gcide) | Output \Out"put`\, n.
1. The amount or quantity of a material or product that is
produced by a mine, factory, or any system for production
of commercial goods, such as the amount of coal or ore put
out from one or more mines, or the quantity of material
produced by, or turned out from, one or more furnaces or
mills, in a given time; production.
[1913 Webster +PJC]
2. The materials, profits, or information produced by any
system.
[PJC]
3. (Physiol.) That which is thrown out as products of the
metabolic activity of the body; the egesta other than the
faeces. See Income.
[1913 Webster]
Note: The output consists of: (a) The respiratory products of
the lungs, skin, and alimentary canal, consisting
chiefly of carbonic acid and water with small
quantities of hydrogen and carbureted hydrogen. (b)
Perspiration, consisting chiefly of water and salts.
(c) The urine, which is assumed to contain all the
nitrogen truly excreted by the body, besides a large
quantity of saline matters and water. --Foster.
[1913 Webster]
4. The power, voltage, or current produced by a device to
generate or regulate electrical power; as, the power
supply had a maximum output of 250 milliamps.
[PJC]
5. (Computers) The data or information produced by operation
of a computer program or subroutine for transfer to
another program or to an external device. The output of
one program may be used as the input to another program.
[PJC] |
output (wn) | output
n 1: final product; the things produced [syn: end product,
output]
2: production of a certain amount [syn: output, yield]
3: signal that comes out of an electronic system [syn: {output
signal}, output]
4: the quantity of something (as a commodity) that is created
(usually within a given period of time); "production was up
in the second quarter" [syn: output, yield, production]
5: what is produced in a given time period [syn: output,
outturn, turnout]
v 1: to create or manufacture a specific amount; "the computer
is outputting the data from the job I'm running" |
output (foldoc) | output
Data transferred from a computer system to
the outside world via some kind of output device.
Opposite: input.
(1997-04-28)
|
| podobné slovo | definícia |
capital-output ratio (encz) | capital-output ratio, |
cardiac output (encz) | cardiac output, n: |
emission-output ratio (encz) | emission-output ratio,poměr produkce a emisí [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
full output (encz) | full output,plný výkon Pavel Cvrček |
gross output (encz) | gross output, |
i/o (input/output) (encz) | I/O (Input/Output),Vstup/Výstup [zkr.] Milan Svoboda |
incremental capital-output ratio (encz) | incremental capital-output ratio, |
incremental labor-output ratio (encz) | incremental labor-output ratio, |
input-output analysis (encz) | input-output analysis,input-output analýza (analýza vstupu a
výstupu) [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
input-output matrix (encz) | input-output matrix, |
input-output table (encz) | input-output table, |
labor-output ratio (encz) | labor-output ratio, |
output budget (encz) | output budget, |
output capacity (encz) | output capacity, |
output contract (encz) | output contract, n: |
output element (encz) | output element,výstupní prvek (systému) [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
output file (encz) | output file, n: |
output gap (encz) | output gap,výrobní mezera [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
output measures of economic growth (encz) | output measures of economic growth,měření ekonomického růstu na
výstupu [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
output program (encz) | output program, n: |
output routine (encz) | output routine, n: |
output signal (encz) | output signal, n: |
output stage (encz) | output stage,výstupní stupeň n: [tech.] parkmaj |
output-to-input ratio (encz) | output-to-input ratio, n: |
outputs (encz) | outputs,produkty n: pl. Zdeněk Brožoutputs,výstupy n: pl. Zdeněk Brož |
outputting (encz) | outputting,produkující adj: Zdeněk Brož |
potential output (encz) | potential output,potenciální output [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
socially optimum level of output (encz) | socially optimum level of output,společensky optimální úroveň
výstupu [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
structural change in output (encz) | structural change in output, |
unit of output (encz) | unit of output, |
input-output analýza (analýza vstupu a výstupu) (czen) | input-output analýza (analýza vstupu a výstupu),input-output
analysis[eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
potenciální output (czen) | potenciální output,potential output[eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
Output (gcide) | Output \Out"put`\, n.
1. The amount or quantity of a material or product that is
produced by a mine, factory, or any system for production
of commercial goods, such as the amount of coal or ore put
out from one or more mines, or the quantity of material
produced by, or turned out from, one or more furnaces or
mills, in a given time; production.
[1913 Webster +PJC]
2. The materials, profits, or information produced by any
system.
[PJC]
3. (Physiol.) That which is thrown out as products of the
metabolic activity of the body; the egesta other than the
faeces. See Income.
[1913 Webster]
Note: The output consists of: (a) The respiratory products of
the lungs, skin, and alimentary canal, consisting
chiefly of carbonic acid and water with small
quantities of hydrogen and carbureted hydrogen. (b)
Perspiration, consisting chiefly of water and salts.
(c) The urine, which is assumed to contain all the
nitrogen truly excreted by the body, besides a large
quantity of saline matters and water. --Foster.
[1913 Webster]
4. The power, voltage, or current produced by a device to
generate or regulate electrical power; as, the power
supply had a maximum output of 250 milliamps.
[PJC]
5. (Computers) The data or information produced by operation
of a computer program or subroutine for transfer to
another program or to an external device. The output of
one program may be used as the input to another program.
[PJC] |
cardiac output (wn) | cardiac output
n 1: the amount of blood pumped out by the ventricles in a given
period of time; "a resting adult has a cardiac output of
about three quarts a minute" |
output contract (wn) | output contract
n 1: a contract in which you promise to deliver your entire
output to the other party who promises to accept it |
output device (wn) | output device
n 1: electronic or electromechanical equipment connected to a
computer and used to transfer data out of the computer in
the form of text, images, sounds, or other media |
output file (wn) | output file
n 1: (computer science) a computer file that contains data that
are the output of a device or program |
output program (wn) | output program
n 1: a utility program that organizes the output of a computer |
output routine (wn) | output routine
n 1: a routine that controls an output device |
output signal (wn) | output signal
n 1: signal that comes out of an electronic system [syn: {output
signal}, output] |
output-to-input ratio (wn) | output-to-input ratio
n 1: the output power of a transducer divided by the input power |
basic input/output system (foldoc) | Basic Input/Output System
BIOS
ROM BIOS
(BIOS, ROM BIOS) The part of the {system
software} of the IBM PC and compatibles that provides the
lowest level interface to peripheral devices and controls
the first stage of the bootstrap process, including
installing the operating system. The BIOS is stored in
ROM, or equivalent, in every PC. Its main task is to load
and execute the operating system which is usually stored on
the computer's hard disk, but may be loaded from CD-ROM or
floppy disk at install time.
In order to provide acceptable performance (e.g. for screen
display), some software vendors access the routines in the
BIOS directly, rather than using the higher level operating
system calls. Thus, the BIOS in the compatible computer must
be 100% compatible with the IBM BIOS.
As if that wasn't bad enough, many application programs
bypass even the BIOS and address the screen hardware directly
just as the BIOS does. Consequently, register level
compatibility is required in the compatible's display
electronics, which means that it must provide the same storage
locations and identification as the original IBM hardware.
(1999-06-09)
|
computer output on microfilm (foldoc) | Electronic Report Management
Computer Output on Microfilm
Computer Output to Laser Disc
Computer Output to Laser Disk
Enterprise Report Management
ERM
(ERM, Enterprise Report Management) The capture,
archiving and publishing, in digital form, of (typically
mainframe generated) documents such as accounting and
financial reports. ERM often replaces systems based on paper
or microfilm.
ERM usually captures data from print streams and stores it
on hard drives, storage area networks or optical disk
drives. The data is indexed and can be retreived at the
desktop with a web browser or a fat client. ERM systems
are part of enterprise content management or {electronic
document management}.
An example application is {PearlDoc QuickFile Information
Management System (http://pearldoc.com/)} (IMS).
An early replacement for greenbar printed reports was
Computer Output on Microfilm (COM, not to be confused with
Microsoft's Component Object Model). This was superseded
by Computer Output to Laser Disk (or Disc - COLD) which used
optical media.
In 1999 the AIIM renamed COLD to ERM/COLD to reflect the
variety of media in use. This was promoted, in 2002, by Mason
Grigsby - widely reputed as "The Father of COLD" for his
seminal work with INSCI in the late 1980s. Judging from
their website, AIIM don't seem too sure whether ERM is
"Electronic", "Enterprise" or both.
(2007-07-25)
|
computer output to laser disc (foldoc) | Electronic Report Management
Computer Output on Microfilm
Computer Output to Laser Disc
Computer Output to Laser Disk
Enterprise Report Management
ERM
(ERM, Enterprise Report Management) The capture,
archiving and publishing, in digital form, of (typically
mainframe generated) documents such as accounting and
financial reports. ERM often replaces systems based on paper
or microfilm.
ERM usually captures data from print streams and stores it
on hard drives, storage area networks or optical disk
drives. The data is indexed and can be retreived at the
desktop with a web browser or a fat client. ERM systems
are part of enterprise content management or {electronic
document management}.
An example application is {PearlDoc QuickFile Information
Management System (http://pearldoc.com/)} (IMS).
An early replacement for greenbar printed reports was
Computer Output on Microfilm (COM, not to be confused with
Microsoft's Component Object Model). This was superseded
by Computer Output to Laser Disk (or Disc - COLD) which used
optical media.
In 1999 the AIIM renamed COLD to ERM/COLD to reflect the
variety of media in use. This was promoted, in 2002, by Mason
Grigsby - widely reputed as "The Father of COLD" for his
seminal work with INSCI in the late 1980s. Judging from
their website, AIIM don't seem too sure whether ERM is
"Electronic", "Enterprise" or both.
(2007-07-25)
|
computer output to laser disk (foldoc) | Electronic Report Management
Computer Output on Microfilm
Computer Output to Laser Disc
Computer Output to Laser Disk
Enterprise Report Management
ERM
(ERM, Enterprise Report Management) The capture,
archiving and publishing, in digital form, of (typically
mainframe generated) documents such as accounting and
financial reports. ERM often replaces systems based on paper
or microfilm.
ERM usually captures data from print streams and stores it
on hard drives, storage area networks or optical disk
drives. The data is indexed and can be retreived at the
desktop with a web browser or a fat client. ERM systems
are part of enterprise content management or {electronic
document management}.
An example application is {PearlDoc QuickFile Information
Management System (http://pearldoc.com/)} (IMS).
An early replacement for greenbar printed reports was
Computer Output on Microfilm (COM, not to be confused with
Microsoft's Component Object Model). This was superseded
by Computer Output to Laser Disk (or Disc - COLD) which used
optical media.
In 1999 the AIIM renamed COLD to ERM/COLD to reflect the
variety of media in use. This was promoted, in 2002, by Mason
Grigsby - widely reputed as "The Father of COLD" for his
seminal work with INSCI in the late 1980s. Judging from
their website, AIIM don't seem too sure whether ERM is
"Electronic", "Enterprise" or both.
(2007-07-25)
|
formatting output specification instance (foldoc) | Formatting Output Specification Instance
FOSI
(FOSI) An old SGML DTD standard for
document management in the US military, to be replaced (soon
after Oct 1996?) by the ISO standard DSSSL.
(1996-10-07)
|
input/output (foldoc) | input/output
(I/O) Communication between a
computer and its users, its storage devices, other computers
(via a network) or the outside world. The devices the
computer uses to do this are called "peripherals". What
actually counts as I/O depends on what level of detail you are
considering, e.g. communication between processors would not
be considered I/O when considering a multiprocessor as a
single system.
Important aspects of I/O are throughput, latency, and
whether the communications is synchronous or asynchronous
(using some kind of buffer).
(2003-12-04)
|
input/output redirection (foldoc) | input/output redirection
I/O redirection
In Unix, to send ouput from a process
to different file or device or to another process via a
pipe, or to have a process read its input from a different
file, device or pipe. Some other operating systems have
similar facilities.
To redirect input to come from a file instead of the keyboard,
use " |
intelligent input/output (foldoc) | Intelligent Input/Output
I2O
Intelligent I/O
/i:-too-oh/ (I2O) A specification which aims to
provide an I/O device driver architecture that is
independent of both the specific device being controlled and
the host operating system. The Hardware Device Module (HDM)
manages the device and the OS Services Module (OSM) interfaces
to the host operating system. The HDM is portable across
multiple operating systems, processors and busses. The HDM
and OSM communicate via a two layer message passing
protocol. A Message Layer sets up a communications session
and runs on top of a Transport Layer which defines how the two
parties share information.
I2O is also designed to facilitate intelligent I/O subsystems,
with support for message passing between multiple
independent processors. By relieving the host of interrupt
intensive I/O tasks required by the various layers of a driver
architecture, the I2O intelligent I/O architecture greatly
improves I/O performance. I2O systems will be able to more
efficiently deliver the I/O throughput required by a wide
range of high bandwidth applications, such as networked
video, groupware and client-server processing. I2O does
not restrict where the layered modules execute, providing
support for single processor, multiprocessor, and
clustered systems.
I2O is not intended to replace the driver architectures
currently in existence. Rather, the objective is to provide
an open, standards-based approach, which is complementary to
existing drivers, and provides a framework for the rapid
development of a new generation of portable, intelligent I/O.
(http://i2osig.org/).
(1997-11-04)
|
netware input/output subsystem (foldoc) | Netware Input/Output Subsystem
NIOS
(NIOS) The lowest layer in
the Novell NetWare client architecture. NIOS is the
interface layer between the client operating system and the
32-bit client services provided by NetWare.
(http://developer.novell.com/research/appnotes/1996/november/01/04.htm).
(1999-04-24)
|
output device (foldoc) | output device
Equipment connected to a computer that is used to
transfer data out of the computer, either to a human user
(e.g. as images on a monitor or sound from a loudspeaker)
or to some form of permanent record (e.g. printed text).
Most output devices are electronic with electromechanical
components (e.g. a printer or loudspeaker) and/or
electro-optical (e.g. a display screen).
Storage devices such as disk drives and {magnetic tape
drives} act as both input devices and output devices (they
are "read-write" devices), others such as some CD-ROMs may
be input only ("read-only").
(2018-06-25)
|
standard input/output (foldoc) | standard input/output
standard I/O
stderr
stdin
stdio
stdout
The predefined input/output
channels which every Unix process is initialised with.
Standard input is by default from the terminal, and standard
output and standard error are to the terminal. Each of these
channels (controlled via a file descriptor 0, 1, or 2 -
stdin, stdout, stderr) can be redirected to a file, another
device or a pipe connecting its process to another process.
The process is normally unaware of such I/O redirection,
thus simplifying prototyping of combinations of commands.
The C programming language library includes routines to
perform basic operations on standard I/O. Examples are
"printf", allowing text to be sent to standard output, and
"scanf", allowing the program to read from standard input.
(1996-06-07)
|
|