intradistrict collection - meaning and definition. What is intradistrict collection
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What (who) is intradistrict collection - definition

SET OF PURPOSEFULLY GATHERED PHYSICAL OR DIGITAL OBJECTS WITH SOME COMMON CHARACTERISTICS
Museum collection; Art collection; Deacquisitioning; Deacquisition; Art Collection; Museum collections; Art collections; Digital collection; Collection (artwork); Collection (museology); Permanent collection
  • Tabley]], England
  • A collection of masks and textiles from different parts of the world displayed in the living room of the Robert Brady Museum, [[Cuernavaca]], [[Mexico]]
  • Visual storage at the [[Victoria & Albert Museum]], London, England

Collection (museum)         
A museum is distinguished by a collection of often unique objects that forms the core of its activities for [education], [[research, etc. This differentiates it from an archive or library, where the contents may be more paper-based, replaceable and less exhibition oriented, or a private collection of art formed by an individual, family or institution that may grant no public access.
garbage collector         
  • A waste collection barge in [[Venice]], Italy.
  • Waste on a sidewalk for collection, bagged and stickered - in [[Dublin]], [[Ireland]]
  • Bukit Batok West]], Singapore.
PROCESS OF COLLECTING WASTE
Garbage Collection; Garbage Collector; Civic garbage collection; Waste Collection; Trash pickup; Refuse collection; Garbage collecting; Garbage collection
(garbage collectors)
A garbage collector is a person whose job is to take people's garbage away. (AM; in BRIT, use dustman
)
N-COUNT
garbage collection         
  • A waste collection barge in [[Venice]], Italy.
  • Waste on a sidewalk for collection, bagged and stickered - in [[Dublin]], [[Ireland]]
  • Bukit Batok West]], Singapore.
PROCESS OF COLLECTING WASTE
Garbage Collection; Garbage Collector; Civic garbage collection; Waste Collection; Trash pickup; Refuse collection; Garbage collecting; Garbage collection
<programming> (GC) The process by which dynamically allocated storage is reclaimed during the execution of a program. The term usually refers to automatic periodic storage reclamation by the garbage collector (part of the run-time system), as opposed to explicit code to free specific blocks of memory. Automatic garbage collection is usually triggered during memory allocation when the amount free memory falls below some threshold or after a certain number of allocations. Normal execution is suspended and the garbage collector is run. There are many variations on this basic scheme. Languages like Lisp represent expressions as graphs built from cells which contain pointers and data. These languages use automatic dynamic storage allocation to build expressions. During the evaluation of an expression it is necessary to reclaim space which is used by subexpressions but which is no longer pointed to by anything. This reclaimed memory is returned to the free memory pool for subsequent reallocation. Without garbage collection the program's memory requirements would increase monotonically throughout execution, possibly exceeding system limits on virtual memory size. The three main methods are mark-sweep garbage collection, reference counting and copying garbage collection. See also the AI koan about garbage collection. (1997-08-25)

Wikipedia

Collection (museum)

A museum is distinguished by a collection of often unique objects that forms the core of its activities for exhibitions, education, research, etc. This differentiates it from an archive or library, where the contents may be more paper-based, replaceable and less exhibition oriented, or a private collection of art formed by an individual, family or institution that may grant no public access. A museum normally has a collecting policy for new acquisitions, so only objects in certain categories and of a certain quality are accepted into the collection. The process by which an object is formally included in the collection is called accessioning and each object is given a unique accession number.

Museum collections, and archives in general, are normally catalogued in a collection catalogue, traditionally in a card index, but nowadays in a computerized database. Transferring collection catalogues onto computer-based media is a major undertaking for most museums. All new acquisitions are normally catalogued on a computer in modern museums, but there is typically a backlog of old catalogue entries to be computerized as time and funding allows.

A museum's permanent collection are assets that the museum owns and may display, although space and conservation requirements often mean that most of a collection is not on display. Museums often also host temporary exhibitions of works that may come all or partly from their permanent collection, or may be all or partly loaned (a "loan exhibition"). A travelling exhibition is shown in more than one venue; these tend to be either large loan exhibitions which may be exhibited at two or three venues in different countries, or selections from the collection of a large museum which tour to a number of regional museums.