framing error - определение. Что такое framing error
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Что (кто) такое framing error - определение

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Framing error (disambiguation)
Найдено результатов: 669
random error         
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A MEASURED QUANTITY VALUE AND A REFERENCE QUANTITY VALUE
ObservationalError; Measurement error; Experimental error; Systematic bias; Random error; Systematic error; Systemic error; Alleged systemic bias; Random errors; Systematic errors; Measurement errors; Observational Error; Systematic effect; Chance error; Accidental error; Constant error; Stochastic error; Observation error; Systematic and random error; Systematic and random errors; Random and systematic errors; Measurement Error
¦ noun Statistics an error in measurement caused by factors which vary from one measurement to another.
Observational error         
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A MEASURED QUANTITY VALUE AND A REFERENCE QUANTITY VALUE
ObservationalError; Measurement error; Experimental error; Systematic bias; Random error; Systematic error; Systemic error; Alleged systemic bias; Random errors; Systematic errors; Measurement errors; Observational Error; Systematic effect; Chance error; Accidental error; Constant error; Stochastic error; Observation error; Systematic and random error; Systematic and random errors; Random and systematic errors; Measurement Error
Observational error (or measurement error) is the difference between a measured value of a quantity and its true value.Dodge, Y.
systematic error         
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A MEASURED QUANTITY VALUE AND A REFERENCE QUANTITY VALUE
ObservationalError; Measurement error; Experimental error; Systematic bias; Random error; Systematic error; Systemic error; Alleged systemic bias; Random errors; Systematic errors; Measurement errors; Observational Error; Systematic effect; Chance error; Accidental error; Constant error; Stochastic error; Observation error; Systematic and random error; Systematic and random errors; Random and systematic errors; Measurement Error
¦ noun Statistics an error whose effect is not reduced when observations are averaged.
clerical error         
  • Katie]]'', which later served as the United States Navy patrol vessel
  • 2}} minutes of the "[[Watergate tapes]]" during a phone call.
MISTAKE IN CLERICAL WORK, E.G. DATA ENTRY
Scrivener's error; Scrivner's Error
¦ noun a mistake made in copying or writing out a document.
pilot error         
  • Map of the [[Linate Airport disaster]] caused by taking the wrong taxiing route (red instead of green), as control tower had not given clear instructions. The accident occurred in thick fog.
  • publisher=Go Flight Medicine}}</ref> Due to several misunderstandings, the KLM flight tried to take off while the Pan Am flight was still on the runway. The airport was accommodating an unusually large number of commercial airliners, resulting in disruption of the normal use of taxiways.
  • Multiple sources of information can be taken from one interface here, known as the PFD, or primary flight display from which pilots receive all of the most important data readings
  • A military pilot reads the pre-flight checklist prior the mission. Checklists ensure that pilots are able to follow operational procedure and aids in memory recall.
  • Actual flight path (red) of [[TWA Flight 3]] from departure to crash point ([[controlled flight into terrain]]). Blue line shows the nominal Las Vegas course, while green is a typical course from Boulder. The pilot inadvertently used the Boulder outbound course instead of the appropriate Las Vegas course.
DECISION, ACTION OR INACTION BY A PILOT OF AN AIRCRAFT
Cockpit error; Pilot Error
<jargon> (Sun, from aviation) A user's misconfiguration or misuse of a piece of software, producing apparently bug-like results. E.g. "Joe Luser reported a bug in sendmail that causes it to generate bogus headers." "That's not a bug, that's pilot error. His "sendmail.cf" is hosed." Compare UBD. [Jargon File] (1994-12-05)
Clerical error         
  • Katie]]'', which later served as the United States Navy patrol vessel
  • 2}} minutes of the "[[Watergate tapes]]" during a phone call.
MISTAKE IN CLERICAL WORK, E.G. DATA ENTRY
Scrivener's error; Scrivner's Error
A clerical error is an error on the part of an office worker, often a secretary or personal assistant. It is a phrase which can also be used as an excuse to deflect blame away from specific individuals, such as high-powered executives, and instead redirect it to the more anonymous clerical staff.
Frame (World Wide Web)         
CONFLATION OF MULTIPLE HTML ELEMENTS USED TO DIVIDE A WEB PAGE FOR DISPLAY
HTML frame; Noframes; Netscape Frames; HTML frames; Web frames; Frame (HTML); Frameset (HTML); Framing (World Wide Web); HTML FRAMESET
In the context of a web browser, a frame is a part of a web page or browser window which displays content independent of its container, with the ability to load content independently. The HTML or media elements shown in a frame may come from a different web site as the other elements of content on display, although this practice, known as framing, is today often regarded as a violation of same-origin policy.
error detection and correction         
TECHNIQUES THAT ENABLE RELIABLE DELIVERY OF DIGITAL DATA OVER UNRELIABLE COMMUNICATION CHANNELS
Error-detecting system; Redundancy check; Error control; Error correction; Error-detecting code; Error detection; Error detector; Error checking; Error-correction; Error Control Coding; Error Correction; Error detecting code; Error Checking and Correcting; Error correction and detection; Error Detection; Error coding; Error detection code; Error recovery; Error-correcting; Error detection coding; Error detection & correction; EDAC (Linux); Bluesmoke (Linux); Error checking and correcting
<algorithm, storage> (EDAC, or "error checking and correction", ECC) A collection of methods to detect errors in transmitted or stored data and to correct them. This is done in many ways, all of them involving some form of coding. The simplest form of error detection is a single added {parity bit} or a cyclic redundancy check. Multiple parity bits can not only detect that an error has occurred, but also which bits have been inverted, and should therefore be re-inverted to restore the original data. The more extra bits are added, the greater the chance that multiple errors will be detectable and correctable. Several codes can perform Single Error Correction, Double Error Detection (SECDEC). One of the most commonly used is the Hamming code. At the other technological extreme, cuniform texts from about 1500 B.C. which recorded the dates when Venus was visible, were examined on the basis of contained redundancies (the dates of appearance and disappearance were suplemented by the length of time of visibility) and "the worst data set ever seen" by [Huber, Zurich] was corrected. RAM which includes EDAC circuits is known as {error correcting memory} (ECM). [Wakerly, "Error Detecting Codes", North Holland 1978]. [Hamming, "Coding and Information Theory", 2nd Ed, Prentice Hall 1986]. (1995-03-14)
Pilot error         
  • Map of the [[Linate Airport disaster]] caused by taking the wrong taxiing route (red instead of green), as control tower had not given clear instructions. The accident occurred in thick fog.
  • publisher=Go Flight Medicine}}</ref> Due to several misunderstandings, the KLM flight tried to take off while the Pan Am flight was still on the runway. The airport was accommodating an unusually large number of commercial airliners, resulting in disruption of the normal use of taxiways.
  • Multiple sources of information can be taken from one interface here, known as the PFD, or primary flight display from which pilots receive all of the most important data readings
  • A military pilot reads the pre-flight checklist prior the mission. Checklists ensure that pilots are able to follow operational procedure and aids in memory recall.
  • Actual flight path (red) of [[TWA Flight 3]] from departure to crash point ([[controlled flight into terrain]]). Blue line shows the nominal Las Vegas course, while green is a typical course from Boulder. The pilot inadvertently used the Boulder outbound course instead of the appropriate Las Vegas course.
DECISION, ACTION OR INACTION BY A PILOT OF AN AIRCRAFT
Cockpit error; Pilot Error
Pilot error generally refers to an accident in which an action or decision made by the pilot was the cause or a contributing factor that led to the accident, but also includes the pilot's failure to make a correct decision or take proper action.Pilot’s Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge (2016).
Error detection and correction         
TECHNIQUES THAT ENABLE RELIABLE DELIVERY OF DIGITAL DATA OVER UNRELIABLE COMMUNICATION CHANNELS
Error-detecting system; Redundancy check; Error control; Error correction; Error-detecting code; Error detection; Error detector; Error checking; Error-correction; Error Control Coding; Error Correction; Error detecting code; Error Checking and Correcting; Error correction and detection; Error Detection; Error coding; Error detection code; Error recovery; Error-correcting; Error detection coding; Error detection & correction; EDAC (Linux); Bluesmoke (Linux); Error checking and correcting
In information theory and coding theory with applications in computer science and telecommunication, error detection and correction (EDAC) or error control are techniques that enable reliable delivery of digital data over unreliable communication channels. Many communication channels are subject to channel noise, and thus errors may be introduced during transmission from the source to a receiver.

Википедия

Framing error

Framing error can refer to the following:

  • General form of a framing error is the result of starting to read a sequence of data at the wrong point.
  • In serial communications, a framing error is the result of reading a data frame -- a string of symbols which are grouped in blocks -- at the wrong starting point. The symbols are bits and the blocks are bytes, ten bits in asynchronous transmission and eight in synchronous. A framing error in an asynchronous stream usually recovers quickly, but a framing error in a synchronous stream produces gibberish at the end of the packet. Framing errors can be detected with parity bits.
  • In genetics, a framing error (also called a frameshift or a frameshift mutation) is a mutation that inserts or deletes a single nucleotide from a DNA sequence. Due to the triplet nature of gene expression, the insertion/deletion can disrupt the grouping of the codons, resulting in a completely different translation from the original.
  • In psychology, the framing effect (psychology) is an example of cognitive bias in which people react to a particular choice in different ways depending on how it is presented. Cognitive errors as a result of this bias are commonly called framing errors.