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signature
(redirected from Signiture)

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.03 sec.
signature, in music: see musical notation musical notation, symbols used to make a written record of musical sounds.

Two different systems of letters were used to write down the instrumental and the vocal music of ancient Greece. In his five textbooks on music theory Boethius (c.A.D. 470–A.D.
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signature

(1) See digital signature.

(2) A pattern used for matching. Also called a "fingerprint" or "definition." For example, antivirus companies maintain a database that contains the virus code (the signature) of each of the known viruses. To detect a virus, the antivirus program looks for these code strings in executable programs. Spyware blockers that look for spyware and adware also use signature patterns.

An intrusion detection system also uses signatures, which are patterns that suggest an attack. For example, excessive logins that failed or the execution of certain programs.

(3) A unique number built into hardware or software for identification.

(4) A group of printed pages used in the construction of a book or booklet. Typically comprising 16 or 32 pages, signatures may also be 8, 12, 24, 48 or 64 pages long. The signature is printed on one large sheet of paper in a certain "imposition" order that, when cut and folded, results in the correct page sequence. The signatures are then bound together to make the final product.


signature
2. US the part of a medical prescription that instructs a patient how frequently and in what amounts he should take a drug or agent

signature [′sig·nə·chər]
(electronics)
The characteristic pattern of a target as displayed by detection and classification equipment.
(graphic arts)
A folded, printed sheet, usually consisting of 16 or 32 pages, that forms a section of a book or a pamphlet; the sheet may have fewer pages, but is always in multiples of four.
(mathematics)
For a quadratic or Hermitian form, the number of positive coefficients minus the number of negative coefficients when the form is reduced by a linear transformation to a sum of squares of absolute values.
For a symmetric or Hermitian matrix, the number of positive entries minus the number of negative entries when the matrix is transformed to diagonal form.
(naval architecture)
The graphic record of the magnetic properties of a vessel automatically traced as the vessel passes over the sensitive element of a recording instrument; more accurately called magnetic signature.
(ordnance)
The identifying characteristics peculiar to each type of target which enable detecting apparatus, such as certain fuses, to sense and differentiate targets.
(quantum mechanics)
A quantum number α that characterizes a system with the symmetry of a prolate or oblate spheroid and satisfies the equationr = exp (-iπα), whereris the eigenvalue of the system under a rotation through 180° about an axis perpendicular to the symmetry axis.

1.signature - A set of function symbols with arities.
2.(messaging)signature - (Or sig) A few lines of information about the sender of an electronic mail message or news posting. Most Unix mail and news software will automagically append a signature from a file called .signature in the user's home directory to outgoing mail and news.

A signature should give your real name and your e-mail address since, though these appear in the headers of your messages, they may be munged by intervening software. It is currently (1994) hip to include the URL of your home page on the World-Wide Web in your sig.

The composition of one's sig can be quite an art form, including an ASCII logo or one's choice of witty sayings (see sig quote, fool file). However, large sigs are a waste of bandwidth, and it has been observed that the size of one's sig block is usually inversely proportional to one's prestige on the net.

See also doubled sig, sig virus.
3.(programming)signature - A concept very similar to abstract base classes except that they have their own hierarchy and can be applied to compiled classes. Signatures provide a means of separating subtyping and inheritance. They are implemented in C++ as patches to GCC 2.5.2 by Gerald Baumgartner <gb@cs.purdue.edu>.

ftp://ftp.cs.purdue.edu/pub/gb/.


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The new title will have a controlled circulation of 11,500 sellers of affluent and luxury travel, including agents/members of American Express, Ensemble Travel, Signiture Travel Network and Virtuoso.
Part 11 focuses on the issues surrounding compliance with 2lCFR Part 11, the FDA's regulation for electronic records and electronic signitures.
 
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