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state
(redirected from Theories of state)

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.
state: see government government, system of social control under which the right to make laws, and the right to enforce them, is vested in a particular group in society. There are many classifications of government.
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state

Political organization of society, or the body politic, or, more narrowly, the institutions of government. The state is distinguished from other social groups by its purpose (establishment of order and security), methods (its laws and their enforcement), territory (its area of jurisdiction), and sovereignty. In some countries (e.g., the U.S.), the term also refers to nonsovereign political units subject to the authority of the larger state, or federal union.


state

(1) In object-oriented programming, the state of an object is the combination of the original values in the object plus any modifications made to them.

(2) The current or last-known status, or condition, of a process, transaction or setting. "Maintaining state" or "managing state" means keeping track of the process. This is an issue on the Web, because the HTTP protocol does not maintain state between one page request and the next. A Web site needs to keep track of customers that fill a shopping cart with an item, wander off to another page and then come back to complete the order. Likewise, Webmasters like to analyze the routes users take when visiting their sites. In order to maintain state in a stateless environment, cookie files and server protocols such as NSAPI and ISAPI are used.

Maintaining State with Voice Calls
Because everything is chopped into packets by the network, maintaining "state" is also an issue when voice is carried over the Internet (voice over IP). Techniques are devised to simulate the end-to-end connection of a regular telephone call that would "maintain the state of the call." This would readily allow the call to be barged in on, a requirement in certain call centers as well as for emergencies. See cookie, stateless, IP telephony signaling protocol, Web bug, NSAPI and ISAPI.


state
1. a sovereign political power or community
2. the territory occupied by such a community
3. the sphere of power in such a community
4. one of a number of areas or communities having their own governments and forming a federation under a sovereign government, as in the US
5. the body politic of a particular sovereign power, esp as contrasted with a rival authority such as the Church
www.sosig.ac.uk/roads/subject-listing/World-cat/state.html

state [stāt]
(control systems)
A minimum set of numbers which contain enough information about a system's history to enable its future behavior to be computed.
(physics)
The condition of a system which is specified as completely as possible by observations of a specified nature, for example, thermodynamic state, energy state.
(quantum mechanics)
The condition in which a system exists; the state may be pure and describable by a wave function or mixed and describable by a density matrix.

(storage, architecture, jargon, theory)state - How something is; its configuration, attributes, condition, or information content. The state of a system is usually temporary (i.e. it changes with time) and volatile (i.e. it will be lost or reset to some initial state if the system is switched off).

A state may be considered to be a point in some space of all possible states. A simple example is a light, which is either on or off. A complex example is the electrical activation in a human brain while solving a problem.

In computing and related fields, states, as in the light example, are often modelled as being discrete (rather than continuous) and the transition from one state to another is considered to be instantaneous. Another (related) property of a system is the number of possible states it may exhibit. This may be finite or infinite. A common model for a system with a finite number of discrete state is a finite state machine.


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In places where Marxism was highly revered, other theories of state management were combated and discredited, and vice versa.
 
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