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database |
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databaseCollection of data or information organized for rapid search and retrieval, especially by a computer. Databases are structured to facilitate storage, retrieval, modification, and deletion of data in conjunction with various data-processing operations. A database consists of a file or set of files that can be broken down into records, each of which consists of one or more fields. Fields are the basic units of data storage. Users retrieve database information primarily through queries. Using keywords and sorting commands, users can rapidly search, rearrange, group, and select the field in many records to retrieve or create reports on particular aggregates of data according to the rules of the database management system being used. databaseA set of related files that is created and managed by a database management system (DBMS). Today, DBMSs can manage any form of data including text, images, sound and video. Database and file structures are always determined by the software. As far as the hardware is concerned, it's all bits and bytes.
database Computing a systematized collection of data that can be accessed immediately and manipulated by a data-processing system for a specific purpose database [′dad·ə‚bās] (computer science) A nonredundant collection of interrelated data items that can be shared and used by several different subsystems.
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| Leaders must design and implement databased, customer-focused, strategic planning processes that involve staff in order to increase staff commitment to engage in the many new efforts that will have the most important strategic impact on outcomes for customers. A reader stumbles through a badly lighted labyrinth far from the equally databased, technically more sophisticated, and much more vivifying worlds of recent, relevant (and here uncited) monographs by Samuel Cohn on French miners' strikes 1890-1935, Roberto Franzosi on Italian postwar industrial conflict, and Olivier Fillieule on French demonstrations 1979-1993. In fact, that type of user (mainframe, custom-programmed, databased and long-term) will be financially set back to the tune of billions of dollars. |
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