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Record
(redirected from three-dimensional record)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
record
(1) Pronounced "reck-erd," a group of related fields that store data about a subject (master record) or activity (transaction record). A collection of records make up a file.

Master records contain permanent data, such as account number, and variable data, such as balance due. Transaction records contain only permanent data, such as quantity and product code. See master file and transaction file for examples of record contents.

(2) Pronounced "reck-erd," a block of data read and written at one time without any relationship to records in a file as in definition #1 above. This usage applies to some, but not all, disk organization methods.

(3) Pronounced "ruh-kord," to capture audio or video onto a magnetic tape, magnetic disk or solid state memory.

(4) Pronounced "reck-erd," an analog audio recording pressed into a vinyl disc, although early 78 RPM records were a mixture of shellac, cotton, slate and wax. These records are known as "phonograph records" or "gramophone records." See LP.
record
1. a written account of some transaction that serves as legal evidence of the transaction
2. a written official report of the proceedings of a court of justice or legislative body, including the judgments given or enactments made
3. a list of crimes of which an accused person has previously been convicted, which are known to the police but may only be disclosed to a court in certain circumstances
4. have a record to be a known criminal; have a previous conviction or convictions
5. a thin disc of a plastic material upon which sound has been recorded. Each side has a spiral groove, which undulates in accordance with the frequency and amplitude of the sound. Records were formerly made from a shellac-based compound but were later made from vinyl plastics
6. Computing a group of data or piece of information preserved as a unit in machine-readable form
7. (in some computer languages) a data structure designed to allow the handling of groups of related pieces of information as though the group was a single entity

record [′rekĀ·ərd]
(computer science)
A group of adjacent data items in a computer system, manipulated as a unit. Also known as entity.
(science and technology)
To preserve for later reproduction or reference.

(data, database, programming)record - An ordered set of fields, usually stored contiguously. The term is used with similar meaning in several different contexts. In a file, a "record" probably has some fixed length, in contrast to a "line" which may have any length and is terminated by some End Of Line sequence). A database record is also called a "row". In a spreadsheet it is always called a "row". Some programming languages use the term to mean a type composed of fields of several other types (C calls this a "struct").

In all these cases, a record represents an entity with certain field values.

Fields may be of a fixed width (bits or characters) or they may be separated by a delimiter character, often comma (CSV) or HT (TSV).

In a database the list of values of a given field from all records is called a column.

Record 

(Russian, protokol), in the USSR (1) an official document stating that an administrative violation has been committed; (2) a document giving an account of the course and results of procedural actions during the investigation of a criminal case; or (3) a document stating the proceedings of a court. The law defines the essential elements of a record and the requirements for compiling it.

An administrative record is compiled either by authorized officials (for example, militia officers or sanitary inspectors) or by representatives of the public (such as public controllers). It includes information about the offender, the nature, place, and time of the violation, and the witnesses. The record is signed by the person who drew it up, the person who committed the administrative violation, witnesses, and victims. The person against whom the record is directed has the right to add explanations and relevant comments in his own hand. The record is then sent to an administrative commission or other agency authorized to hear cases of administrative violations.

The record of an act of investigation is compiled by an investigator or person conducting an inquiry. Such a record states where, when, by whom, at what time of day, and with whose participation the investigative act was performed. It also indicates the type of act of investigation (interrogation, search, inspection, confrontation), what it revealed, and the content of the testimony (explanations) given by participants in the act of investigation. The record is read to all the participants in the act of investigation and is signed by them; remarks made at this time concerning its content are also entered in the record.

The record of a court session is kept by the secretary of the session and signed by the secretary as well as the person presiding at the session. The record states the place and date of the session, the time the session began and ended, the name and composition of the court, and the like. If a recording was used during the court session or if photographs or films were made, this information is entered in the record, and the recording, negatives and prints, or films are appended to the record. Participants in a court hearing have the right to add their remarks within three days after the record has been signed. Appellate and supervisory courts, which verify the legality and grounds of a judgment (decision), base their judgments concerning the proceedings of the court hearing on the record of the court session. Consequently, an incomplete or inaccurate record may result in a judicial error. The absence of a record entails the unconditional annulment of a court’s judgment or decision.



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A research project is proposed in partnership with Durham University, which will use computer design techniques to make a three-dimensional record of the old timber-framed buildings.
The more than 200 luxurious and superbly crafted objects on view range from jewelry to clocks, watches, vanity cases, cigarette boxes, and other accessories, and include design drawings and recently discovered original plaster casts, used as three-dimensional records by the firm.
The TouchLock II verification system matches the touch of a finger against a unique three-dimensional record stored in the bank's employee fingerprint database and provides an audit trail indicating exactly which staff member has authorized a particular transaction," he said.
 
 
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