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  • Reference work
  • © 2001

Computer Science and Communications Dictionary

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Table of contents (21376 entries)

  1. Front Matter

  2. A

    1. a

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    2. A

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    3. A-AND-NOT-B gate

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    4. abandoned call

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    5. Abbe constant

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    6. abbreviated address

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    7. abbreviated-address calling

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    8. abbreviated addressing

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    9. abbreviated answer

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    10. abbreviated dialing

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    11. abbreviated title

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    12. abbreviation

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    13. abscissa

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    14. abduction

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    15. abductive inference

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 1-1
    16. abend

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 2-2
    17. aberration

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 2-2
    18. abnormal end

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 2-2
    19. abnormal end of task

      • Martin H. Weik
      Pages 2-2

About this book

The Computer Science and Communications Dictionary is the most comprehensive dictionary available covering both computer science and communications technology. A one-of-a-kind reference, this dictionary is unmatched in the breadth and scope of its coverage and is the primary reference for students and professionals in computer science and communications.
The Dictionary features over 20,000 entries and is noted for its clear, precise, and accurate definitions.
Users will be able to: Find up-to-the-minute coverage of the technology trends in computer science, communications, networking, supporting protocols, and the Internet; find the newest terminology, acronyms, and abbreviations available; and prepare precise, accurate, and clear technical documents and literature.

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