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1 primary key
"One or more fields that uniquely identify each record in a table. In the same way that a license plate number identifies a car, the primary key uniquely identifies a record." -
2 service principal name
The name by which a client uniquely identifies an instance of a service. It is usually built from the DNS name of the host. The SPN is used in the process of mutual authentication between the client and the server hosting a particular service. -
3 SPN
The name by which a client uniquely identifies an instance of a service. It is usually built from the DNS name of the host. The SPN is used in the process of mutual authentication between the client and the server hosting a particular service. -
4 IP address
"A binary number that uniquely identifies a host (computer) connected to the Internet to other Internet hosts, for the purposes of communication through the transfer of packets." -
5 class key
The subset of data members of a class whose values uniquely identify an instance of the class. -
6 distinguished name
"A name that uniquely identifies an object by using the relative distinguished name for the object, plus the names of container objects and domains that contain the object. The distinguished name identifies the object as well as its location in a tree. Every object in Active Directory has a distinguished name." -
7 Uniform Resource Locator
"An address that uniquely identifies a location on the Internet. A URL is usually preceded by http://, as in http://www.microsoft.com. A URL can contain more detail, such as the name of a page of hypertext, often with the file name extension.html or.htm." -
8 URL
"An address that uniquely identifies a location on the Internet. A URL is usually preceded by http://, as in http://www.microsoft.com. A URL can contain more detail, such as the name of a page of hypertext, often with the file name extension.html or.htm." -
9 web address
"An address that uniquely identifies a location on the Internet. A URL is usually preceded by http://, as in http://www.microsoft.com. A URL can contain more detail, such as the name of a page of hypertext, often with the file name extension.html or.htm." -
10 window handle
A handle that uniquely identifies a window. -
11 programmatic identifier
"An identifier in the form OLEServerName.ObjectName (for example, Excel.Sheet or PowerPoint.Slide) that's used by the Windows registry to uniquely identify an object."معرّف برمجي -
12 ProgID
"An identifier in the form OLEServerName.ObjectName (for example, Excel.Sheet or PowerPoint.Slide) that's used by the Windows registry to uniquely identify an object." -
13 Stop message
"A character-based, full-screen error message displayed on a blue background. A Stop message indicates that the Windows kernel detected a condition from which it cannot recover. Each message is uniquely identified by a Stop error code (a hexadecimal number) and a string indicating the errors symbolic name. Stop messages are usually followed by up to four additional hexadecimal numbers, enclosed in parentheses, which identify developer-defined error parameters. A driver or device may be identified as the cause of the error. A series of troubleshooting tips are also displayed, along with an indication that, if the system was configured to do so, a memory dump file was saved for later use by a kernel debugger." -
14 global trade identification number
"A 14-digit data structure used to uniquely identify trade items, products, and services at a unit level."English-Arabic terms dictionary > global trade identification number
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15 GTIN
"A 14-digit data structure used to uniquely identify trade items, products, and services at a unit level." -
16 serial shipping container code
A standardized 18-digit label that uniquely identifies each unit to be transported or stored.English-Arabic terms dictionary > serial shipping container code
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17 SSCC
A standardized 18-digit label that uniquely identifies each unit to be transported or stored. -
18 sales tax code
"A user-defined code that uniquely identifies a specific sales tax and defines its characteristics, such as the percentage or amount, tax authority, terms of payment, and ledger accounts used for posting." -
19 MAC address
"A 12-digit hexadecimal address that is preprogrammed into a computer's network adapter, and that uniquely identifies that computer on the network." -
20 SRK
"On a system that incorporates a TPM, a cryptographic asymmetric key which is created at the root of the TPM key hierarchy (2048-bit RSA key) and which is used by the TPM to store protected data. The private portion of this key never leaves the TPM. The public part of this key is returned to the owner and needs to be carefully guarded since it uniquely identifies the TPM on the network, therefore is privacy sensitive."
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См. также в других словарях:
uniquely — index particularly Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
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uniquely — unique ► ADJECTIVE 1) being the only one of its kind; unlike anything else. 2) (unique to) belonging or connected to (one particular person, group, or place). 3) remarkable or unusual. DERIVATIVES uniquely adverb uniqueness noun. ORI … English terms dictionary
uniquely — adverb so as to be unique (Freq. 4) he could determine uniquely the properties of the compound • Syn: ↑unambiguously • Derived from adjective: ↑unique … Useful english dictionary
Uniquely colorable graph — In graph theory, a uniquely colorable graph is a k chromatic graph that has only one possible (proper) k coloring up to permutation of the colors. Example 1 . A minimal imperfect graph is a graph in which every subgraph is perfect. The deletion… … Wikipedia
Uniquely Inversible Grammar — A uniquely inversible grammar is a formal grammar where no two distinct productions give the same result. This implies the specific production can be inferred from its results. Formal definition A o alpha and B o eta iff (A B Rightarrow alpha… … Wikipedia
Uniquely — Unique U*nique , a. [F. unique; cf. It. unico; from L. unicus, from unus one. See {One}.] Being without a like or equal; unmatched; unequaled; unparalleled; single in kind or excellence; sole. {U*nique ly}, adv. {U*nique ness}, n. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
uniquely — adverb see unique … New Collegiate Dictionary