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scaling The breaking away of a hardened concrete surface, usually to a depth off/IS' to 3/16'.
Ãâó: www.moxie-intl.com/glossary.htm
scaling Altering the spatial resolution of a single image to increase or reduce the size; or altering the temporal resolution of an image sequence to increase or decrease the rate of display. Techniques include decimation, interpolation, motion compensation, replication, resampling, and subsampling. Most scaling methods introduce artifacts.
Ãâó: www.dvd-makers.com/public/468.cfm
scaling Scaling is changing the size of an image without changing its shape. Scaling may be required when the image size does not fit the display device. An example of scaling down would be to take a 640 x 480 resolution TV image and display it as a smaller picture on the same screen, so that multiple pictures can be shown at the same time. (Such as with picture-in-picture, PIP. ...
Ãâó: www.pricedrightllc.com/id30.html
scaling On an Arithmetic (Linear) scale chart, the spacing between each point on the vertical scale is identical. Thus the vertical distance between 10 and 20 is the same as the vertical distance between 90 and 100. See ChartSchool article on price scaling.
Ãâó: www.stockcharts.com/education/GlossaryA.html
scaling The process of drawing a figure either enlarged or reduced in size from its original size. Usually the scale is given, as on a map 1 inch equals 10 miles.
Ãâó: www.dpi.state.wi.us/dpi/standards/mathglos.html
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