| parity2 |
equality; close correspondence or similarity.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| parity |
is a form of data protection used by RAID level 5 to recreate the data of a failed drive in a disk array. [top]
Ãâó: www.usbman.com/glossarycomputerterms.htm
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| parity |
A nucleus or particle has odd (-) or even (+) parity according to whether or not its wave function changes sign when all of the space coordinates are changed.
Ãâó: ie.lbl.gov/education/glossary/Glossary.htm
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| parity |
The quality of being either odd or even. The fact that all numbers have a parity is commonly used in data communications to ensure the validity of data. This is called parity checking.
Ãâó: bugclub.org/glossary.html
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| parity |
Statistical parity is the objective of affirmative efforts. Parity is achieved when the percentage of women and minorities in the work force of an organization matches the percentages of protected calls members available in the labor force.
Ãâó: www.usma.edu/EEO/eeo_terminology.htm
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