düz kütük

listen to the pronunciation of düz kütük
Turkish - English
(Bilgisayar) flat file
A data file containing usually one record per line

When the flat file became unmanageable, we switched to a proper database system.

A text file Unlike many other systems, standard UNIX applications use text files instead of imposing particular formatting conventions on the document This results in much easier sharing of information between applications
A file that has no formatting In a relational database, a flat file is sometimes synonymous with a relation A flat file has no hierarchical structure
A database that consists of a single table Lightweight database programs such as the database component in Microsoft Works are sometimes called 'flat-file managers' (or list managers) because they can only handle single-table databases More powerful programs, such as FileMaker Pro, Access, Approach and Paradox, can handle multi-table databases, and are called relational database managers, or RDBMSs
Text file of customer records
(noun, database) A collection of records containing no data aggregates, nested repeated data items, or groups of data items
A collection of similar computer records in which each record on the file is the same as every other record in terms of importance or use
This term usually refers to a file that consists of
a file with two flat surfaces
A database structure with a single table The simplest form of database
Any file having fixed-record length, or in EDI, the file produced by EDI translation software to serve as input to the interface Usually has the same fields as the original file, but each field is expanded to its maximum length Does not have delimiters
An ASCII text file that usually means the contents of a database table saved in plain text format for conversion to another database Each row is one record from the database A table of 35,000 students would take 35,000 lines in a flat file, assuming all the variables were output in one line The example below has each field separated (or delimited) by the "pipe" symbol "|"
(See rectangular file )
an ASCII data file produced by a business application that is converted into ANSI ASC X12 format by translation software, and vice versa It typically uses fixed-length format rather than variable length ANSI ASC X12 format Also known as a User Defined File (UDF)
A database that contains all data in a large table
A database in ASCII format that separates records by a special character See also ASCII, database
An electronic record that is stripped of all specific application (program) formats This allows the data elements to be migrated into other applications for manipulation This mode of stripping electronic data prevents data loss due to hardware and proprietary software obsolescence
A database that consists of a single table Some database programs such as the database component in Microsoft Works are called 'flat-file managers' (or list managers) because they can only handle single-table databases More powerful programs, such as Access, Approach and Paradox, can handle multi-table databases, and are called relational database managers, or RDBMSs
A flat-file database keeps information organized in a structured manner, typically in one big file A desktop spreadsheet application is an example of a flat-file database management system These are useful for Web publishers preparing content because a large body of information can be assembled and then distributed in a consistent format Flat-file databases typically lack support for processing transactions (inserts and updates) from concurrent users Thus, collaboration or ecommerce Web sites generally rely on a relational database management system as a back-end
A computer file used to transfer information from one computer program to another based on fixed-length data fields rather than the variable length fields used in X12 or UN/EDIFACT formats See X12 and UN/EDIFACT
düz kütük
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