tamamlik

listen to the pronunciation of tamamlik
Turkish - English
completeness
{n} perfection, a perfect state
(logic) an attribute of a logical system that is so constituted that a contradiction arises if any proposition is introduced that cannot be derived from the axioms of the system
A (logical) language is said to be complete if and only if all the formulas in the language that must be true (in any world in which the axioms of the language are true) can be proved from the axioms Godel's incompleteness theorem shows that any language in which the truths of basic arithmetic can be formualted cannot be complete (unless the number of axions is infinite)
Used to score a UP A complete UP will have a conditions phrase, stem, Key Verb Phrase, Purpose, Fuzzy situation parameters and a conditions phrase
the state or condition of being complete
is the amount of valid data actually obtained as a fraction of that which could have been obtained (GVRD, 1993)
How much of the newspaper consumers read in an average weekday and Sunday One of three elements comprising the Reader Behavior Score, along with time and frequency
{i} wholeness, perfection, state of being complete; state of being completed
"The amount of valid data obtained compared to the planned amount, and [it is] usually expressed as a percentage; a data quality indicator" (QAMS 1993, 6)
Concept of the adequacy of a formal system that is employed both in proof theory and in model theory (see logic). In proof theory, a formal system is said to be syntactically complete if and only if every closed sentence in the system is such that either it or its negation is provable in the system. In model theory, a formal system is said to be semantically complete if and only if every theorem of the system is provable in the system
A measure of the amount of valid data obtained from a measurement system compared to the amount that was expected to be obtained under routine operating conditions
An indication of how much of a published run is held Completeness is indicated in ranges, for example, Complete (95% 100% held), Incomplete (50%-94% held), Scattered (less than 50% held)
the degree to which all necessary parts of a work product exist and are included
A measure of the amount of valid data obtained from a measurement system compared to the amount that was expected to be obtained under correct, normal conditions
A promise made by a system that it will supply all true (or relevant) information Trivially (and not very interestingly) accomplished by providing all information, whether true or not Contrast soundness
A characteristic of information quality measuring the degree to which all required data is known (1) Fact completeness is a measure of data definitions quality expressed as a percentage of the attributes about an entity type that need to be known to assure that they are defined in the model and implemented in the database (2)Value completeness is a measure of data content quality expressed as a percentage of the columns or fields of a table or file that should have values in them, in fact do so
The state of being complete
the state of being complete and entire; having everything that is needed
tamamlik
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