encoder

listen to the pronunciation of encoder
İngilizce - İngilizce
A device used to encode a signal either for cryptography or compression
A device that converts linear or rotary displacement into digital or pulse signals The most popular type of encoder is the optical encoder, which uses a rotating disk with alternating opaque areas, a light source, and a photodetector
a system that maintains constraints between attributes of a concept and properties of the grapheme representing it
  See analog-to-digital converter
Displays aircraft's altitiude on ground-based radar screens
program that converts a WAV file into an MP3 file
1 On a telescope, a device for digitizing the position or rotation of a moving part, i e for reading the mechanical position of that part of the telescope structure into a numerical control system 2 In computing, a facility that encodes data to achieve compression, in contrast to a decoder, which decompresses data
The part of a CODEC that converts the audio into numbers and then mathematically compresses it
A digital circuit that takes one data input and provides equivalent output in binary or other number base, thus functioning in the opposite manner of a decoder
feedback device that utilizes an optical source and sensor to provide velocity and position information in the form of a digital signal; not readily adaptable to different environments
Circuit that converts information such as a decimal number or an alphabetic character into some coded form For example, circuit that coverts digits 0 through 9 to a binary code
The electromechanical device, which contains a means for measuring distance traveled along a magnetic stripe, used to produce flux reversals at specified locations along the stripe
A device that generates signals to a pager
(sensor) - a device that converts a linear or rotary displacement into digital representation
Component of the communication process in which information is translated from one form into another In speech, to encode is to translate ideas into spoken words A telephone mouthpiece serves as an encoder as it translates spoken sounds into electrical impulses
A program to compress digital audio data If you wanted to compress WAV´s into MP3´s or LiquidAudio you would have to use an encoder MPeX net Encoder
Apparatus consisting of a measuring standard and a scanning unit (transducer, sensor)
{i} person or thing that converts messages into code
A feedback device which converts mechanical motion into electronic signals Usually an encoder is a rotary device that outputs digital pulses which correspond to incremental angular motion The encoder consists of a glass or metal wheel with alternating clear and opaque stripes that are detected by optical sensors to produce the digital outputs
Equiment that converts a baseband analog input into a digital data stream
A feedback device which converts mechanical motion into electronic signals Usually an encoder is a rotary device which outputs digital pulses which correspond to incremental angular motion Example: A 1000 line encoder produces 1000 pulses every mechanical revolution The encoder consists of a glass or metal wheel with alternating clear and opaque stripes which are detected by optical sensors to produce the digital outputs
A speed–sensing device which outputs a frequency of pulses proportional to the measured line speed
A feedback device that translated mechanical motion into an electronic signal or combination of signals (pulses) Field Motor field windings provide the magnetic field, located in the stator of DC shunt-wound motor, which interacts with the armature field to produce torque PM motors use magnets, instead of windings, to produce the stator field
(n ) A facility that encodes data for the purpose of achieving data compression Frequently, the data to be encoded is video data, but other types of data, including audio, can be compressed as well Contrast with decoder See also cell encoding, data compression, entropy coding, H 261 encoding, hierarchical encoding, predictive encoding, run-length encoding, sequential encoding
A device that encodes the signal before transmission
Software used to convert a file from a computer sound file to an MP3 file
technology for position sensors The function principle is counting of pulses (incremental) or comparing of patterns (absolute)
ENCODE
ENCyclopedia of DNA Elements; a catalogue of all the functional elements, encoded in the human genome
encode
The process of translating sound into symbols Encoding is the opposite of decoding Spelling requires encoding whereas reading requires decoding (Hall & Moats, 1999)
encode
Translation of messages into symbols that the computer understands
encode
To render permanently incoherent
encode
To convert source information into another form
encode
To change a message into symbols or a form that can be transmitted by a communication system
encode
To convert data into a different format, usually for the purpose of transferring it easily
encode
To apply code, usually before machine processing or data transmission
encode
To convert data into a form which may be processed by a computer
encode
To convert data to a special format that is easier to transfer Examples are BinHex for FTP and Uuencode for Usenet newsgroups
encode
The process by which sampled audio is prepared for VariPhrase manipulation
encode
convert ordinary language into code; "We should encode the message for security reasons"
encode
To convert plain text into code
encode
Convert data to machine-readable format The three steps in converting an analog signal to a digital signal are sampling, quantizing, and encoding
encode
Process of translating a message into a form that can then be transmitted to a receiver (see also decode) (See 9)
encode
Convert one music file type into another Most commonly, CD tracks are encoded as MP3 files
encode
In general, to produce a string of symbols or numbers corresponding to an input value Particularly on the Internet, to produce a file that can be stored and transmitted using the Internet's usual routines from a file containing a data type the system isn't set up to handle Encoding is necessary because parts of the Internet, such as the mail system and Usenet newsgroups, were set up expecting only text files In order to transmit programs, spreadsheets, and other formatted files that might contain characters not allowed in text, as well as Macintosh files that contain multiple parts (forks), the files must be converted to a form that looks like text You then convert the files back to the original form as you download them, or you use a decoding utility afterwards For PC files and Unix programs, the most popular form of encoding is UUencoding For Macintosh files, it's BinHex To convert an analog signal, such as normal video, to its digital equivalent To "digitize" a signal
encode
To turn the original message into the encoded message
encode
The term used to describe the translation of information, such as text or photographs, into binary code
encode
The compressing of a file (See "Compression") Encoding converts digital media files into stream-ready files and live feeds into streams Stream encoding adds indexed or "hinted" tracks that tell the streaming server how to package the media for transmission over the network
encode
To convert a message, file, or information into code
encode
To convert data characters into bar code symbol characters
encode
To convert plain text into a different form by means of a code
encode
If you encode a message or some information, you put it into a code or express it in a different form or system of language. The two parties encode confidential data in a form that is not directly readable by the other party decode. to put a message or other information into code   decode, decipher decipher
encode
convert ordinary language into code; "We should encode the message for security reasons
encode
Conversion of information into a code
encode
To convert (a character, routine, or program) into machine language
encode
To convert an audio or video stream into a specific file format for use with media players and web browsers
encode
Convert data to a form that is suitable for entry into a computer
encode
To represent information in some form in the memory system (p 236)
encode
To represent one set of values using another set of values, by constructing a mapping between them
encode
{f} encrypt, convert a message into code (especially a secret code); put data into digital form (Computers)
encoders
plural of encoder
encoder

    Heceleme

    en·cod·er

    Telaffuz

    Etimoloji

    [ in-'kOd, en- ] (transitive verb.) circa 1919. to encode + -er