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  2. Data loading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_loading

    Data loading, or simply loading, is a part of data processing where data is moved between two systems so that it ends up in a staging area on the target system.. With the traditional extract, transform and load (ETL) method, the load job is the last step, and the data that is loaded has already been transformed.

  3. Extract, transform, load - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extract,_transform,_load

    Extract, transform, load (ETL) is a three-phase computing process where data is extracted from an input source, transformed (including cleaning), and loaded into an output data container.

  4. Iteratee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iteratee

    Iteratees were created due to problems with existing purely functional solutions to the problem of making input/output composable yet correct. Lazy I/O in Haskell allowed pure functions to operate on data on disk as if it were in memory, without explicitly doing I/O at all after opening the file - a kind of memory-mapped file feature - but because it was impossible in general (due to the ...

  5. Iterator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iterator

    Specifically, the for loop will call a value's into_iter() method, which returns an iterator that in turn yields the elements to the loop. The for loop (or indeed, any method that consumes the iterator), proceeds until the next() method returns a None value (iterations yielding elements return a Some(T) value, where T is the element type).

  6. Loop-level parallelism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loop-level_parallelism

    Loop-level parallelism is a form of parallelism in software programming that is concerned with extracting parallel tasks from loops.The opportunity for loop-level parallelism often arises in computing programs where data is stored in random access data structures.

  7. Iteration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iteration

    In mathematics, iteration may refer to the process of iterating a function, i.e. applying a function repeatedly, using the output from one iteration as the input to the next. Iteration of apparently simple functions can produce complex behaviors and difficult problems – for examples, see the Collatz conjecture and juggler sequences .

  8. Iterated function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iterated_function

    The functions below the (blue) sine are six integral iterates below it, starting with the second iterate (red) and ending with the 64th iterate. The green envelope triangle represents the limiting null iterate, the sawtooth function serving as the starting point leading to the sine function. The dashed line is the negative first iterate, i.e ...

  9. Relocation (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relocation_(computing)

    Relocation is the process of assigning load addresses for position-dependent code and data of a program and adjusting the code and data to reflect the assigned addresses. [1] [2] Prior to the advent of multiprocess systems, and still in many embedded systems, the addresses for objects are absolute starting at a known location, often zero.