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  2. Adjusting entries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adjusting_entries

    In accounting, adjusting entries are journal entries usually made at the end of an accounting period to allocate income and expenditure to the period in which they actually occurred. The revenue recognition principle is the basis of making adjusting entries that pertain to unearned and accrued revenues under accrual-basis accounting .

  3. Modifiable areal unit problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modifiable_areal_unit_problem

    For example, census data may be aggregated into county districts, census tracts, postcode areas, police precincts, or any other arbitrary spatial partition. Thus the results of data aggregation are dependent on the mapmaker's choice of which "modifiable areal unit" to use in their analysis.

  4. Economic bubble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_bubble

    A recent example is the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), signed into law by U.S. President George W. Bush on 3 October 2008 to provide a government bailout for many financial and non-financial institutions who speculated in high-risk financial instruments during the housing boom condemned by a 2005 story in The Economist titled "The ...

  5. Bubble chart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bubble_chart

    A bubble chart is a type of chart that displays three dimensions of data. Each entity with its triplet ( v 1 , v 2 , v 3 ) of associated data is plotted as a disk that expresses two of the v i values through the disk's xy location and the third through its size.

  6. Bubble sort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bubble_sort

    Bubble sort, sometimes referred to as sinking sort, is a simple sorting algorithm that repeatedly steps through the input list element by element, comparing the current element with the one after it, swapping their values if needed. These passes through the list are repeated until no swaps have to be performed during a pass, meaning that the ...

  7. Get breaking Business News and the latest corporate happenings from AOL. From analysts' forecasts to crude oil updates to everything impacting the stock market, it can all be found here.

  8. Cartographic generalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartographic_generalization

    During the first half of the 20th century, cartographers began to think seriously about how the features they drew depended on scale. Eduard Imhof, one of the most accomplished academic and professional cartographers at the time, published a study of city plans on maps at a variety of scales in 1937, itemizing several forms of generalization that occurred, including those later termed ...

  9. Pie chart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pie_chart

    Exploded pie chart for the example data (see below), with the largest party group exploded. A chart with one or more sectors separated from the rest of the disk is known as an exploded pie chart . This effect is used to either highlight a sector, or to highlight smaller segments of the chart with small proportions.