enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Weak entity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weak_entity

    The foreign key is typically a primary key of an entity it is related to. The foreign key is an attribute of the identifying (or owner, parent, or dominant) entity set. Each element in the weak entity set must have a relationship with exactly one element in the owner entity set, [1] and therefore, the relationship cannot be a many-to-many ...

  3. HTTP ETag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_ETag

    A strongly validating ETag match indicates that the content of the two resource representations is byte-for-byte identical and that all other entity fields (such as Content-Language) are also unchanged. Strong ETags permit the caching and reassembly of partial responses, as with byte-range requests.

  4. Entity-level control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entity-Level_Control

    Entity-level controls have a pervasive influence throughout an organization. If they are weak, inadequate, or nonexistent, they can produce material weaknesses relating to an audit of internal control and material misstatements in the financial statements of the company.

  5. Emergentism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergentism

    Emergentism distinguishes between two main types of emergence: weak and strong. Weak emergence: This type of emergence involves properties that can in principle be derived from the interactions of lower-level entities but are not immediately obvious. These properties are emergent in the sense that they are the result of complex interactions but ...

  6. Emergence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergence

    If not, a new entity is formed with new, emergent properties: this is called strong emergence, which it is argued cannot be simulated, analysed or reduced. [ citation needed ] David Chalmers writes that emergence often causes confusion in philosophy and science due to a failure to demarcate strong and weak emergence, which are "quite different ...

  7. Weak reference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weak_reference

    In computer programming, a weak reference is a reference that does not protect the referenced object from collection by a garbage collector, unlike a strong reference.An object referenced only by weak references – meaning "every chain of references that reaches the object includes at least one weak reference as a link" – is considered weakly reachable, and can be treated as unreachable and ...

  8. Situational strength - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Situational_strength

    A meta-analysis was performed by Bowling et al. to test the relationship of situational strength between job satisfaction and job performance. The results of this were that constraints and consequences both led to a negative relationship. Job satisfaction and job performance were more related to each other in strong versus weak situations.

  9. Supervenience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supervenience

    Local supervenience comes in strong and weak varieties: Weak: For any world w, and for any two objects x in w and y in w, if x and y are base-indiscernible, they are supervenient-indiscernible. Strong: For any worlds w1 and w2, and for any two objects x in w1 and y in w2, if x and y are base-indiscernible, they are supervenient-indiscernible.