OnlineWoerterBuecher.de
Internes

Lexikon


British Library Method


Brute force searching. According to legends circulating in the 1970s, in the British Library books are searched for by examining each book sequentially in the first shelf, then the next shelf, continuing until the book is found or the entire library has been searched. The term was referred to in a Dutch coursebook, "Inleiding In De Informatica" (Introduction to Informatics) from a course given by C.H.A. Koster and Th.A. Zoethout. This was based on a course given at the TU Berlin. [Reference?] (1999-04-14)

In addition suitable contents:
[ = ] [ al ] [ algorithm ] [ am ] [ an ] [ ar ] [ arc ] [ as ] [ at ] [ B ] [ b ] [ ba ] [ base ] [ be ] [ bo ] [ br ] [ by ] [ C ] [ ca ] [ cc ] [ ch ] [ ci ] [ co ] [ con ] [ cu ] [ D ] [ ding ] [ du ] [ ed ] [ ee ] [ eg ] [ er ] [ et ] [ fi ] [ file ] [ fo ] [ for ] [ fr ] [ ge ] [ gen ] [ gi ] [ h ] [ hing ] [ hm ] [ hr ] [ id ] [ il ] [ in ] [ io ] [ ir ] [ is ] [ it ] [ K ] [ la ] [ Lex ] [ li ] [ library ] [ ly ] [ ma ] [ mo ] [ mod ] [ module ] [ na ] [ nc ] [ ne ] [ nf ] [ ng ] [ ni ] [ nl ] [ nu ] [ om ] [ ph ] [ query ] [ rc ] [ re ] [ rl ] [ ro ] [ ru ] [ se ] [ sh ] [ shelf ] [ st ] [ T ] [ tc ] [ th ] [ to ] [ tr ] [ ve ] [ Z ]






Go Back ]

Free On-line Dictionary of Computing

Copyright © by OnlineWoerterBuecher.de - (3694 Reads)

All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner.

Page Generation in 0.0869 Seconds, with 16 Database-Queries
Zurück zur Startseite