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completenessRelationships Related Term: accuracy adequacy of documentation integrity reliability sufficiency n. ~ 1. The property of having every necessary step concluded with nothing wanting. - 2. The property [..]
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completenessCompleteness is the extent to which all statistics that are needed are available. It is usually described as a measure of the amount of available data from a statistical system compared to the amount [..]
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completenessThe second aspect of Aristotle's requirements for a tragedy. By completeness, Aristotle emphasizes the logic, wholeness, and closure necessary to satisfy the audience.
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completeness(NIST) The property that all necessary parts of the entity are included. Completeness of a product is often used to express the fact that all requirements have been met by the product. See: traceabili [..]
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completenessAn indication of how much of the published run of a serial title is held by a library, usually given in the holdings statement as: complete (95-100 percent held), incomplete (50-94 percent held), or s [..]
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completeness(n) the state of being complete and entire; having everything that is needed(n) (logic) an attribute of a logical system that is so constituted that a contradiction arises if any proposition is introd [..]
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completenessAn indication of how much of a published run of a serial is held. Completeness is indicated in ranges, for example, Complete (95%-100% held), Incomplete (50%-94% held), Scattered (less than 50% held).
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completeness
the state or condition of being complete
(logic) The property of a logical theory that whenever a wff is valid then it must also be a theorem. Symbolically, letting ''T'' represent a theory within [..]
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