Unit 6 Vocab
Bit - shorthand for binary digit.
Binary digit - either 0 or 1.
Binary base - uses only combinations of the digits zero and one.
Byte - 8 bits.
Decimal base - uses only combinations of the digits 0 β 9.
Abstraction - the process of reducing complexity by focusing on the main idea; by hiding details irrelevant to the question at hand and bringing together related and useful details, it reduces complexity and allows one to focus on the idea.
Analog data - values that change smoothly, rather than in discrete intervals, over time (ex: pitch and volume of music, colors of a painting, or the position of a sprinter during a race).
Sampling technique - measuring values of the analog signal at regular intervals called samples.
Samples - measured to figure out the exact bits required to store each sample.
Data compression - reduces the size (number of bits) of transmitted or stored data.
Lossless - data compression algorithms that can usually reduce the number of bits stored or transmitted while guaranteeing complete reconstruction of the original data.
Lossy - data compression algorithms that can significantly reduce the number of bits stored or transmitted but only allow reconstruction of an approximation of the original data.
Information - the collection of facts and patterns extracted from data.
Metadata - data about data (ex: the date of creation or the file size of an image).
Cleaning data - a process that makes the data uniform without changing their meaning (e.g. replacing all equivalent abbreviations, spellings, and capitalizations with the same word).
Overflow error - an error that occurs when a computer attempts to handle a number that is outside of the defined range of values.