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  2. What are the differences between "manual", "guide" and...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/59224

    Agreeing with chessmath and choster, I'd like to add a few cents of my own. User documentation may refer to subject matter i.e. Project, Team, Test, System, Administrative, Marketing or Miscellaneous types.

  3. What is the difference between "guide" and "guideline"

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/170539/what-is-the-difference-between...

    Guideline: A statement or other indication of policy or procedure by which to determine a course of action. official guidelines for the prevention of flu. guidelines to the implementation of economic directives. Guide: Something that serves to direct or indicate. a shopper's guide ; guide to the use of electronic devices.

  4. "Iterate" vs. "Reiterate" - English Language & Usage Stack...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/140613/iterate-vs-reiterate

    2. Definition of iterate: to say or do again or again and again. Definition of reiterate: to state or do over again or repeatedly sometimes with wearying effect. The distinction seems to be that reiterate is conventionally used when the repeating of this thing is supplementary to the attempt to convey the point at hand.

  5. terminology - What does PROC mean? - Arqade

    gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/122163

    25. Apparently, there are several definitions available. 1) It stands for "Programmed Random OCcurence". This term pretty accurately describes the event itself, both its randomness and the fact there is some special effect. 2) Short for Procedure, or Special Procedure. Coming far back from the old text MUDs (Multi-user dungeons), it stands for ...

  6. A word to describe an excessively formal process or procedure

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/478545

    Merriam–Webster gives the second, and more distinctive, meaning of rigmarole as "a complex and ritualistic procedure that is characterized more by form than genuine meaning". It often applies to official procedures that, over a long period of time, have adapted to changing circumstances by accumulation, because no-one has had the authority to ...

  7. Stored procedure slow but queries fast? : r/SQLServer - Reddit

    www.reddit.com/r/SQLServer/comments/zanc8l/stored_procedure_slow_but_queries_fast

    I have an SSIS package that is taking 30-50 minutes on the 'pre-execute' phase when it's critical that it runs in 2-3 minutes. According to SQL Sentry all the time is spent on a stored procedure that the SSIS package is calling. The curious thing however is that there don't appear to be any excessively long running queries on the server when ...

  8. Apr 18, 2012 at 5:21. 1. @Verge, from the NOAD, convolute is a biology term meaning, "rolled longitudinally upon itself, as a leaf in the bud," while convolve is a rare word carrying the primary meaning, to "roll or coil together; entwine," and the secondary meaning in mathematics "combine (one function or series) with another by forming their ...

  9. Furthermore, there are only about 1,190 results for "break glass policy" and only about 400 results for "break glass procedure", so these terms are not used much anywhere. I would expect higher results even if they were widely used by the healthcare field.

  10. Run-time error ‘5’ – Invalid procedure call or argument

    www.reddit.com/r/MSAccess/comments/rdwubz/runtime_error_5_invalid_procedure...

    This community is for users of the FastLED library. A place to discuss and share your addressable LED pixel creations, ask for help, get updates, etc. Help your fellow community artists, makers and engineers out where you can.

  11. Is "Plannable" an English (UK) word?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/115247

    8. Is plannable, (e.g.: this task can be planned, it is plannable) an actual word in UK English? It's one I see used quite often (mostly in business scenarios, both spoken and in emails) but haven't been able to find in on-line dictionaries and is always underlined by spell-checkers. Research suggests that it's in fairly common usage although ...