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  2. ClickHouse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ClickHouse

    For example, constant-length values are supported to avoid storing their length "number" next to the values. Linear scalability. It's possible to extend a cluster by adding servers. Fault tolerance. The system is a cluster of shards, where each shard is a group of replicas. ClickHouse uses asynchronous multi-master replication.

  3. Batch renaming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batch_renaming

    Add a number sequence (001,002,003,...) to a list of files. Use a text file as a source for new file names. Some batch rename software can do more than just renaming filenames. Features include changing the dates of files and changing the file attributes (such as the write protected attribute).

  4. Numeric precision in Microsoft Excel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numeric_precision_in...

    Here the 'IEEE 754 double value' resulting of the 15 bit figure is 3.330560653658221E-15, which is rounded by Excel for the 'user interface' to 15 digits 3.33056065365822E-15, and then displayed with 30 decimals digits gets one 'fake zero' added, thus the 'binary' and 'decimal' values in the sample are identical only in display, the values ...

  5. Register renaming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Register_renaming

    Early computers often worked lock-step with their main memory, which reduced the advantages of large register files. A common design note from the minicomputer market of the 1960s was to have the registers be physically implemented in main memory, in which case the performance advantage was simply that the instruction could directly refer to the location rather than having to use a second byte ...

  6. Rename (relational algebra) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rename_(relational_algebra)

    In relational algebra, a rename is a unary operation written as / where: . R is a relation; a and b are attribute names; b is an attribute of R; The result is identical to R except that the b attribute in all tuples is renamed to a. [1]

  7. Consistent hashing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consistent_hashing

    The term "consistent hashing" was introduced by David Karger et al. at MIT for use in distributed caching, particularly for the web. [4] This academic paper from 1997 in Symposium on Theory of Computing introduced the term "consistent hashing" as a way of distributing requests among a changing population of web servers. [5]

  8. French Republican calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Republican_calendar

    French Republican Calendar of 1794, drawn by Philibert-Louis Debucourt. The French Republican calendar (French: calendrier républicain français), also commonly called the French Revolutionary calendar (calendrier révolutionnaire français), was a calendar created and implemented during the French Revolution, and used by the French government for about 12 years from late 1793 to 1805, and ...