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  2. Scaffold (programming) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scaffold_(programming)

    Scaffolding is a technique supported by some model–view–controller frameworks, in which the programmer can specify how the application database may be used.The compiler or framework uses this specification, together with pre-defined code templates, to generate the final code that the application can use to create, read, update and delete database entries, effectively treating the templates ...

  3. Database refactoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_refactoring

    A database refactoring is a simple change to a database schema that improves its design while retaining both its behavioral and informational semantics. Database refactoring does not change the way data is interpreted or used and does not fix bugs or add new functionality. Every refactoring to a database leaves the system in a working state ...

  4. Scaffolding (bioinformatics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scaffolding_(bioinformatics)

    This is an example of a scaffold. Scaffolding is a technique used in bioinformatics. It is defined as follows: [1] Link together a non-contiguous series of genomic sequences into a scaffold, consisting of sequences separated by gaps of known length. The sequences that are linked are typically contiguous sequences corresponding to read overlaps.

  5. Evolutionary database design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolutionary_database_design

    Traditional database design technique does not support changes like evolutionary database design technique.'Unfortunately, the traditional data community assumed that evolving database schema is a hard thing to do and as a result never thought through how to do it.' [1] In a way, the evolutionary design is better for application developers and ...

  6. Network model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_model

    While the hierarchical database model structures data as a tree of records, with each record having one parent record and many children, the network model allows each record to have multiple parent and child records, forming a generalized graph structure. This property applies at two levels: the schema is a generalized graph of record types ...

  7. Data assimilation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_assimilation

    The existing data assimilation methods such as many variants of ensemble Kalman filters and variational methods, well established with linear or near-linear models, are being assessed on non-linear models. Many new methods are being developed, e.g. particle filters for high-dimensional problems, and hybrid data assimilation methods. [36]

  8. Scaffold (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scaffold_(disambiguation)

    Scaffold (chemistry), the core structure of a compound or a class of compounds; Scaffold protein, a regulator of cell signalling pathways; Scaffold, a protein that is used as a starting point for the design of antibody mimetics; Tissue scaffold, in tissue engineering, an artificial structure capable of supporting three-dimensional tissue formation

  9. Scaffold/matrix attachment region - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scaffold/Matrix_Attachment...

    the description of scaffold-attachment elements (SARs) by Laemmli and coworkers, which were thought to demarcate the borders of a given chromatin domain [2] the characterization of matrix-associated regions (MARs) the first examples of which supported the immunoglobulin kapp-chain enhancer according to its occupancy with transcription factors [ 3 ]