file


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file

1
1. Chess any of the eight vertical rows of squares on a chessboard
2. Computing a named collection of information, in the form of text, programs, graphics, etc., held on a permanent storage device such as a magnetic disk

file

2
a hand tool consisting essentially of a steel blade with small cutting teeth on some or all of its faces. It is used for shaping or smoothing metal, wood, etc.
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

file

[fīl]
(computer science)
A collection of related records treated as a unit.
(design engineering)
A steel bar or rod with cutting teeth on its surface; used as a smoothing or forming tool.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

file

file: nomenclature
A metal (usually steel) tool having a rectangular, triangular, round, or irregular section and either tapering or of uniform width and thickness, covered on one or more of its surfaces with teeth or oblique ridges; used for abrading, reducing, or smoothing metal, wood, or other materials.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

file

(file system)
An element of data storage in a file system.

The history of computing is rich in varied kinds of files and file systems, whether ornate like the Macintosh file system or deficient like many simple pre-1980s file systems that didn't have directories. However, a typical file has these characteristics:

* It is a single sequence of bytes (but consider Macintosh resource forks).

* It has a finite length, unlike, e.g., a Unix device.

* It is stored in a non-volatile storage medium (but see ramdrive).

* It exists (nominally) in a directory.

* It has a name that it can be referred to by in file operations, possibly in combination with its path.

Additionally, a file system may support other file attributes, such as permissions; timestamps for creation, last modification, and last access and revision numbers (a` la VMS).

Compare: document.
This article is provided by FOLDOC - Free Online Dictionary of Computing (foldoc.org)
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

File

a cutting tool with rows of cutting teeth along the working surfaces (planes or edges). The first files date from the early Iron Age (Hallstatt culture, c. 900–400 B.C.) and were one of the tools used by iron forgers. The instrument became widespread after the emergence of specialists in metalworking (ancient Rome). Files originally had parallel cutting ridges; later they acquired intersecting ridges. (Such files first appeared in Rus’ in the 12th century.) The following files are distinguished: bastard files (coarse cut), smooth-cut files (fine cut), and barette files (finest cut). Small files with fine cut are usually called needle files.

The cross sections of files may be rectangular, semicircular, triangular, or square. Rasps, files with separate points, are used for working wood and other nonmetallic materials. Files are used manually or mounted on special filing machines.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
While a LAN environment promotes concurrent work on same documents because of locks built into files, these locks cannot prevent two people in two different locations from modifying the same document.
Then follow the same steps for a static file except place a check in the Add interactivity checkbox (see screenshot) in exhibit 5.
It has become essential to protect school resources against illegal file sharing, make acceptable-use policies explicit, and educate students, staff and parents about new consequences for illegal actions.
Decide which files you want to back up often, such as key financial and customer documents, and choose a device where you want to send them, such as the drive letter "a:" for a floppy drive, or to a drive letter and directory path such as "d:\mybackups" for a backup directory you created on your second hard drive.
Associated with forums, or sometimes located in a separate section, are file libraries, which contain software, text files, images and graphics, address lists, and almost anything else that can be contained in a computer file.
This program capacity can also be used in a residents' file for residents whose family members need to be informed of a facility function.
Until July 1988, according to an internal NSF report obtained by Kalb through one of his FOIA requests, NSF did not file materials relating to grant proposals under the applicants' names, but instead under th institutions for which they worked.
So you pull the back-up copy and toss it or file it in, say, a "Drafts" file, and put the original for rewrite into your TODAY or THIS WEEK folder (depending on your deadline for that piece and your other priorities).
882(c) requires a foreign corporation to file a true and accurate return "in the manner prescribed" by the Code to benefit from deductions and credits.

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