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path

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path

(path),
A road or way; the course taken by an electrical current or by nervous impulses.
See also: pathway.
[A.S. paeth]
Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

path

(path)
The route or course along which something travels.
[A.S. paeth]
Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing © Farlex 2012

path

(path)
1. A road or way.
2. Course taken by an electrical current or by nervous impulses.
[A.S. paeth]
Medical Dictionary for the Dental Professions © Farlex 2012
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References in periodicals archive
where [T.sub.prop] is the full path propagation delay of the burst, and [T.sub.wait] is the accumulated waiting time induced by CP at every node that includes burst assembly/disassembly time, maximum burst departure waiting time, and packet processing delay.
As a result, it has the ability to guarantee full path transaction completion.
Seeing this I decided to walk the full path of this monstrous highway, and also at the point on Cooper's Field where they plan a new turning area, again all the trees have been lopped to clear the area to widen the current foot path to this 13 foot-wide highway, but three very mature trees all well over 50 years old and over 60 feet high have not been touched.
This new version delivers a common view--including full path visualization and critical path analysis--across distributed and mainframe assets via integration with BrightStor Storage Resource Manager (BrightStor SRM), BrightStor SAN Manager and BrightStor CA-Vantage SRM.
Then, within the field braces type IncludeText followed by a space and the full path name of the boilerplate document.
For each instance, the full path is stored as a sequence of numbers representing outer elements (from outermost to innermost in a hierarchical order) that contain the content specified in the value field.
An error of just 0.1 arcsecond could shift the tracks shown on page 93 by a full path width!
iDecide goes beyond basic clickstream tracking to provide full path analysis on the large volumes of data generated by Web sites, which can be up to 13 gigabytes per hour.
Three techniques are currently used to measure the requests of cached pages: (1) Do Nothing, (2) Full Path Recovery, and (3) Partial Path Recovery.
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