Computer
Sr. | English Words | Urdu Words |
1 | COMPUTER | کمپیوٹر ۔ |
2 | COMPUTER Noun | کمپیوٹر ۔ کوئی بھی ایسی ڈیوائس جس میں حسبِ منشاء نتائج کی تخلیق کی صلاحیت موجود ہو ۔ اس بات سے قطع نظر کہ ان کا کام کتنا بڑا یا چھوٹا ہے ۔ کمپیوٹر اپنے افعال تین مبینہ طریقوں سے سر انجام دیتے ہیں ۔ ۱ ۔ ان پٹ ڈیٹا قبول کرنا ۔ ۲ ۔ ان پٹ کو مبینہ طریقوں پروگرامز کے مطابق پروسیس کرنا اور ۳ ۔ آئوٹ پٹ پیدا کرنا ۔ |
3 | COMPUTER Adjective | کمپیوٹر ۔ ایسی مشین جو ریاضیاتی تخمینے اعداد اور مقداد کی بنیاد پر مرتب کرنے کی صلاحیت رکھتی ہے ۔ |
4 | COMPUTER FAMILY Noun | کمپیوٹر فیملی ۔ ایک اصطلاح جو عموما کمپیوٹرز کے ایک گروپ کی نشاندہی کرتی ہے ۔ جو ایک جیسے مائیکروپرسیسرز کے سلسلے پر مبنی ہوتے ہیں اور جن میں اہم ڈیزائن فیچرز مشترکہ طور پر موجود ہوتی ہیں ۔ |
5 | COMPUTER GRAPHICS Noun | تصاویر اور ڈرائنگ وغیرہ جو کمپیوٹر پر نظر آتی ہیں ۔ |
computer
[kuh m-pyoo-ter]
1.
Also called processor.
an electronic device designed to accept data, perform prescribed
mathematical and logical operations at high speed, and display the
results of these operations.
Compare analog computer, digital computer.
2.
a person who computes; computist.
computerlike, adjective
noncomputer, adjective
computer
/kəmˈpjuːtə/
noun
1.
- a device, usually electronic, that processes data according to a set of instructions. The digital computer stores data in discrete units and performs arithmetical and logical operations at very high speed. The analog computer has no memory and is slower than the digital computer but has a continuous rather than a discrete input. The hybrid computer combines some of the advantages of digital and analog computers See also digital computer, analog computer, hybrid computer
- (as modifier): computer technology, related prefix cyber-
2.
a person who computes or calculates
n.
1640s, "one who calculates," agent noun from compute
(v.). Meaning "calculating machine" (of any type) is from 1897; in
modern use, "programmable digital electronic computer" (1945 under this
name; theoretical from 1937, as Turing machine). ENIAC (1946) usually is considered the first. Computer literacy is recorded from 1970; an attempt to establish computerate (adjective, on model of literate) in this sense in the early 1980s didn't catch on. Computerese "the jargon of programmers" is from 1960, as are computerize and computerization.
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary
Copyright © 2002. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A New York Congressman says the use of computers to record personal data on individuals, such as their credit background, "is just frightening to me." [news article, March 17, 1968]
computer A programmable machine that performs high-speed processing of numbers, as well as of text, graphics, symbols, and sound. All computers contain a central processing unit that interprets and executes instructions; input devices, such as a keyboard and a mouse, through which data and commands enter the computer; memory that enables the computer to store programs and data; and output devices, such as printers and display screens, that show the results after the computer has processed data. |
Copyright © 2002. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights
computer definition
An electronic device that stores and manipulates information. Unlike a calculator, it is able to store a program and retrieve information from its memory. Most computers today are digital, which means they perform operations with quantities represented electronically as digits.
publication
A journal of the IEEE Computer Society.
(1995-03-10)
computerA journal of the IEEE Computer Society.
(1995-03-10)
A machine that can be programmed to manipulate symbols. Computers can perform complex and repetitive procedures quickly, precisely and reliably and can quickly store and retrieve large amounts of data.
The physical components from which a computer is constructed (electronic circuits and input/output devices) are known as "hardware". Most computers have four types of hardware component: CPU, input, output and memory. The CPU (central processing unit) executes programs ("software") which tell the computer what to do. Input and output (I/O) devices allow the computer to communicate with the user and the outside world. There are several kinds of memory - fast, expensive, short term memory (e.g. RAM) to hold intermediate results, and slower, cheaper, long-term memory (e.g. magnetic disk and magnetic tape) to hold programs and data between jobs.
See also analogue computer.
(1995-03-10)
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