daldırma fidanı

listen to the pronunciation of daldırma fidanı
Turkish - English
layer
A person who lays things, such as tiles
A hen kept to lay eggs
That which is laid; a stratum; a bed; one thickness, course, or fold laid over another; as, a layer of clay or of sand in the earth; a layer of bricks, or of plaster; the layers of an onion
A (usually) horizontal deposit; a stratum
an abstract place usually conceived as having depth; "a good actor communicates on several levels"; "a simile has at least two layers of meaning"; "the mind functions on many strata simultaneously"
* - a subdivision of a CAD or GIS database containing related data Layers can be visualized as "transparencies" which allow the user to view and analyze information selectively by theme (see figure in OVERLAY entry below) Some GIS build their databases as a series of layers covering a single area, for example the PCSA database for the United States Layers are fundamental to overlay analysis
{f} induce a twig to root while still attached to the parent plant (Gardening); arrange in layers; cut in layers (as of hair)
thin structure composed of a single thickness of cells a hen that lays eggs single thickness of usually some homogeneous substance; "slices of hard-boiled egg on a bed of spinach"
an integrated, areally distributed, set of spatial data usually representing entity instances within one theme, or having one common attribute or attribute value in an association of spatial objects In the context of raster data, a layer is specifically a two-dimensional array of scaler values associated with all of part of a grid or image
A logical set of thematic data described and stored in a map library Layers organize a map library by subject matter, e g , soils, roads, wells, and extend over the entire geographic area defined by the spatial index of the map library
In networks, layers refer to software protocol levels comprising the architecture, with each layer performing functions for the layers above it
The open system interconnection (OSI) model of seven layers that defines the protocols for data communications
An item of clothing worn under or over another
OSI reference model Each layer performs certain tasks to move the information from the sender to the receiver Protocols within the layers define the tasks for the networks
a relatively thin sheetlike expanse or region lying over or under another make or form a layer; "layer the different colored sands
{i} thickness of some material that covers a surface; stratum, covering, bed; person or thing that lays; egg laying chicken; twig which is induced to root while still attached to the parent plant (Gardening)
Communication networks for computers may be organised as a set of more or less independent protocols, each in a different layer (also called level) The lowest layer governs direct host-to-host communication between the hardware at different hosts; the highest consists of user applications Each layer builds on the layer beneath it For each layer, programs at different hosts use protocols appropriate to the layer to communicate with each other TCP/IP has five layers of protocols; OSI has seven The advantage of having different layers of protocols is that the methods of passing information from one layer to another are specified clearly as part of the protocol suite, and changes within a protocol layer are prevented from affecting the other layers This greatly simplifies the task of designing and maintaining communication programs
A collection of objected plotted on the Debrief Plot Each layer can be switched on and off individually using the Layer Manager When written to a plot-file, each layer is stored separately - making it quite easy to copy individual layers out of a plot-file using a text-editor and collating them into a new file (An example of this would be drawing exercise areas into one session, then moving them all into one layer, save the file to disk, copy this layer to a file of its own, then dropping this file of exercise areas into new files - an example of this is in the VPF best-practice )
A thematic set of spatial data described and stored in an ArcStorm database or a LIBRARIAN map library Layers organize a database or map library by subject matter (e g , soils, roads, and wells) Conceptually, layers in a database or map library environment are exactly like coverages See also ArcStorm database and map library
In network architecture, a protocol or group of protocols that function at a designated level within a protocol suite, such as IP within the TCP/IP suite Each layer is responsible for providing specific functions or services for the proper transmission of data on a network