(Antika) In information handling, a hard copy is a permanent reproduction, or copy, in the form of a physical object, of any media suitable for direct use by a person (in particular paper), of displayed or transmitted data. Examples of hard copy include teleprinter pages, continuous printed tapes, computer printouts, and radio photo prints
A physical document, usually text on paper While additions to The Electronic Commerce Dictionary appear as soft copy in this Web page the original book is available only in hard copy (Return to home page for more book information )
(1) Recorded information copied from a computer onto paper or some other durable surface, such as microfilm To be distinguished from a temporary image on a display screen and from the electronic information on a magnetic tape or disk(ette) or in the computer's main memory See also OUTPUT RECORDS
A hard copy of a document is a printed version of it, rather than a version that is stored on a computer. eight pages of hard copy. A printed copy, especially of the output of a computer or word processor. information from a computer that is printed out onto paper, or the printed papers themselves
The printed version of any document created using a computer programme, such as a Word-processor We used to refer to these as papers, pamphlets and books
A print out of the manuscript Imprint- The name of the publishing company on the title page
An actual printed paper copy of a computer document A soft copy exists only on a computer monitor
In computer graphics and in telecommunications, a permanent reproduction, on any media suitable for direct use by a person, of displayed or transmitted data (188) Note 1: Examples of hard copy include teletypewriter pages, continuous printed tapes, facsimile pages, computer printouts, and radiophoto prints Note 2: Magnetic tapes, diskettes, and nonprinted punched paper tapes are not hard copy
A permanent copy of a display image generated on an output device such as a printer or plotter, and which can be carried away A printed copy of machine output in a visually readable form; for example, printed reports, listings, documents, and summaries
Hardcopy is the generic term used to describe the materials containing images of our layouts and artwork that come out of a laser printer or an imagesetter
generally information that is either printed from electronic data or written or printed information including text and pictures, that has not yet been converted to electronic data A web designer may receive web site input from a client in the form of e-mailed pictures (electronic data) or as photos to scan (hardcopy) from the client Text sent by email is electronic data Text provided as brochures or typed pages is hardcopy (See also: "data" )
Information printed on paper (This may seem odd, as paper is not very hard But once something is printed on to paper, it cannot be affected by, for example, a hard disk crash ) The equivalent term for information stored in a computer is soft copy
Hardcopy means printed output Emacs has commands for making printed listings of text in Emacs buffers See section ï½¥ï¾ï½¡ï½¼ï½¥ï¾‰ï½¥ï½³ï½¥ï¾”。シスï¾ï¾Žï¾
Is when you print out the work you have been doing on the computer, or printing out any information that is inside the computer All information that is inside the computer is in a digital format and is difficult to see or touch without some form of digital display To make a hardcopy is to print the digital information, or data, onto paper, where it can be touched and seen without any devices