FACTOID # 125: India’s criminal courts acquitted over a million defendants in 1999, more than the next 48 surveyed countries combined.
 
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Encyclopedia > Canonical order

In computing, a canonical order is the order of elements that obeys a certain set of rules or specifications. Sorting algorithms are often used to canonicalize data sets. Originally, the word computing was synonymous with counting and calculating, and a science that deals with the original sense of computing mathematical calculations. ... In computer science and mathematics, a sorting algorithm is an algorithm that puts elements of a list in a certain order. ...


In XML Signature canonicalization is the process of converting XML content to a canonical form, to take into account changes that can invalidate a signature over that data (from JWSDP 1.6). XML Signature (also called XMLDsig) is a W3C recommendation that defines an XML syntax for digital signatures. ... // Valid documents An XML document that complies with a particular schema, in addition to being well-formed, is said to be valid. ... The Java Web Services Development Pack (JWSDP) is a free Software Development Kit (SDK) for developing Web Services, web applications and Java applications with the newest technologies for Java. ...


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Order - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (344 words)
Order (from Latin ordo "row, rank, series, arrangement", Old French ordre from the Latin accusative, ordinem, attested in English from the 1220s).
Order (schema) The number of defining symbols in a schema.
In information processing, order is a measure of the number of objects or sub-systems in a system as seen by an observer.
More about Canons Regular (3206 words)
Karl Egger, C.R.L. Canons Regular differ from other Orders in so far as they have no founder of their own: they are the outcome of a living organism of the Church and for this reason their institution is rather more flexible and less uniform especially with regard to the religious habit and internal constitution.
Canons Regular since the XII century have been known as Augustinian or Austin Canons taking their name from St Augustine, the great Doctor of the Church, for he realized in an ideal way the common life of the Clergy, and because from that time the Canons adopted the "Rule" of Augustine.
Every Canon Regular belonged to that house in which he made his vows but he could be transferred to another house in the interest of the common good of the Order (subsidium Ordinis), or for any other grave reason, at the same time he continued to belong to his own monastery.
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