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Terms for subject Microsoft containing code | all forms | exact matches only
EnglishMaori
access codewaehere uru (A string of characters entered by a user to verify his or her identity to a network or to a local computer, device, or client, or to sign in to an account, app, and so on)
American Standard Code for Information InterchangeWhakawhitinga Pārongo mō te Waehere Paerewa Amerikana (" A standard single-byte character encoding scheme used for text-based data. ASCII uses designated 7-bit or 8-bit number combinations to represent either 128 or 256 possible characters. Standard ASCII uses 7 bits to represent all uppercase and lowercase letters, the numbers 0 through 9, punctuation marks, and special control characters used in U.S. English. Most current x86-based systems support the use of extended (or "high") ASCII. Extended ASCII allows the eighth bit of each character to identify an additional 128 special symbol characters, foreign-language letters, and graphic symbols.")
area codewaehere rohe (A number that identifies each telephone service area in a country/region and is used as a dialing prefix)
bank codewaehere pēke (A unique bank registration number that a bank uses to identify itself)
bank sorting codewaehere kōmaka pēke (A 6-digit code used by the British and Irish banking industries to identify banks and route money transfers between banks)
bar codewaehere pae (The special identification code printed as a set of vertical bars of differing widths on books, grocery products, and other merchandise. Used for rapid, error-free input in such facilities as libraries, hospitals, and grocery stores, bar codes represent binary information that can be read by an optical scanner. The coding can include numbers, letters, or a combination of the two; some codes include built-in error checking and can be read in either direction)
branch codewaehere peka (A numeric code used in combination with a bank code to identify a specific bank branch)
card validation codewaehere whakamana kāri (A code that credit card companies use to authorize credit card charges. For example, American Express uses a four-digit number on the front of the credit card, and Visa, MasterCard, and Discover use a three-digit number on the back)
Central Bank MFO CodeWaehere MFO Pēke Matua (A 9-digit code used to identify banks for routing transactions in the Russian Federation)
central bank transaction codewaehere tauwhitinga pēke matua (A statistical code defined by the Central Bank of Russia used to describe the subjects of payments denominated in Russian roubles for cross-border transactions)
character codewaehere pūāhua (A numeric value that corresponds to a particular character in a set)
code access securityhaumarutanga uru waehere (A mechanism provided by the common language runtime whereby managed code is granted permissions by security policy and these permissions are enforced, helping to limit the operations that the code will be allowed to perform)
Code of ConductNgā Ture Whanonga (The link to the code of conduct, which contains rules that explain how someone should behave while using a service or product)
code pagewhārangi waehere (A table that relates the character codes (code point values) used by a program to keys on the keyboard or to characters on the display. This provides support for character sets and keyboard layouts for different countries or regions)
code panepihanga waehere (In Visual Basic for Applications, the window that is used to display, edit, and write module-level and procedure code)
error codewaehere hapa (One of four fields of an SCODE. It is a unique number that is assigned to represent the error or warning)
field codewaehere āpure (Placeholder text that shows where specified information from your data source will appear; the elements in a field that generate a field's result. The field code includes the field characters, field type, and instructions)
IFSC codewaehere IFSC (A series of 11 alphanumeric characters used by the Indian Financial System to identify banks participating in the NEFT system and to route transactions between banks)
master boot codewaehere whakaara matua (A small amount of executable code contained in the master boot record that scans the partition table for the active partition, finds the starting sector of the active partition, loads a copy of the boot sector from the active partition into memory, and transfers control to the executable code in the boot sector)
postal codewaehere poutāpeta (An alphanumeric code assigned to all addresses in order to facilitate mail delivery)
sort codewaehere kōmaka (A 6-digit code used by the British and Irish banking industries to identify banks and route money transfers between banks)
South African National Clearing CodeWaehere Whakawātea ā-Whenua o Awherika ki te Tonga (A series of numbers used to identify banks and transaction routing information for South African financial institutes)
SWIFT codeWaehere SWIFT (An international identification code used to identify financial institutions for international money transfers)
ZIP codewaehere POUTĀPETA (In the United States, the postal code assigned to all addresses)

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