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coding

noun

  1. analytical process in social sciences in which data is categorized to facilitate analysis
  2. write software, writing computer programs
  3. authorization of level of clinical intervention in case of medical emergency
  4. medical patient being in cardiac arrest
L318274 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /koʊdɪŋ/ / /kəʊdɪŋ/

adj

Etymology: Etymology tree English code English -ing English coding From code + -ing.

  1. Applied to vehicles when they are under number coding.

    My car is coding today, so I cannot drive.

noun

Etymology: Etymology tree English code English -ing English coding From code + -ing.

  1. The process of encoding or decoding.
  2. An encoding.
  3. The process of writing computer software code.

    I spent all night on the coding, but the program was ready by morning.

    I spent decades as a knowledge worker in technology, precisely where society wanted me—in front of screens, building digital products, becoming the very kind of specialist I’m now critiquing. Like many of my generation, I learned some simple coding before I learned to fix a leaky faucet or [to] grow my own food. I still love technology and believe in its potential to automate mundane tasks, freeing us to pursue higher forms of creativity and connection—but this promise rings hollow if we sacrifice our fundamental capabilities in the process.

  4. A method of communicating important medical information discreetly and quickly between medical professionals and responders.
  5. An alternative therapy used to treat addictions by convincing the patient (through hypnosis, placebos, etc.) that the substance will harm or kill them if they use it again.
  6. A 1-uniform morphism; an injective morphism; a morphism that maps letter to letter
  7. Ellipsis of number coding.

verb

Etymology: Etymology tree English code English -ing English coding From code + -ing.

  1. present participle and gerund of code