conformance
中文解釋
wordnet sense
Collocation Usage
Collins Definition
Web Definitions:
- conformity: correspondence in form or appearance
- The act of conforming; conformity
- The ability of a product or service to meet (or conform to) stated requirements.
- Adherence to a specified set of criteria for use of a standard. (See Chapter 3, Conformance.)
- n. a state achieved by proper and complete adherence to the requirements of this specification. See Section 1.5 (Conformance).
- fulfillment of an implementation of all requirements specified; adherence of an implementation to the requirements of one or more specific specifications or standards.
- The assurance that a product formally meets all the requirements of a standard or specification and passes the tests associated with the specification. Linked to compliance. See compliance for IEEE's POSIX 1003.3-1990 standard.
- Means that the material meets the customer's specifications and requirements.
- This is the process of checking if a business/firm’s activity conforms with a particular standard - e.g. the certifier checks conformance to ISO 14001.
- The response to a sleeper's body. Optimum conformance is achieved when the sleeper has proper spinal alignment.
- In software asset management, the degree of alignment (full or partial) with a standard, such as ISO/IEC 19770-1.
- An affirmative indication or judgment that a product or service has met the requirements of a relevant specification, contract, or regulation.
- the state of meeting regulatory requirements or company approved procedures; The term "conformance" is used throughout this manual where in some cases the term "compliance" would be more technically correct.
- the characteristics of the product satisfy the established standards.
- The state of meeting and/or exceeding customer requirements and expectations.
- The process of determining whether a request for personally identifiable information (PII) matches the rules defined in a single governing privacy policy. See also conformance check.
- the question of whether the trials were fair to Sacco and Vanzetti.