Identification (information)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The function of Identification is to map a known quantity to an unknown entity so as to make it known. The known quantity is called the identifier (or ID) and the unknown entity is what needs identification. A basic requirement for identification is that the ID be unique. IDs may be scoped, that is, they are unique only within a particular scope. IDs may also be built out of a collection of quantities such that they are unique on the collective.

Identification is the capability to find, retrieve, report, change, or delete specific data without ambiguity. This applies especially with information stored in databases. In database normalization it is the central, defining function to the discipline.

[edit] Example

To retrieve the data stored about an individual with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) of the United States, the IRS needs to be supplied with the individual's Social Security Number (SSN). The SSN, then, "identifies" a unique individual to the IRS. No other living person has that SSN, and that individual is assumed to not have more than one SSN. Other data that the individual's SSN identifies with the IRS would be such things as his or her name, birthdate, and current employer.

This page has been transwikied to Wiktionary.

Because this article has content useful to Wikipedia's sister project Wiktionary, it has been copied to there, and its dictionary counterpart can be found at either Wiktionary:Transwiki:Identification (information) or Wiktionary:Identification (information). It should no longer appear in Category:Copy to Wiktionary and should not be re-added there.
Wikipedia is not a dictionary, and if this article cannot be expanded beyond a dictionary definition, it should be tagged for deletion. If it can be expanded into an article, please do so and remove this template.
Note that {{vocab-stub}} is deprecated. If {{vocab-stub}} was removed when this article was transwikied, and the article is deemed encyclopedic, there should be a more suitable category for it.

In other languages