Data (computing)

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In computer science, data is anything in a form suitable for use with a computer[1]. Data is often distinguished from programs. A program is a set of instructions that detail a task for the computer to perform. In this sense, data is thus everything that is not program code[2].

In an alternate usage, binary files (which are not human-readable) are sometimes called "data", as distinguished from human-readable "text" [3]. The total amount of digital data in 2007 was estimated to be 281 billion gigabytes.[4][5]


[edit] Data vs programs

Fundamentally, computers follow the instructions they are given. A set of instructions to perform a given task (or tasks) is called a "program". In the nominal case, the program, as executed by the computer, will consist of binary machine code. The elements of storage manipulated by the program, but not actually executed by the CPU, contain data.

Typically, different files are used to store programs vs data. Executable files contain programs; all other files are data files. However, executable files may also contain data which is "built-in" to the program. In particular, some executable files have a data segment, which nominally contains constants and initial values (both data).

For example: A user might first instruct the operating system to load a word processor program from one file, and then edit a document stored in another file. In this example, the document would be considered data. If the word processor also features a spell checker, then the dictionary (word list) for the spell checker would also be considered data. The algorithms used by the spell checker to suggest corrections would be considered code.

The line between program and data can become blurry. An interpreter, for example, is a program. The input data to an interpreter is itself a program -- just not one expressed in native machine language. In many cases, the interpreted program will be a human-readable text file, which is manipulated with a text editor -- more normally associated with plain text data.


[edit] References

  1. ^ data. American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language. Retrieved on 2007-03-19.
  2. ^ data. Webopedia. Retrieved on 2007-03-19.
  3. ^ file(1). OpenBSD Manual Pages (2004-12-04). Retrieved on 2007-03-19.
  4. ^ Paul, Ryan. "Study: amount of digital info > global storage capacity", Ars Technica, March 12, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-03-12. 
  5. ^ Gantz, John F. et al. (2008). The Diverse and Exploding Digital Universe. International Data Corporation via EMC. Retrieved on 2008-03-12.

[edit] See also