Schedule
Encyclopedia
Schedule generally refers to:
Schedule may also refer to:
- a timetable (disambiguation)
- an airline timetableAirline timetableAirline timetables are booklets that many airlines worldwide use to inform passengers of several different things, such as schedules, fleet, security, in-flight entertainment, food menu, restriction and phone contact information....
- the act of Scheduling (disambiguation)
Schedule may also refer to:
- Schedule (computer science)Schedule (computer science)In the fields of databases and transaction processing , a schedule of a system is an abstract model to describe execution of transactions running in the system. Often it is a list of operations ordered by time, performed by a set of transactions that are executed together in the system...
, a list of actions from a set of transactions in databases - Scheduling (communications) in telecommunications and computer networks
- Schedule (broadcasting) synonym for a Broadcast stationBroadcast stationA broadcast station may be:*a radio station*a television stationIt does not include radio networks or television networks.-See also:*Broadcasting*Broadcast network*Station...
- Schedule (project management)Schedule (project management)In project management, a schedule consists of a list of a project's terminal elements with intended start and finish dates. Terminal elements are the lowest element in a schedule, which is not further subdivided...
, a list of a project's terminal elements with intended start and finish dates - Schedule (workplace)Schedule (workplace)A schedule, often called a rota, is a list of employees who are working on any given day, week, or month in a workplace. A schedule is necessary for the day-to-day operation of any retail store or manufacturing facility. The process of creating a schedule is called scheduling...
, a list of employees who are working on any given day, week, or month in a workplace - A listing in an addendumAddendumAn addendum, in general, is an addition required to be made to a document by its reader subsequent to its printing or publication. It comes from the Latin verbal phrase addendum est, being the gerundive form of the verb addo, addere, addidi, additum, "to give to, add to", meaning " must be added"...
to a document, particularly a statute (a drug schedule, for example)- A listing in a specification (see, for example, Schedule 80)