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Identifier

An identifier is a name that identifies (that is, labels the identity of) either a unique object or a unique class of objects, where the "object" or class may be an idea, physical countable object (or class thereof), or physical noncountable substance (or class thereof). The abbreviation Id often refers to identity, identification (the process of identifying), or an identifier (that is, an instance of identification). An identifier may be a word, number, letter, symbol, or any combination of those.

Registration plates are used to display identifiers for motor vehicles.

The words, numbers, letters, or symbols may follow an encoding system (wherein letters, digits, words, or symbols stand for [represent] ideas or longer names) or they may simply be arbitrary. When an identifier follows an encoding system, it is often referred to as a code or id code. For instance the ISO/IEC 11179 metadata registry standard defines a code as system of valid symbols that substitute for longer values in contrast to identifiers without symbolic meaning. Identifiers that do not follow any encoding scheme are often said to be arbitrary Ids; they are arbitrarily assigned and have no greater meaning. (Sometimes identifiers are called "codes" even when they are actually arbitrary, whether because the speaker believes that they have deeper meaning or simply because they are speaking casually and imprecisely.)

The unique identifier (UID) is an identifier that refers to only one instance—only one particular object in the universe. A part number is an identifier, but it is not a unique identifier—for that, a serial number is needed, to identify each instance of the part design. Thus the identifier "Model T" identifies the class (model) of automobiles that Ford's Model T comprises; whereas the unique identifier "Model T Serial Number 159,862" identifies one specific member of that class—that is, one particular Model T car, owned by one specific person.

The concepts of name and identifier are denotatively equal, and the terms are thus denotatively synonymous; but they are not always connotatively synonymous, because code names and Id numbers are often connotatively distinguished from names in the sense of traditional natural language naming. For example, both "Jamie Zawinski" and "Netscape employee number 20" are identifiers for the same specific human being; but normal English-language connotation may consider "Jamie Zawinski" a "name" and not an "identifier", whereas it considers "Netscape employee number 20" an "identifier" but not a "name." This is an emic indistinction rather than an etic one.

Metadata

In metadata, an identifier is a language-independent label, sign or token that uniquely identifies an object within an identification scheme. The suffix "identifier" is also used as a representation term when naming a data element.

ID codes may inherently carry metadata along with them. For example, when you know that the food package in front of you has the identifier "2011-09-25T15:42Z-MFR5-P02-243-45", you not only have that data, you also have the metadata that tells you that it was packaged on September 25, 2011, at 3:42pm UTC, manufactured by Licensed Vendor Number 5, at the Peoria, IL, USA plant, in Building 2, and was the 243rd package off the line in that shift, and was inspected by Inspector Number 45.

Arbitrary identifiers might lack metadata. For example, if a food package just says 100054678214, its ID may not tell anything except identity—no date, manufacturer name, production sequence rank, or inspector number. In some cases, arbitrary identifiers such as sequential serial numbers leak information (i.e. the German tank problem). Opaque identifiers—identifiers designed to avoid leaking even that small amount of information—include "really opaque pointers" and Version 4 UUIDs.

In computer science

In computer science, identifiers (IDs) are lexical tokens that name entities. Identifiers are used extensively in virtually all information processing systems. Identifying entities makes it possible to refer to them, which is essential for any kind of symbolic processing.

In computer languages

In computer languages, identifiers are tokens (also called symbols) which name language entities. Some of the kinds of entities an identifier might denote include variables, types, labels, subroutines, and packages.

Ambiguity

Identifiers (IDs) versus Unique identifiers (UIDs)

A resource may carry multiple identifiers. Typical examples are:

  • One person with multiple names, nicknames, and forms of address (titles, salutations)
    • For example: One specific person may be identified by all of the following identifiers: Jane Smith; Jane Elizabeth Meredith Smith; Jane E. M. Smith; Jane E. Smith; Janie Smith; Janie; Little Janie (as opposed to her mother or sister or cousin, Big Janie); Aunt Jane; Auntie Janie; Mom; Grandmom; Nana; Kelly's mother; Billy's grandmother; Ms. Smith; Dr. Smith; Jane E. Smith, PhD; and Fuzzy (her jocular nickname at work).
  • One document with multiple versions[1]
  • One substance with multiple names (for example, CAS index names versus IUPAC names;[2] INN generic drug names versus USAN generic drug names versus brand names)

The inverse is also possible, where multiple resources are represented with the same identifier (discussed below).

Implicit context and namespace conflicts

Many codes and nomenclatural systems originate within a small namespace. Over the years, some of them bleed into larger namespaces (as people interact in ways they formerly hadn't, e.g., cross-border trade, scientific collaboration, military alliance, and general cultural interconnection or assimilation). When such dissemination happens, the limitations of the original naming convention, which had formerly been latent and moot, become painfully apparent, often necessitating retronymy, synonymity, translation/transcoding, and so on. Such limitations generally accompany the shift away from the original context to the broader one. Typically the system shows implicit context (context was formerly assumed, and narrow), lack of capacity (e.g., low number of possible IDs, reflecting the outmoded narrow context), lack of extensibility (no features defined and reserved against future needs), and lack of specificity and disambiguating capability (related to the context shift, where longstanding uniqueness encounters novel nonuniqueness). Within computer science, this problem is called naming collision. The story of the origination and expansion of the CODEN system provides a good case example in a recent-decades, technical-nomenclature context. The capitalization variations seen with specific designators reveals an instance of this problem occurring in natural languages, where the proper noun/common noun distinction (and its complications) must be dealt with. A universe in which every object had a UID would not need any namespaces, which is to say that it would constitute one gigantic namespace; but human minds could never keep track of, or semantically interrelate, so many UIDs.

Identifiers in various disciplines

Identifier Scope
atomic number, corresponding one-to-one with element name international (via ISV)
Australian Business Number Australian
CAGE code U.S. and NATO
CAS registry number originated in U.S.; today international (via ISV)
CODEN originated in U.S.; today international
Digital object identifier (DOI, doi) Handle System Namespace, international scope
DIN standard number originated in Germany; today international
E number originated in E.U.; may be seen internationally
EC number
Employer Identification Number (EIN) U.S.
Electronic Identifier Serial Publicaction (EISP) international
Global Trade Item Number international
Group identifier many scopes, e.g., specific computer systems
International Chemical Identifier international
International Standard Book Number (ISBN) ISBN is part of the EAN Namespace; international scope
International eBook Identifier Number (IEIN) international
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN) international
ISO standard number, e.g., ISO 8601 international
Library of Congress Control Number U.S., with some international bibliographic usefulness
Personal identification number (Denmark) Denmark
Pharmaceutical code Many different systems
Product batch number
Serial Item and Contribution Identifier U.S., with some international bibliographic usefulness
Serial number many scopes, e.g., company-specific, government-specific
Service batch number
Social Security Number U.S.
Tax file number Australian
Unique Article Identifier (UAI) international
International Standard University Code Higher educational institution verification code

See also

References

  1. ^ University of Glasgow. . Archived from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 28 April 2009.
  2. ^ University of Pennsylvania. . Archived from the original on 4 January 2009. Retrieved 28 April 2009.

identifier, identifier, name, that, identifies, that, labels, identity, either, unique, object, unique, class, objects, where, object, class, idea, physical, countable, object, class, thereof, physical, noncountable, substance, class, thereof, abbreviation, of. An identifier is a name that identifies that is labels the identity of either a unique object or a unique class of objects where the object or class may be an idea physical countable object or class thereof or physical noncountable substance or class thereof The abbreviation Id often refers to identity identification the process of identifying or an identifier that is an instance of identification An identifier may be a word number letter symbol or any combination of those Registration plates are used to display identifiers for motor vehicles The words numbers letters or symbols may follow an encoding system wherein letters digits words or symbols stand for represent ideas or longer names or they may simply be arbitrary When an identifier follows an encoding system it is often referred to as a code or id code For instance the ISO IEC 11179 metadata registry standard defines a code as system of valid symbols that substitute for longer values in contrast to identifiers without symbolic meaning Identifiers that do not follow any encoding scheme are often said to be arbitrary Ids they are arbitrarily assigned and have no greater meaning Sometimes identifiers are called codes even when they are actually arbitrary whether because the speaker believes that they have deeper meaning or simply because they are speaking casually and imprecisely The unique identifier UID is an identifier that refers to only one instance only one particular object in the universe A part number is an identifier but it is not a unique identifier for that a serial number is needed to identify each instance of the part design Thus the identifier Model T identifies the class model of automobiles that Ford s Model T comprises whereas the unique identifier Model T Serial Number 159 862 identifies one specific member of that class that is one particular Model T car owned by one specific person The concepts of name and identifier are denotatively equal and the terms are thus denotatively synonymous but they are not always connotatively synonymous because code names and Id numbers are often connotatively distinguished from names in the sense of traditional natural language naming For example both Jamie Zawinski and Netscape employee number 20 are identifiers for the same specific human being but normal English language connotation may consider Jamie Zawinski a name and not an identifier whereas it considers Netscape employee number 20 an identifier but not a name This is an emic indistinction rather than an etic one Contents 1 Metadata 2 In computer science 2 1 In computer languages 3 Ambiguity 3 1 Identifiers IDs versus Unique identifiers UIDs 3 2 Implicit context and namespace conflicts 4 Identifiers in various disciplines 5 See also 6 ReferencesMetadata EditIn metadata an identifier is a language independent label sign or token that uniquely identifies an object within an identification scheme The suffix identifier is also used as a representation term when naming a data element ID codes may inherently carry metadata along with them For example when you know that the food package in front of you has the identifier 2011 09 25T15 42Z MFR5 P02 243 45 you not only have that data you also have the metadata that tells you that it was packaged on September 25 2011 at 3 42pm UTC manufactured by Licensed Vendor Number 5 at the Peoria IL USA plant in Building 2 and was the 243rd package off the line in that shift and was inspected by Inspector Number 45 Arbitrary identifiers might lack metadata For example if a food package just says 100054678214 its ID may not tell anything except identity no date manufacturer name production sequence rank or inspector number In some cases arbitrary identifiers such as sequential serial numbers leak information i e the German tank problem Opaque identifiers identifiers designed to avoid leaking even that small amount of information include really opaque pointers and Version 4 UUIDs In computer science EditIn computer science identifiers IDs are lexical tokens that name entities Identifiers are used extensively in virtually all information processing systems Identifying entities makes it possible to refer to them which is essential for any kind of symbolic processing In computer languages Edit Main article Identifier computer languages In computer languages identifiers are tokens also called symbols which name language entities Some of the kinds of entities an identifier might denote include variables types labels subroutines and packages Ambiguity EditIdentifiers IDs versus Unique identifiers UIDs Edit Main article Unique identifier A resource may carry multiple identifiers Typical examples are One person with multiple names nicknames and forms of address titles salutations For example One specific person may be identified by all of the following identifiers Jane Smith Jane Elizabeth Meredith Smith Jane E M Smith Jane E Smith Janie Smith Janie Little Janie as opposed to her mother or sister or cousin Big Janie Aunt Jane Auntie Janie Mom Grandmom Nana Kelly s mother Billy s grandmother Ms Smith Dr Smith Jane E Smith PhD and Fuzzy her jocular nickname at work One document with multiple versions 1 One substance with multiple names for example CAS index names versus IUPAC names 2 INN generic drug names versus USAN generic drug names versus brand names The inverse is also possible where multiple resources are represented with the same identifier discussed below Implicit context and namespace conflicts Edit See also Naming collision Many codes and nomenclatural systems originate within a small namespace Over the years some of them bleed into larger namespaces as people interact in ways they formerly hadn t e g cross border trade scientific collaboration military alliance and general cultural interconnection or assimilation When such dissemination happens the limitations of the original naming convention which had formerly been latent and moot become painfully apparent often necessitating retronymy synonymity translation transcoding and so on Such limitations generally accompany the shift away from the original context to the broader one Typically the system shows implicit context context was formerly assumed and narrow lack of capacity e g low number of possible IDs reflecting the outmoded narrow context lack of extensibility no features defined and reserved against future needs and lack of specificity and disambiguating capability related to the context shift where longstanding uniqueness encounters novel nonuniqueness Within computer science this problem is called naming collision The story of the origination and expansion of the CODEN system provides a good case example in a recent decades technical nomenclature context The capitalization variations seen with specific designators reveals an instance of this problem occurring in natural languages where the proper noun common noun distinction and its complications must be dealt with A universe in which every object had a UID would not need any namespaces which is to say that it would constitute one gigantic namespace but human minds could never keep track of or semantically interrelate so many UIDs Identifiers in various disciplines EditMain page Category Identifiers Identifier Scopeatomic number corresponding one to one with element name international via ISV Australian Business Number AustralianCAGE code U S and NATOCAS registry number originated in U S today international via ISV CODEN originated in U S today internationalDigital object identifier DOI doi Handle System Namespace international scopeDIN standard number originated in Germany today internationalE number originated in E U may be seen internationallyEC numberEmployer Identification Number EIN U S Electronic Identifier Serial Publicaction EISP internationalGlobal Trade Item Number internationalGroup identifier many scopes e g specific computer systemsInternational Chemical Identifier internationalInternational Standard Book Number ISBN ISBN is part of the EAN Namespace international scopeInternational eBook Identifier Number IEIN internationalInternational Standard Serial Number ISSN internationalISO standard number e g ISO 8601 internationalLibrary of Congress Control Number U S with some international bibliographic usefulnessPersonal identification number Denmark DenmarkPharmaceutical code Many different systemsProduct batch numberSerial Item and Contribution Identifier U S with some international bibliographic usefulnessSerial number many scopes e g company specific government specificService batch numberSocial Security Number U S Tax file number AustralianUnique Article Identifier UAI internationalInternational Standard University Code Higher educational institution verification codeSee also EditBarcode Binomial nomenclature British Approved Name Data descriptor Data element Descriptor Diagnosis code Document management system File descriptor Food labeling regulations Gene nomenclature Handle computing Identification Identity object oriented programming Identity document Index term Marketing part number Metadata Name binding Namespace Naming convention programming National identification number Nomenclature contains various standardized naming systems Nomenclature code Chemical nomenclature International Code of Nomenclature for algae fungi and plants International Code of Nomenclature of Bacteria International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants International Code of Zoological Nomenclature Overloading Part number Personally identifiable information Product code Reference computer science Referent Representation term Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine Uniform resource identifier URI Unique identifier Unique keyReferences Edit Look up identifier in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Identifiers University of Glasgow Procedure for Applying Identifiers to Documents Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 28 April 2009 University of Pennsylvania Information on Chemical Nomenclature Archived from the original on 4 January 2009 Retrieved 28 April 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Identifier amp oldid 1151072667, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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