definición y significado de Diagram | sensagent.com


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Definición y significado de Diagram

Definición

diagram (n.)

1.a drawing intended to explain how something works; a drawing showing the relation between the parts

diagram (v.)

1.make a schematic or technical drawing of that shows interactions among variables or how something is constructed

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Merriam Webster

DiagramDi"a*gram (?), n. [Gr. �, fr. � to mark out by lines; dia` through + � to draw, write: cf. F. diagramme. See Graphic.]
1. (Geom.) A figure or drawing made to illustrate a statement, or facilitate a demonstration; a plan.

2. Any simple drawing made for mathematical or scientific purposes, or to assist a verbal explanation which refers to it; a mechanical drawing, as distinguished from an artistical one.

Indicator diagram. (Steam Engine) See Indicator card, under indicator

DiagramDi"a*gram, v. t. To put into the form of a diagram.

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Definición (más)

definición de Diagram (Wikipedia)

Sinónimos

Ver también

diagram (v.)

tracing

Frases

A Block diagram Language • Activity cycle diagram • Activity diagram • Affinity diagram • Andy Diagram • Argand diagram • Bachman diagram • Band diagram • Barber–Johnson diagram • Basing diagram • Bergeron diagram • Bifurcation diagram • Binary decision diagram • Block diagram • Bookseller/Diagram Prize for Oddest Title of the Year • Bratteli diagram • Buekenhout diagram • Burger diagram • Business diagram • Butterfly diagram • Campbell Diagram • Carroll diagram • Cash flow diagram • Cathedral diagram • Causal diagram • Causal loop diagram • Chemical structure diagram • Chinese vowel diagram • Circuit diagram • Class diagram • Cluster diagram • Coefficient diagram method • Color–color diagram • Communication diagram • Commutative diagram • Component diagram • Composite structure diagram • Computer network diagram • Constellation diagram • Contract bridge diagram • Control Structure Diagram • Control flow diagram • Coxeter–Dynkin diagram • Cremona diagram • Darrow Yannet diagram • Data flow diagram • Data structure diagram • Davenport diagram • De Finetti diagram • Decision diagram • Dependency diagram • Deployment diagram • Diagram (category theory) • Diagram Designer • Diagram for Healing • Diagram geometry • Diagram of Suburban Chaos • Die-Cut Plug Wiring Diagram Book • Digital timing diagram • Dynkin diagram • E-R diagram • Eadie–Hofstee diagram • Edgeworth Box Diagram • Eight-Diagram Pole Fighter • Electrical diagram • Entity relationship diagram • Euler diagram • Event chain diagram • Experimental design diagram • Ferrers diagram • Flammability diagram • Flow diagram • Forming limit diagram • Free body diagram • Frost diagram • Function block diagram • Functional flow block diagram • Fundamental diagram • Fundamental diagram of traffic flow • Gabbard diagram • Galaxy color-magnitude diagram • Grotrian diagram • Harrod-Johnson diagram • Hasse diagram • Heegaard diagram • Height-velocity diagram • Hertzsprung–Russell diagram • Herzprung Russel diagram • Hess diagram • Hovmöller diagram • Indicator diagram • Influence diagram • Information diagram • Information flow diagram • Interaction overview diagram • Interlock diagram • Ionic partition diagram • Ishikawa diagram • Isothermal transformation diagram • Jablonski diagram • Jones diagram • Kinematic diagram • Knot diagram • Ladder diagram • Latimer diagram • Lexis diagram • Ligne de la Cote Fleurie diagram • Lineweaver Burk diagram • Lineweaver–Burk diagram • Link diagram • Marquand diagram • Mathematical diagram • Minkowski diagram • Molecular orbital diagram • Motion diagram • Mr knott's patented essay diagram • Mr knotts patented essay diagram • NR-diagram • Nassi–Shneiderman diagram • Network diagram • Network diagram (project management) • Object diagram • One-line diagram • One-loop Feynman diagram • Onion diagram • Orgel diagram • Package diagram • Penguin diagram • Penrose diagram • Phase diagram • Pie diagram • Piper diagram • Piping and instrumentation diagram • Polar area diagram • Pourbaix diagram • Precedence Diagram Method • Precedence diagram • Predominance diagram • Pressure volume diagram • Process flow diagram • Process-data diagram • Product flow diagram • QAPF diagram • QFL diagram • Quiver diagram • Railway Junction Diagram • Reed-Kellogg diagram • Relevance diagram • Ribbon diagram • Sankey diagram • Satake diagram • Schlegel diagram • Sentence diagram • Sequence diagram • Shear and moment diagram • Single-line diagram • Skew-T log-P diagram • Spacetime diagram • Spider diagram • Stand density management diagram • State diagram • Stellation diagram • Stem-and-leaf diagram • Stiff diagram • Straight Line Diagram • Straight-line diagram • String diagram • Stüve diagram • Swan diagram • Syntax diagram • System Sequence Diagram • System context diagram • Tanabe-Sugano diagram • The Diagram Brothers • Timing diagram • Timing diagram (Unified Modeling Language) • Tombstone diagram • Tornado diagram • Trace diagram • Tree diagram • UML Model diagram • Use case diagram • Van Krevelen diagram • Veitch diagram • Venn diagram • Vin diagram • Voronoi diagram • Vowel diagram • Walsh diagram • Warnier/Orr diagram • Wavenumber–frequency diagram • Weighted Voronoi diagram • Wiggers diagram • Williot diagram • Wiring diagram • Zero suppressed decision diagram

Diccionario analógico

Wikipedia

Diagram

                   
  Sample flowchart representing the decision process to add a new article to Wikipedia.

A diagram is a two-dimensional geometric symbolic representation of information according to some visualization technique. Sometimes, the technique uses a three-dimensional visualization which is then projected onto the two-dimensional surface. The word graph is sometimes used as a synonym for diagram.

Contents

  Overview

In science the term is used in both ways. For example Anderson (1997) stated more generally: "diagrams are pictorial, yet abstract, representations of information, and maps, line graphs, bar charts, engineering blueprints, and architects' sketches are all examples of diagrams, whereas photographs and video are not".[1] On the other hand Lowe (1993) defined diagrams as specifically "abstract graphic portrayals of the subject matter they represent".[2]

In the specific sense diagrams and charts contrast computer graphics, technical illustrations, infographics, maps, and technical drawings, by showing "abstract rather than literal representations of information".[3] The essences of a diagram can be seen as:[3]

  • a form of visual formatting devices
  • a display that do not show quantitative data, but rather relationships and abstract information
  • with building blocks such as geometrical shapes connected by lines, arrows, or other visual links.

Or in Hall's (1996) words "diagrams are simplified figures, caricatures in a way, intended to convey essential meaning".[4] These simplified figures are often based on set of rules. The basic shape according to White (1984) can be characterized in terms of "elegance, clarity, ease, pattern, simplicity, and validity".[3] The elegance for a start is determined by whether or not the diagram is "the simplest and most fitting solution to a problem".[5]

  Main diagram types

There are at least the following types of diagrams:

  • Graph-based diagrams: these take a collection of items and relationships between them, and express them by giving each item a 2D position, while the relationships are expressed as connections between the items or overlaps between the items; examples of such techniques:
  • Chart-like diagram techniques, which display a relationship between two variables that take either discrete or a continuous ranges of values; examples:
  • Other types of diagrams, e.g.,

Many of these types of diagrams are commonly generated using diagramming software. Thousands of diagram techniques exist. Some more examples follow.

  Specific diagram types

  A–D

A
B
C
D

List of modeling languages

  E–H

E
F
G
H

  I–L

I
J
K
L

  M–P

M
N
O
P

  R–U

R
S
T
U

  V–Z

V
W
Y

  See also

  References

  1. ^ Michael Anderson (1997). "Introduction to Diagrammatic Reasoning". Retrieved 21 July 2008.
  2. ^ Lowe, Richard K. (1993). "Diagrammatic information: techniques for exploring its mental representation and processing". Information Design Journal 7 (1): 3–18. DOI:10.1075/idj.7.1.01low. 
  3. ^ a b c Brasseur, Lee E. (2003). Visualizing technical information: a cultural critique. Amityville, N.Y: Baywood Pub. ISBN 0-89503-240-6. 
  4. ^ Bert S. Hall (1996). "The Didactic and the Elegant: Some Thoughts on Scientific and Technological Illustrations in the Middle Ages and Renaissance". in: B. Braigie (ed.) Picturing knowledge: historical and philosophical problems concerning the use of art in science. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p.9
  5. ^ White, Jan V. (1984). Using charts and graphs: 1000 ideas for visual persuasion. New York: Bowker. ISBN 0-8352-1894-5. 
  6. ^ HIPO diagram

  Further reading

  • Bounford, Trevor (2000). Digital diagrams. New York: Watson-Guptill Publications. ISBN 978-0-8230-1572-6. 
  • Michael Anderson, Peter Cheng, Volker Haarslev (Eds.) (2000). Theory and Application of Diagrams: First International Conference, Diagrams 2000. Edinburgh, Scotland, UK, September 1–3, 2000. Proceedings.
   
               

 

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