What's the difference between codify and decode?

Codify


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To reduce to a code, as laws.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Facebook is a business, and as such needs to codify relationships into a system it can monetise.
  • (2) The surgical techniques are well codified and relatively simple.
  • (3) This degree of agreement among professionals and between studies is encouraging for the future prospects of codifying the meaning of such expressions.
  • (4) Whenever I hear about David Blunkett's tests for new immigrants, I think of my mother's initial impressions and don't know whether to laugh or cry: laugh because of the patent folly of his attempts to fix what is fluid and to codify what is contested in British identity; or cry at the racism that has inspired it, the nationalism that informs it, and the historical, political and cultural illiteracy that infects every part of it.
  • (5) The consistent analysis of epidemiology, techniques and results allowed regularly improving the accuracy of surgical indications, which are now properly codified and preferably include arthroplasties and closed-focus osteosynthesis.
  • (6) The interests of the public Both the government and the industry proposal have identical passages codifying the importance of free speech, the detecting or exposing of crime, corruption or health and safety scandals.
  • (7) A computerized method of codifying dental lesions and treatment is presented to enable faster identification of victims of catastrophes.
  • (8) But Michael Gove's "ABacc" performance measure takes old-school bias and codifies it.
  • (9) Meanwhile, race was codified into laws determining that even one drop of African ancestry rendered a person legally black.
  • (10) If, however, it becomes simply another codified bureaucracy, then a great deal of time and money will be invested for very little gain.
  • (11) The author studies haemostatic vascular ligations in obstetrics, in order to codify the indication of BLUA and BLHA in obstetrical haemorrhages uncontrollable with classic therapeutic means.
  • (12) From information codified in collection and in distribution departments, the computer is able to give to the authorities essential daily decision elements such as the knowledge of :--the exact profile of each collection (1 119 in 1974),--statistics of blood distributions,--available stock, classified by storage time, volume, blood group, etc.
  • (13) It is possible that such panels will eventually be codified into law.
  • (14) The therapeutical methods are codified, but recidives are possible.
  • (15) We evaluated the concordance among the codifiers of the causes, with a 92% result (P less than 0.0001).
  • (16) Back-up treatment for the various stages of the disease is not well codified but is indicated by most authors.
  • (17) And today, I can announce a series of concrete and substantial reforms that my Administration intends to adopt administratively or will seek to codify with Congress.
  • (18) A senior independent should ensure communication with big investors although that has been the role of the SID since it was codified in the Higgs report on corporate governance in 2003.
  • (19) Quashing racist laws does not eliminate racism, only its explicit and codified enforcement.
  • (20) Fifty years on, it is clear that in eliminating legal segregation – not racism, but formal, codified discrimination – the civil rights movement delivered the last moral victory in America for which there is still a consensus.

Decode


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) "Decoding the tsetse fly's DNA is a major scientific breakthrough.
  • (2) TV decoders of UAR-1 type are recommended for clinical practice.
  • (3) In each case the probe was placed at a single site at the junction of the head and body of the subunit, near the decoding site and the area in which elongation factor Tu is bound.
  • (4) Factor 3 (mixed audio) was defined by accuracy at decoding discrepant cues and "noisy" audio cues.
  • (5) During retrieval, the bar code is decoded in real-time and the desired images are automatically retrieved.
  • (6) The consulting skills required of medical students and practitioners have been categorized into a number of specific skills, two of which are: students' ability to empathize with the patient; and ability to decode non-verbal cues given by the patient in the interview.
  • (7) The VBM deficit is a failure to decode the target stimulus, and is not simply a function of abnormalities due to an overactive transient channel system.
  • (8) Sixteen autistic children with WISC Performance IQs of 70 or above were analyzed to determine their conceptions of spatial relations, size comparisons, and gesture imitations through the use of the WISC, an originally devised Language Decoding Test (LDT), and a modified Gesture Imitation Test (GIT).
  • (9) The need to see or to call the medical team to decode them allows close collaboration between the family and the clinical team.
  • (10) Spokesmen for BSkyB and the Premier League said that previous rulings by the ECJ and the UK high court make it clear that it is illegal for pubs to use foreign decoders to air cheap sport.
  • (11) It is proposed that locale is decoded by a form of spectral pattern recognition, whereby the locale of the source is represented as a peak on an autocorrelation function.
  • (12) This innate mechanism may have features in common with the vocal signal decoding mechanism of subhuman primates.
  • (13) The total variation in informational entropy is zero in the cycle of the invertible system, while in the noninvertible system the entropy of decoding is less than that of encoding.
  • (14) Taken together, the results demonstrate that the 8-basepair acceptor stem and the long extra arm are crucial determinants of tRNA(Sec) which enable decoding of UGA140 in the fdhF message.
  • (15) One child illustrated the close association between writing and phonologic encoding and decoding operations, and two children the preservation of linguistic skills provided the acoustic channel was by-passed and language presented visually.
  • (16) Worryingly for Allardyce, Sunderland’s defence seemed to be having trouble decoding his passing radar.
  • (17) Decoding these mRNAs yields protein products of 182 (P1), 175 (P1), 140 (P2) and 136 (P2) amino acids.
  • (18) After the initial analyses (at least 15 cells per person) the slides were decoded, destained and reused for C and Q band polymorphism studies.
  • (19) In addition to this, decoded tomographic images of unrestricted depth are readily attainable.
  • (20) Moreover, we find that certain mild perturbations of the structure, for example, creation of G-U wobble pairs, generate resistance to streptomycin, an antibiotic known to interfere with the decoding process.