0 present participle of encode --
1 to change something into a system for sending messages secretly, or to represent complicated information in a simple or short way: --
Grammatical information helps learners to encode sentences.
Some music CDs are encoded with information about the performers and their music.
Many satellite broadcasts are encoded so that they can only be received by people who have paid to see them.
The development of a general theory of frequency encoding in excitable systems by hormonal stimuli allowed the study of intracellular calcium dynamics.
Frequency encoding in excitable systems with application to calcium oscillations.
In particular, we show how those examples would be encoded in our language and why, under this new encoding, they typecheck.
In the next section, we define the discrete interval encoding tree with operations for inserting, deleting and searching for elements.
Work has also been carried out in encoding into solutions disjunctions between attributes and negations of attribute values.
Three encoding strategies (verbal, nominal and locational) are used to show the patterns of encoding for the four predicate types across languages.
We do not claim that our encoding will solve all of the problems with programming using higher-order abstract syntax.
In both cases, however, such encoding tricks distract from and complicate the semantic analysis.