The word error has different meanings in different domains. The concrete meaning of the Latin word error means "wandering" or "straying", although the metaphorical meaning "mistake, misapprehension" is actually more common. To the contrary of an illusion, an error or a mistake can be dispelled through knowledge (knowing that one is looking at a mirage and not at real water doesn't make the mirage disappear). In a similar manner, ideology can't be dispelled by simple knowledge of its existence, but only, marxists argue, by a shift in perspective.
An
error is a difference between a computed, estimated, or measured value and the true, specified, or theoretically correct value. See
errors and residuals in statistics.
Experimental science
An
error is a bound on the precision and accuracy of the result of a measurement. These can be classified into two types:
statistical error (see above) and
systematic error. Statistical error is caused by random (and therefore inherently unpredictable) fluctuations in the measurement apparatus, whereas systematic error is caused by an unknown but nonrandom fluctuation. If the cause of the systematic error can be identified, then it can usually be eliminated. Such errors can also be referred to as
uncertainties.
An
error is a difference between desired and actual
performance.
Engineers often seek to design
systems in such a way as to mitigate or preferably avoid the effects of error, whether
unintentional or not. One type of error is
human error which includes
cognitive bias.
Human factors engineering is often applied to designs in an attempt to minimize this type of error by making systems more forgiving or
error-tolerant. Errors in a system can also be
latent design errors that may go unnoticed for years, until the right set of circumstances arises that cause them to become active. See also
Observational error.
See
medical error for a description of
error in medicine.
See
aviation safety for a description of how flying has been made safer by making the
aviation system more error-tolerant.
An
error is a deviation from a correct value caused by a
malfunction in a system or a
functional unit. An example would be the occurrence of a wrong
bit caused by an equipment malfunction. (Sources:
Federal Standard 1037C and
MIL-STD-188). See also
error-correcting code and
error-detecting code. A
soft error is a deviation from a correct value which does not necessarily imply a malfunction.
An
error may be a piece of incorrectly written program code. A
syntax error is an ungrammatical or nonsensical statement in a program; one that cannot be parsed by the language implementation. A
logic error is a mistake in the
algorithm used, which causes erroneous results or undesired operation.
Anti-patterns, or undesirable program design elements, may make it harder to detect or correct errors.
An error may also be an exception, a condition which arises during program execution due to an unexpected event. For instance, it is an error to attempt to write more files onto a disk that is full. Careful programmers write code that can handle errors that may occur; strategies for doing so include using error codes and using exception handling. Continuing past an unhandled error can cause error avalanche, a condition in which errors pile up and behavior becomes more erratic.
Social context
An individual language user's deviations from standard language paradigms are sometimes referred to as
errors. At present, this usage is out of favor outside of language classes. Those who recognize the role of language usage in everyday social class distinctions feel that linguistics should be descriptive rather than prescriptive to avoid reinforcing dominant class value judgments about what linguistic forms should and should not be used.
Gaffe
A
gaffe is a verbal mistake made by a company or individual, usually in a
social environment. The mistake comes from saying something that is true, but inappropriate. This commonly results in embarrassment or, when the gaffe has negative connotations, friction between people involved. As used by some journalists, particularly sportswriters, "gaffe" becomes an imagined synonym for any kind of mistake, e.g. a dropped ball by a player in a baseball game.
An
error is said to occur when perfect fidelity is lost in the copying of
information. For example, in an asexually reproducing species, an error (or mutation) has occurred for each DNA
nucleotide that differs between the
child and the
parent. Errors in this sense are not judged as "good" or "bad", although an error may make an
organism either more or less adapted to its
environment.
An
error is judged by the
official scorer when a
runner advances a base because of a
fielding mistake, and perfect play would have prevented the advancement, and the mistake was physical. Mental misjudgments are not errors. Failing to get more than one out on given play is not an error. Application of this rule is necessarily subjective. See
error (baseball).
See also
External links
Error | Metrology | Human communication
Fehler | Error | Fout | エラー | Błąd | Erro | Ошибка | Fel