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The phrase "a exhaustive" is not correct in English.
It should be "an exhaustive." You can use "an exhaustive" when referring to something that is thorough and complete, often in the context of a list, study, or analysis.
Example: "The report provided an exhaustive overview of the research findings."
Alternatives: "a comprehensive" or "a thorough."
Exact(10)
Although there are ways of computing subgroups during point group generation rather than after the fact, the algorithm employed is a exhaustive search algorithm which uses the permutation cycles of the point group multiplication table.
A exhaustive list of QPCR primer sequences can be provided on request.
BactPepDB is a database of predicted peptides from a exhaustive survey of complete prokaryote genomes.
The algorithm is a exhaustive search to find the best combination of Fourier coefficients in terms of the information criterion.
No stochastic optimizer was used, so it may be possible for slightly higher performance (and slightly better agreement) with a exhaustive EP parameter search.
Relating to the previous formulas, the resulting search space is | S| = 1.749 × 10, and every tree has 2, 975 neighbors, an area too large to be explored with a exhaustive search.
Similar(50)
Consequently, there is no difference between an exhaustive and a non-exhaustive interpretation.
They are merely an illustrative not an exhaustive catalogue.
(It is, as the author readily admits, neither an exhaustive nor an unbiased survey).
The jury deliberated for only an hour after an exhaustive three-week trial.
The above are a few ideas, not an exhaustive list.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com