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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a tight scheduling" is not correct in English.
It should be "tight scheduling" without the article "a." You can use "tight scheduling" to refer to a schedule that is very full or has little flexibility.
Example: "Due to tight scheduling, we will need to complete the project by the end of the week."
Alternatives: "tight timetable" or "strict schedule."
Exact(1)
In addition, the real-time property of a MAC protocol based on a TDMA solution is difficult to achieve even using a tight scheduling scheme.
Similar(58)
We had a tight schedule.
It's a tight schedule.
She keeps me on a tight schedule.
We operate on a tight schedule and a tight budget.
"Everything was on a tight schedule," he explained.
But the Grand Tour ensembles were on a tight schedule, and had about twenty minutes each.
Bosses imposed a tight schedule and strict worker discipline to keep up the productive pace.
(The man had been in office for eight days — a tight schedule for era-delivering).
But with Rodriguez playing better and the Yankees having a tight schedule, the exam was canceled.
That is what matters to people who are building web applications on a tight schedule.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com