Sentence examples for alphabet elements from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(1)

The phrase "alphabet elements" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to the individual letters or characters that make up an alphabet, often in discussions about language, linguistics, or coding systems.
Example: "In this exercise, we will analyze the frequency of each alphabet element in the given text."
Alternatives: "letters of the alphabet" or "alphabet characters".

Exact(1)

This variability measure takes values between 0 and 1, and describes how dispersed the distribution of the alphabet elements is: higher values correspond to more uniform nucleotide / codon usage; lower values correspond to more biased nucleotide / codon usage, indicating that some nucleotides / synonymous codons are preferred.

Similar(58)

Consider the Greek alphabet, the elements of which were adapted from the Phoenician around the 9th century.

For batch CHNOPS, SIRIUS 3 is run using this alphabet of elements without any further restrictions.

Here, "decomposing a peak" refers to finding all molecular formulas (over the fixed alphabet of elements) that are sufficiently close to the measured peak mass.

We use the alphabet of elements CHNOPSClBrI for all instances, and mass accuracies 5 and 10 ppm as suggested in [49].

This means that doubling the peak mass we want to decompose, will increase the running time of the algorithm 32-fold for the alphabet of elements CHNOPS.

A fragmentation tree (FT) ({mathcal{T}}= (V,E)) consists of a set of nodes V which are molecular formulas over some alphabet of elements, and directed edges (arcs) connecting these nodes.

In more detail, nodes V correspond to fragments of a compound, whereas the labels are (neutral or radical) losses: that is, both are molecular formulas over some fixed alphabet of elements (Böcker and Rasche, 2008).

Hence, running time can easily get prohibitive, in particular if we consider larger alphabets of elements, or have to perform many decompositions.

In 2005, Böcker and Lipták [100, 101] presented an algorithm that works for arbitrary alphabets of elements, requires only little memory, and is swift in practice.

The vectors are of size p and contain alphabetically sorted elements of the alphabet defined by the corresponding SNP site (SNP site always refers to a whole population).

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