prone to error
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prone — [prōn] adj. [ME < L pronus < pro, before: see PRO 1] 1. lying or leaning face downward 2. lying flat or prostrate; in a horizontal position 3. having a natural bent; disposed or inclined (to) [prone to error] 4. groveling; abject … English World dictionary
prone — [ proun ] adjective * 1. ) likely to do something or be affected by something, especially something bad: prone to: The coastal region is prone to earthquakes. prone to do something: He s prone to gain weight. error /injury prone: an injury prone… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Error hiding — is an anti pattern, in computer programming. The programmer hides error messages by overriding them with exception handling. As a result of this the root error message is hidden from the user (hence error hiding ) and so they will not be told… … Wikipedia
prone */ — UK [prəʊn] / US [proʊn] adjective 1) likely to do something or be affected by something, especially something bad prone to: The coastal region is prone to earthquakes. prone to do something: He s prone to gain weight. error /injury prone: an… … English dictionary
error-prone — adjective capable of making an error all men are error prone • Syn: ↑erring • Similar to: ↑fallible … Useful english dictionary
error-prone repair — See SOS system … Dictionary of molecular biology
error-prone — adjective In the habit of making errors … Wiktionary
error-prone — /ˈɛrə proʊn/ (say eruh prohn) adjective unusually susceptible to making errors …
Fundamental attribution error — In social psychology, the fundamental attribution error (also known as correspondence bias or attribution effect) describes the tendency to over value dispositional or personality based explanations for the observed behaviors of others while… … Wikipedia
Systematic error — Systematic errors are biases in measurement which lead to the situation where the mean of many separate measurements differs significantly from the actual value of the measured attribute. All measurements are prone to systematic errors, often of… … Wikipedia