Canonical

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Canonical is the adjective for canon, literally a 'rule', and has come to mean also 'standard', 'typical', or 'unique distinguished exemplar'.

See the page canon (disambiguation) for most uses of 'canonical' in law, canon law, religion, literature, etc.

Contents

[edit] Mathematics

  • In mathematics, a canonical form is a natural unique representation of an object, or a preferred notation for some object.
  • In set theory, a canonical representative is a standard member of each element of a set partition.

[edit] Physics

[edit] Computer science

  • In enterprise application integration, the Canonical Model is a design pattern used to communicate between different data formats.
  • In computer networking, a canonical name record (CNAME record) is a type of Domain Name System record.
  • In computer networking, a canonical number is a former name for a MAC address

[edit] Business

[edit] Religion

[edit] See also

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