throughput
English
Etymology
From through + put.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈθɹuː.pʊt/
- (General American, Canada) IPA(key): /ˈθɹu.pʊt/
- Hyphenation: through‧put
Noun
throughput (countable and uncountable, plural throughputs)
- (networking) The rate at which data is transferred through a system.
- (operations) The rate of production; the rate at which something can be processed.
- The factory managed a throughput of 120 units per hour.
- 1927, Harald Nielsen, "Distillation of Carbonaceous Materials" , US Patent 1886262, line 70:
- "if the rate of heating is substantially reduced, not only is the throughput of the apparatus diminished and the cost of the process increased, but the properties of the resultant coke are detrimentally affected."
- 1961 December, “Planning the London Midland main-line electrification”, in Trains Illustrated, page 719:
- However, many people—including railwaymen—are only beginning to realise how great is the amount of civil engineering work necessary to achieve adequate clearances for high-voltage overhead equipment under bridges and tunnels; what is involved in the re-signalling needed to permit the increased throughput of traffic (in some places it is unavoidable, to afford better sighting of signals obscured by overhead electrical gear); [...].
- (optics) Synonym of etendue.
Alternative forms
- thruput (US, nonstandard)
Derived terms
- aggregate throughput
- maximum throughput
- system throughput
Translations
rate of data transmission
|
rate of processing
|
etendue — see etendue
See also
- feed-through
Further reading
throughput on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
throughput (business) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
- put through
Italian
Etymology
Unadapted borrowing from English throughput.
Noun
throughput m (uncountable)
- (networking) throughput (rate of data transmission)
Further reading
- throughput in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana