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Batch vs. Group — What's the Difference?

Batch vs. Group — What's the Difference?

Difference Between Batch and Group

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Batch

An amount produced at one baking
A batch of cookies.

Group

An assemblage of persons or objects gathered or located together; an aggregation
A group of dinner guests.
A group of buildings near the road.

Batch

A quantity required for or produced as the result of one operation
Made a batch of cookie dough.
Mixed a batch of cement.

Group

A set of two or more figures that make up a unit or design, as in sculpture.

Batch

A group of persons or things
A batch of tourists.
A whole new batch of problems.
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Group

A number of individuals or things considered or classed together because of similarities
A small group of supporters across the country.

Batch

(Computers) A set of data or jobs to be processed in a single program run.

Group

(Linguistics) A category of related languages that is less inclusive than a family.

Batch

Variant of bach.

Group

A military unit consisting of two or more battalions and a headquarters.

Batch

To assemble or process as a batch.

Group

A unit of two or more squadrons in the US Air Force, smaller than a wing.

Batch

The quantity of bread or other baked goods baked at one time.
We made a batch of cookies to take to the party.

Group

Two or more atoms behaving or regarded as behaving as a single chemical unit.

Batch

(by extension) A quantity of anything produced at one operation.
We poured a bucket of water in at the top, and the ice-maker dispensed a batch of ice-cubes at the bottom.

Group

A column in the periodic table of the elements.

Batch

A group or collection of things of the same kind, such as a batch of letters or the next batch of business.

Group

(Geology) A stratigraphic unit, especially a unit consisting of two or more formations deposited during a single geologic era.

Batch

(computing) A set of data to be processed at one time.
The system throttled itself to batches of 50 requests at a time to keep the thread count under control.

Group

(Mathematics) A set, together with a binary associative operation, such that the set is closed under the operation, the set contains an identity element for the operation, and each element of the set has an inverse element with respect to the operation. The integers form a group under the operation of ordinary addition.

Batch

A bread roll.

Group

Of, relating to, constituting, or being a member of a group
A group discussion.
A group effort.

Batch

(Philippines) A graduating class; school class.
She was the valedictorian of Batch ’73.

Group

To place or arrange in a group
Grouped the children according to height.

Batch

(obsolete) The process of baking.

Group

To belong to or form a group
The soldiers began to group on the hillside.

Batch

A bank; a sandbank.

Group

A number of things or persons being in some relation to one another.
There is a group of houses behind the hill;
He left town to join a Communist group
A group of people gathered in front of the Parliament to demonstrate against the Prime Minister's proposals.

Batch

A field or patch of ground lying near a stream; the dale in which a stream flows.

Group

(group theory) A set with an associative binary operation, under which there exists an identity element, and such that each element has an inverse.

Batch

(transitive) To aggregate things together into a batch.
The contractor batched the purchase orders for the entire month into one statement.

Group

An effective divisor on a curve.

Batch

To handle a set of input data or requests as a batch process.
The purchase requests for the day were stored in a queue and batched for printing the next morning.

Group

A (usually small) group of people who perform music together.
Did you see the new jazz group?

Batch

(informal) To live as a bachelor temporarily, of a married man or someone virtually married.
I am batching next week when my wife visits her sister.

Group

(astronomy) A small number (up to about fifty) of galaxies that are near each other.

Batch

Of a process, operating for a defined set of conditions, and then halting.
The plant had two batch assembly lines for packaging, as well as a continuous feed production line.

Group

(chemistry) A column in the periodic table of chemical elements.

Batch

The quantity of bread baked at one time.

Group

(chemistry) A functional group.
Nitro is an electron-withdrawing group.

Batch

A quantity of anything produced at one operation; a group or collection of persons or things of the same kind; as, a batch of letters; the next batch of business.

Group

(sociology) A subset of a culture or of a society.

Batch

All the loaves of bread baked at the same time

Group

(military) An air force formation.

Batch

(often followed by `of') a large number or amount or extent;
A batch of letters
A deal of trouble
A lot of money
He made a mint on the stock market
It must have cost plenty

Group

(geology) A collection of formations or rock strata.

Batch

A collection of things or persons to be handled together

Group

(computing) A number of users with the same rights with respect to accession, modification, and execution of files, computers and peripherals.

Batch

Batch together; assemble or process as a batch

Group

An element of an espresso machine from which hot water pours into the portafilter.

Group

(music) A number of eighth, sixteenth, etc., notes joined at the stems; sometimes rather indefinitely applied to any ornament made up of a few short notes.

Group

(sports) A set of teams playing each other in the same division, while not during the same period playing any teams that belong to other sets in the division.

Group

(business) A commercial organization.

Group

(transitive) To put together to form a group.
Group the dogs by hair colour

Group

(intransitive) To come together to form a group.

Group

A cluster, crowd, or throng; an assemblage, either of persons or things, collected without any regular form or arrangement; as, a group of men or of trees; a group of isles.

Group

An assemblage of objects in a certain order or relation, or having some resemblance or common characteristic; as, groups of strata.

Group

A variously limited assemblage of animals or plants, having some resemblance, or common characteristics in form or structure. The term has different uses, and may be made to include certain species of a genus, or a whole genus, or certain genera, or even several orders.

Group

A number of eighth, sixteenth, etc., notes joined at the stems; - sometimes rather indefinitely applied to any ornament made up of a few short notes.

Group

To form a group of; to arrange or combine in a group or in groups, often with reference to mutual relation and the best effect; to form an assemblage of.
The difficulty lies in drawing and disposing, or, as the painters term it, in grouping such a multitude of different objects.

Group

Any number of entities (members) considered as a unit

Group

(chemistry) two or more atoms bound together as a single unit and forming part of a molecule

Group

A set that is closed, associative, has an identity element and every element has an inverse

Group

Arrange into a group or groups;
Can you group these shapes together?

Group

Form a group or group together

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