1. circ - Noun
2. circ - Verb
An amphitheatrical circle for sports; a circus.
Source: Webster's dictionarycirc.
This stream of audio frames, as a whole, is then subjected to CIRC encoding, which segments and rearranges the data and expands it with parity bits in a way that allows occasional read errors to be detected and corrected. Source: Internet
The other nine bytes consist of eight CIRC error-correction bytes and one subcode byte used for control and display. Source: Internet
Eight-to-Fourteen Modulation (EFM) and a modification of CD's CIRC code, called Advanced Cross Interleaved Reed-Solomon Code (ACIRC) are employed. Source: Internet
CIRC encoding plus the subcode byte generate 33-bytes long frames, called "channel-data" frames. Source: Internet
The first element of a CIRC decoder is a relatively weak inner (32,28) Reed–Solomon code, shortened from a (255,251) code with 8-bit symbols. Source: Internet
The result is a CIRC that can completely correct error bursts up to 4000 bits, or about 2.5 mm on the disc surface. Source: Internet