问题 单项选择题

数据处理过程中经常会发生数据出错,因此,数据校验工作非常重要。实际工作中一般都需要采取某些有效的数据校验措施,但有些做法是很少采用的。例如,在每个处理阶段结束后,要求()。

A.自己采用其他方法校验处理结果

B.自己再采用同样的处理方法处理一遍

C.其他人采用其他方法校验处理结果

D.小组长宏观检查数据的合理性

答案

参考答案:B

解析:

[分析] 数据处理过程中出现数据错误是难免的,但由于数据出错的危害性很大,所以避免数据出错的最好方法是企业建立校验制度,个人培养校验习惯。

企业建立校验制度就是要建立数据处理责任制。一个人在一个处理阶段结束后,应该由另一个人来校验,一般是采用其他方法来检查处理结果。然后,再由小组长对处理结果进行宏观检查,看数据是否合理。

个人的校验习惯主要是每个处理阶段结束后,并不急着进行下一阶段的处理,而是用其他方法对处理结果进行一次校验。例如,检查数据总和是否相等、是否平衡等。发现错误后,再进行细致的定位,直到找出错误原因,纠正错误。

“自己再按原来的处理过程处理一遍”这种做法一般并不可行。因为处理工作量很大,自己再处理一遍心里不会高兴,个人的习惯性错误也难以避免,效果并不好。领导要清楚这些,不能这样要求下属。

单项选择题
单项选择题

Soon after his appointment as secretary-general of the United Nations in 1997, Kofi Annan lamented that he was being accused of failing to reform the world body in six weeks. "But what are you complaining about" asked the Russian ambassador. "You’ve had more time than God." Ah, Mr. Annan quipped back, "but God had one big advantage. He worked alone without a General Assembly, a Security Council and [all] the committees."

Recounting that anecdote to journalists in New York this week, Mr. Annan sought to explain why a draft declaration on UN reform and tackling world poverty, due to be endorsed by some 150 heads of state and government at a world summit in the city on September 14th-16th, had turned into such a pale shadow of the proposals that he himself had put forward in March. "With 191 member states", he sighed, "it’s not easy to get an agreement."

Most countries put the blame on the United States, in the form of its abrasive new ambassador, John Bolton, for insisting at the end of August on hundreds of last-minute amendments and a line-by-line renegotiation of a text most others had thought was almost settled. But a group of middle-income developing nations, including Pakistan, Cuba, Iran, Egypt, Syria and Venezuela, also came up with plenty of last-minute changes of their own. The risk of having no document at all, and thus nothing for the world’s leaders to come to New York for, was averted only by marathon all-night and all-weekend talks.

The 35-page final document is not wholly devoid of substance. It calls for the creation of a Peacebuilding Commission to supervise the reconstruction of countries after wars; the replacement of the discredited UN Commission on Human Rights by a supposedly tougher Human Rights Council; the recognition of a new "responsibility to protect" peoples from genocide and other atrocities when national authorities fail to take action, including, if necessary, by force; and an "early" reform of the Security Council. Although much pared down, all these proposals have at least survived.

Others have not. Either they proved so contentious that they were omitted altogether, such as the sections on disarmament and non-proliferation and the International Criminal Court, or they were watered down to little more than empty platitudes. The important section on collective security and the use of force no longer even mentions the vexed issue of pre-emptive strikes; meanwhile the section on terrorism condemns it "in all its forms and manifestations, committed by whomever, wherever and for whatever purposes", but fails to provide the clear definition the Americans wanted.

Both Mr. Annan and, more surprisingly, George Bush have nevertheless sought to put a good face on things, with Mr. Annan describing the summit document as "an important step forward" and Mr. Bush saying the UN had taken "the first steps" towards reform. Mr. Annan and Mr. Bolton are determined to go a lot further. It is now up to the General Assembly to flesh out the document’s skeleton proposals and propose new ones. But its chances of success appear slim.

According to the text, empty platitudes might be found in the section on ()

A. Peacebuilding Commission

B. UN Commission on Human Rights

C. terrorism

D. the Security Council