We know that in key knowledge dotpoints, "for example" means the following items are only illustrative, but "including" mandates knowledge of the following points.<br>But in the new study design there is a new, undocumented wrinkle... one (and only one) key knowledge dotpoint uses a mysteriously suggestive colon...<br>
<br>(ITA U3O2 KK10) "- a methodology for creating an RDBMS structure: identifying tables and fields; normalising tables, defining data types and field sizes, identifying primary key and foreign key fields"<br clear="all">
<br>Does that colon signify "for example" or "including"?<br><br>-- <br>Mark Kelly<br>Manager - Information Systems<br>McKinnon Secondary College<br>McKinnon Rd McKinnon 3204, Victoria, Australia<br>Direct line / Voicemail: 8520 9085<br>
School Phone +613 8520 9000<br>School Fax +613 9578 9253<br><a href="mailto:kel@mckinnonsc.vic.edu.au">kel@mckinnonsc.vic.edu.au</a><br><br>Webmaster - <a href="http://www.mckinnonsc.vic.edu.au">http://www.mckinnonsc.vic.edu.au</a><br>
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