code vs schedule

code

noun
  • A body of law, sanctioned by legislation, in which the rules of law to be specifically applied by the courts are set forth in systematic form; a compilation of laws by public authority; a digest. 

  • By synecdoche: a codeword, code point, an encoded representation of a character, symbol, or other entity. 

  • A message represented by rules intended to conceal its meaning. 

  • Any system of principles, rules or regulations relating to one subject. 

  • A program. 

  • A cryptographic system using a codebook that converts words or phrases into codewords. 

  • A particular lect or language variety. 

  • A set of unwritten rules that bind a social group. 

  • Instructions for a computer, written in a programming language; the input of a translator, an interpreter or a browser, namely: source code, machine code, bytecode. 

  • A short symbol, often with little relation to the item it represents. 

  • An emergency requiring situation-trained members of the staff. 

  • A set of rules for converting information into another form or representation. 

verb
  • To encode. 

  • To call a hospital emergency code. 

  • To categorise by assigning identifiers from a schedule, for example CPT coding for medical insurance purposes. 

  • To go into a state where a hospital emergency code is required to save one's life. 

  • To encode a protein. 

  • To add codes to a dataset. 

  • Of a patient, to suffer a sudden medical emergency (a code blue) such as cardiac arrest. 

  • To write software programs. 

schedule

noun
  • A written or printed table of information, often forming an annex or appendix to a statute or other regulatory instrument, or to a legal contract. 

  • A serial record of items, systematically arranged. 

  • One of the five divisions into which controlled drugs are classified, or the restrictions denoted by such classification. 

  • An allocation or ordering of a set of tasks on one or several resources. 

  • A procedural plan, usually but not necessarily tabular in nature, indicating a sequence of operations and the planned times at which those operations are to occur. 

verb
  • To add a name to the list of people who are participating in something. 

  • To plan an activity at a specific date or time in the future. 

  • To create a time-schedule. 

  • To admit (a person) to hospital as an involuntary patient under a schedule of the applicable mental health law. 

How often have the words code and schedule occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )