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Directive

A directive is an instruction or order intended to guide action or behavior. It can be informal guidance or a formal mandate issued by a person or body with authority. In many contexts, a directive implies an obligation that recipients are expected to follow, though enforceability varies by context.

In government and international law, a directive is a binding instrument that requires authorities to achieve

In computing, a directive is a statement that directs the behavior of a compiler, interpreter, or runtime

In organizational and administrative settings, a directive is a formal order from higher authority directing employees

In linguistics and semantics, the term can describe language used to issue commands or requests, often realized

certain
results
within
a
set
period,
while
leaving
the
choice
of
methods
to
the
recipient
jurisdiction.
The
European
Union
uses
directives
to
harmonize
laws
among
member
states;
directives
must
be
transposed
into
national
law,
and
they
differ
from
regulations,
which
apply
directly
without
national
transposition.
environment.
Preprocessor
directives
in
languages
such
as
C
and
C++
control
compilation,
while
other
environments
use
directives
or
pragmas
to
influence
optimization,
warnings,
or
linkage.
or
units
to
undertake
specific
actions.
It
may
be
issued
as
part
of
policy
implementation,
operations,
or
safety
requirements,
and
it
is
usually
distinguished
from
broader
policies
or
regulations
in
that
it
prescribes
concrete
steps
or
tasks.
by
the
imperative
mood,
though
this
usage
varies
by
theory.