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ID

Id is a term with multiple meanings across disciplines, including psychology, linguistics, and information technology. In everyday usage, it is also an abbreviation for identity or identification. The different senses are distinct but share a common idea of a fundamental unit of behavior, meaning, or labeling.

In psychology, the id is a central element of Sigmund Freud's structural model of the mind. It

In linguistics and classical languages, id is a neuter demonstrative pronoun in Latin meaning “that” or “it.”

In computing and information technology, ID stands for identifier. An identifier is a unique label assigned

Overall, id serves as a compact label for a fundamental element—whether a psychic impulse, a linguistic reference,

represents
the
primitive,
instinctual
drives
and
impulses
present
from
birth,
operating
on
the
pleasure
principle
and
seeking
immediate
gratification.
The
id
is
unconscious
and
amoral,
serving
as
a
repository
for
basic
desires
such
as
hunger,
sex,
and
aggression.
Its
impulses
are
balanced
by
the
ego,
which
mediates
reality,
and
the
superego,
which
imposes
moral
norms.
Together,
these
elements
shape
human
behavior.
In
English,
the
term
id
more
commonly
appears
in
abbreviated
form
as
ID,
denoting
identification
or
identity.
to
an
entity
such
as
a
user,
a
record
in
a
database,
or
an
element
in
a
document.
In
web
development,
the
id
attribute
assigns
a
unique
identifier
to
an
HTML
element
for
styling
and
scripting.
In
mathematics
and
computer
science,
the
identity
function
id
maps
every
input
to
itself,
i.e.,
id(x)
=
x.
or
a
unique
tag
in
data
systems.