aql
Acceptable Quality Level (AQL) is a statistical concept used in quality control to define the maximum number of defective units allowed in a sample for the entire lot to be considered acceptable. It is part of sampling plans used to decide whether to accept or reject a shipment based on inspected items. AQLs are defined for defect categories such as minor, major, and critical and are linked to sample sizes and inspection levels. The chosen AQL reflects a balance between inspection cost and risk for both producer and consumer—the greater the risk tolerance, the higher the AQL. In practice, a random sample is inspected; if defects do not exceed the plan’s allowance, the lot is accepted; otherwise it is rejected or reworked. Standards such as ISO 3951, ISO 2859-1, and ANSI/ASQ Z1.4 provide commonly used AQL tables. AQL is a probabilistic measure, not a guarantee of defect-free production.
ArangoDB Query Language (AQL) is the declarative query language used by the multi-model database ArangoDB. It