repeatabilityrepeating
Repeatabilityrepeating is not an established term in scientific literature; it is a coined phrase that may appear in informal discussions to stress the connection between the ability to obtain the same result when an experiment is repeated and the act of repeating the experiment itself. In this sense, the term blends two related ideas: repeatability, as a measure of precision, and repeating as the procedural act of performing measurements again.
Repeatability refers to the closeness of agreement between successive measurements carried out under unchanged conditions. It
In practice, repeatability is contrasted with reproducibility, which assesses variability when conditions change—such as different operators,
Examples include a balance in a single lab yielding nearly identical weights on repeated trials, or software