The Computer Journal
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The Computer Journal
Summary
The Computer Journal is a scientific journal[1]. It ranks in the top 3% of scientific_journal entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- The Computer Journal's instance of is recorded as scientific journal[3].
- The Computer Journal's editor is recorded as Erol Gelenbe[4].
- The Computer Journal's editor is recorded as Steve Furber[5].
- The Computer Journal's publisher is recorded as Oxford University Press[6].
- The Computer Journal's ISSN is recorded as 0010-4620[7].
- The Computer Journal's ISSN is recorded as 1460-2067[8].
- The Computer Journal's language of work or name is recorded as English[9].
- The Computer Journal's archives at is recorded as CLOCKSS[10].
- The Computer Journal's country of origin is recorded as United Kingdom[11].
- +1958-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of The Computer Journal[12].
- The Computer Journal's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/08082s[13].
- The Computer Journal's official website is recorded as http://comjnl.oxfordjournals.org/[14].
- The Computer Journal's main subject is recorded as computer science[15].
- The Computer Journal's NLM Unique ID is recorded as 9890560[16].
- The Computer Journal's ERA Journal ID is recorded as 17794[17].
- The Computer Journal's Scopus source ID is recorded as 23792[18].
- The Computer Journal's ISO 4 abbreviation is recorded as Comput. J.[19].
- The Computer Journal's Danish Bibliometric Research Indicator level is recorded as 2[20].
- The Computer Journal's Danish Bibliometric Research Indicator is recorded as 14450[21].
- The Computer Journal's JUFO ID is recorded as 53931[22].
- The Computer Journal's bibcode is recorded as CompJ[23].
- The Computer Journal's title is recorded as Computer journal[24].
- The Computer Journal's OpenCitations bibliographic resource ID is recorded as 80354[25].
- The Computer Journal's Online Books Page publication ID is recorded as computerjnl[26].
- The Computer Journal's editor-in-chief is recorded as Tom Crick[27].
Why It Matters
The Computer Journal ranks in the top 3% of scientific_journal entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2 views/month).[2]