What does a quality control flag mean?#
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Each data will have a specific quality flag assigned that indicates its status! Both Real-Time quality control and Delayed - Mode quality control follow a solid quality flag policy. Here are some examples that show how robust this quality flag policy is:
• The value assigned by a test cannot override a higher value from a previous test. Taking the Real-Time quality control as an example: a QC flag ‘4’ (bad data) set by Test 11 (gradient test) cannot be decreased to QC flag ‘3’ (bad data that is potentially correctable) set by Test 15 (gray list).
• A measurement with QC flag '4' (bad data) or '3' (bad data that are potentially correctable) cannot get a better QC flag in other quality control tests.
• Since salinity (PSAL) is almost always calculated from temperature (TEMP) and conductivity (CNDC), if the temperature is flagged '4' (or '3'), then salinity is also flagged as '4' (or '3').
