- Industry: Computer
- Number of terms: 98482
- Number of blossaries: 0
- Company Profile:
Sometimes referred to as “Big Blue” IBM is a multinational corporation headquartered in Armonk, New York. It manufactures computer hardware and software and provides information technology and services.
A word fragment. For example, the sentence "It's a wonderful world" is made up of the following word fragments, it + 's + a + wonderful + world.
Industry:Software
An area of computer memory, or storage, that temporarily holds data. Data in the clipboard is available to other applications.
Industry:Software
An explicit formal specification of the representation of the objects, concepts, and other entities that can exist in some area of interest and the relationships among them. See also Web Ontology Language.
Industry:Software
A word that can influence the relevant rank of a document in the search results. During query processing, the importance of a document that contains a boost word might be raised or lowered, depending on the score that is predefined for the word. See also boost class.
Industry:Software
An area of contiguous storage that is allocated upon request from the user application. Heap elements are always allocated within a single heap segment. See also heap segment.
Industry:Software
An explicitly addressable register that can be used for a variety of purposes (for example, as an accumulator or an index register).
Industry:Software
A word that qualifies the noun with respect to its reference in context or the quantity. In English, determiners may include articles ('a'; 'the'), quantifiers ('all'; 'some'), demonstratives ('this'; 'that'), possessive pronouns ('my'; 'your'), and cardinal numbers ('one'; 'two').
Industry:Software
An area of local storage, used for VSO DEDB data, that can provide lookaside capability for shared VSO areas.
Industry:Software
An explicitly defined group of operations corresponding to Java commands that act on resources.
Industry:Software
A word that syntactically functions separately but is phonetically connected to another word. A clitic can be written as connected or separate from the word it is bound to. Common examples of clitics include the last part of a contraction in English 'wouldn't' or 'you're'.
Industry:Software