upload
Apple Inc.
Branche: Computer; Software
Number of terms: 54848
Number of blossaries: 7
Company Profile:
Apple Inc., formerly Apple Computer, Inc., is an American multinational corporation headquartered in Cupertino, California, that designs, develops, and sells consumer electronics, computer software and personal computers.
In AppleScript, the object that receives a command if no object is specified or if the object is incompletely specified in the command. Default (or implicit) targets are specified in tell statements.
Industry:Software; Computer
A sprite such as a clickable button that has wired actions associated with it.
Industry:Software; Computer
A framework version specifier designating a framework that is incompatible with programs linked with a previous version of the framework’s dynamic shared library. Compare minor version.
Industry:Software; Computer
A thread running in kernel space for handling I/O that is triggered by an interrupt, but does not run in an interrupt context. Also called an I/O service thread.
Industry:Software; Computer
In the Ink Services technology, the process of recognizing an ink phrase that was drawn by the user at an earlier time.
Industry:Software; Computer
In WebObjects, a special kind of fault that represents a number of other faults in a single object. See also fault, faulting.
Industry:Software; Computer
In digital audio , retrieving discrete channels from an interleaved representation. Also called reverse multiplexing. Compare interleaving.
Industry:Software; Computer
A uniform shift parallel to the baseline of the positions of individual pairs or sets of glyphs in the style run. Compare cross-stream shift.
Industry:Software; Computer
The time lag between one audio event and another. In audio processing, the second event is typically a processed or unprocessed copy of the original event. Delay is a settable parameter in the AUDelay audio unit included in Mac OS X.
Industry:Software; Computer
A specification file used by a build tool to create an executable version of an application. A makefile details the files, dependencies, and rules by which the application is built.
Industry:Software; Computer