- Industry: 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 image processing, an equation commonly used for transforming pixel intensities in an image that is a summation of n factors and coefficients in the form of ax n + bx n –1 + ... cx 0.
Industry:Software; Computer
XML-based, lightweight, platform-agnostic protocol used to exchange information in a decentralized, distributed environment. The protocol defines the XML elements that must be used to compose a message and how the data in a message should be processed. SOAP was originally an acronym for Simple Object Access Protocol, but as of version 1.2 of the W3C specification, the term is no longer an acronym.
Industry:Software; Computer
The part of a scroll bar that the user drags to view other parts of a document. The scroller size reflects how much of the document is visible; the smaller the scroller, the less of the content the user can see at that time. The scroller represents the relative location, in the whole document, of the portion that can be seen in the window.
Industry:Software; Computer
A one-, two-, three-, or four-dimensional environment whose components (or channels) represent intensity values. For example, RGB space is a three-dimensional color space whose stimuli are the red, green, and blue intensities that make up a given color; and red, green, and blue are color channels.
Industry:Software; Computer
The indexed position of a 2-byte Unicode character in a text buffer, starting at zero for the first character. Sequential values for character offset correspond to the storage order of the characters. Compare edge offset.
Industry:Software; Computer
A piece of code that exercises some part of an application. A unit test provides a specific input and expects the application to return a specific output.
Industry:Software; Computer
In QuickTime, a single element in a user data list, such as a modification date or copyright notice.
Industry:Software; Computer
Reduction of the dynamic range of an audio signal, typically by reducing the gain ratio for amplitudes above a specific level. Compare limiting.
Industry:Software; Computer
An iPhone OS API that produces cryptographically secure pseudorandom numbers.
Industry:Software; Computer