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core and functionality
* Infusion ( s ), the name of extensions made to the core functionality of PHP-Fusion, an open-source content management system
This means he has final veto power on the core functionality.
As a microkernel must allow building arbitrary operating system services on top, it must provide some core functionality.
In addition to the features required by the core API, GPU vendors may provide additional functionality in the form of extensions.
Rather than requiring all desired functionality to be built into the language's core, Python was designed to be highly extensible.
Some wiki software is specifically geared for one of the usage types, while other software can be used for all three, but contains functionality, either in its core or through plugins, that help with one or more of the usage types.
Interleaf Worldview's core functionality is familiar to users of Adobe Acrobat and other Portable Document Format ( PDF ) viewers, although Worldview preceded by a year the introduction of Acrobat in 1993.
Often, a core set of utilities manages the basic installation from these packages and multiple package managers use these utilities to provide additional functionality.
As another example, the Synaptic Package Manager provides a graphical user interface by using the Advanced Packaging Tool ( apt ) library, which, in turn, relies on dpkg for core functionality.
The core functionality of a CAS is manipulation of mathematical expressions in symbolic form.
While core kernel functionality can only be provided by the operating system itself, some functionality previously provided by separately sold middleware is now integrated in operating systems.
To include all this functionality on a single chip, the transputer's core logic was simpler than most CPUs.
Though the core functionality remains similar, code depending on these enhancements may not work on Maxima, and bugs which were fixed in Macsyma may still be present in Maxima, and vice-versa.
The main differences were a doubled internal bus speed ( 100 MHz to 200 MHz ) for faster data transfer, lower core voltage ( only 1. 3 V at 400 MHz ) for lower power consumption and writeback functionality for the data cache, the lack of which had severely impaired performance on the PXA250.
This product leveraged the speed and functionality of eDirectory to store information, and would later become the Novell Identity Manager and form the foundation of a core product set within Novell.
These game engines are sometimes called " middleware " because, as with the business sense of the term, they provide a flexible and reusable software platform which provides all the core functionality needed, right out of the box, to develop a game application while reducing costs, complexities, and time-to-market — all critical factors in the highly competitive video game industry.
OpenBSD has integrated this method into their core system since OpenBSD 3. 3, with a special-purpose daemon ( spamd ) and functionality in the firewall ( pf ) to redirect known spammers to this tarpit.
While functionality varies between different types of vulnerability scanners, they share a common, core purpose of enumerating the vulnerabilities present in one or more targets.
In early video games, gameplay programmers would write code to create all the content in the game — if the player was supposed to shoot a particular enemy, and a red key was supposed to appear along with some text on the screen, then this functionality was all written as part of the core program in C or assembly language by a gameplay programmer.
MediaWiki provides a rich core feature set and a mechanism to attach extensions to provide additional functionality.
However, since the core of Overnet is decentralized, Overnet clients are still able to function with limited functionality.
With class helpers new functionality can be introduced to core RTL and VCL classes without changing the original source code of the RTL or VCL.
* Xpresso ( is not and never has been a module, it is a core functionality )

core and typically
" The basic model was not very useful out of the box, and adding RAM in the form of core memory typically brought the price up to $ 7, 995.
On smaller harps, like the folk harp, the core string material will typically be the same for all strings on a given harp.
An inductor is usually constructed as a coil of conducting material, typically copper wire, wrapped around a core either of air or of ferromagnetic or ferrimagnetic material.
The most popular ones were based on the Cyrix 486DLC / SLC core, which typically offered a substantial speed improvement due to its more efficient instruction pipeline and internal L1 SRAM cache.
In addition to the core and upper body strength necessary to deliver the implement, javelin throwers benefit from the agility and athleticism typically associated with running and jumping events.
The core of the slippery slope argument is that a specific rule or course of action is likely to result in unintended consequences and that these " unintended consequences " are undesirable ( and, typically, worse than either inaction or another course of remediation ).
" Legacy modernization " and " legacy transformation " refer to the act of reusing and refactoring existing, core business logic by providing new user interfaces ( typically Web interfaces ), sometimes through the use of techniques such as screen scraping and service-enabled access ( e. g., through Web services ).
When neutron star core material is presumed to consist mostly of free neutrons, it is typically referred to as neutron-degenerate matter in scientific literature.
The fraction of the reactor's fuel core replaced during refueling is typically one-fourth for a boiling-water reactor and one-third for a pressurized-water reactor.
The core is typically about 3 – 4 light years across, with the corona extending to about 20 light years from the cluster centre.
This can be visualized as a central core of diameter x, with typically a curved spiral wound around of thickness half x, although of course in reality it is made from one casting.
) Modern ammunition has a hardened lead core with a softer outer cladding or jacket, typically of an alloy of copper and nickel-cupro-nickel.
For any given level of general performance, a RISC chip will typically have far fewer transistors dedicated to the core logic which originally allowed designers to increase the size of the register set and increase internal parallelism.
In other instances where core data must or should be kept separate, the application designer typically carves up reserved storage areas into a number of sections equal to the number of I-streams.
It is typically sold as a long strip of perforated paper wrapped around a cardboard core, to be stored in a dispenser adjacent to a toilet.
Pillows typically consist of a fine-grained core with a glassy crust and have radial jointing.
Modern military aircraft typically employ afterburners on a low bypass turbofan core.
Before the advent of disk operating systems and the ability to record large data files, core dumps were paper printouts of the contents of memory, typically arranged in columns of octal or hexadecimal numbers ( a " hex dump "), sometimes accompanied by their interpretations as machine language instructions, text strings, or decimal or floating-point numbers ( cf.
Composite shafts are typically made from an aluminium core wrapped with a carbon fibre outer.
This form of core memory typically wove three wires through each core on the plane, word read, word write, and bit sense / write.
Criticisms of ramp metering primarily centre on impacts to users nearer to the urban core, which are typically delayed by the ramp metering, as compared to often uncontrolled users approaching from further out along the system.
An infantry battle group will typically be commanded by the commander of the core infantry battalion around which it is formed and can range in size from 300 to 1, 500 or more soldiers, depending on the nature of the mission assigned.
The hydrophobic core of the bilayer is typically 3-4 nm thick, but this value varies with chain length and chemistry.
This resistance is typically quite high since the hydrophobic core is impermeable to charged species.

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