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-path A term for the shape of an element in an illustration. A path, on its own will not show on the hardcopy until it has a line weight and color attribute (or fill) assigned to it.
Ãâó: www.binarygraphics.com/glossary/illustration.html
-path A path is a series of connected activities. Refer to CRITICAL PATH METHOD for information on critical and non-critical paths.
Ãâó: www.welcom.com/content.cfm
-path A sequence of requests for non-graphics in a single visit. Summary only keeps track of the first three requests, the last request, and whether there were more than four requests in the path or not.
Ãâó: www.summary.net/manual/glossary.html
-path is the specification of a file or directory in a hierarchical file system using pathname separators ("/" in Unix, "\" in MS-DOS) between directories. AKA pathname, the location of a file or directory in the system's hierarchical structure of directories. The pathname tells the shell where in the directory tree to find a file. Files may be referred to by absolute pathname (also called full or complete pathname) or relative pathname.
Ãâó: www.eos.ncsu.edu/guide/glossary.html
-path The portion of a URL that identifies the folders containing a file. For example, in the URL http://my.web.site/hello/world /greetings.htm, the path is /hello/world/.
Ãâó: website.armmnet.net/faq/glossary.html
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