| window |
A hole in a wall like a porthole, only larger and more irregular.
Ãâó: home.mira.net/~gnb/caving/papers/wk-acacg.html
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|---|---|
| window |
A user-defined area that is used to view a subset of the original map.
Ãâó: www.extension.umn.edu/distribution/naturalresource...
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| windowing |
Generic method of displaying data on screen, mimicking looking at several pieces of paper at once. Each window can be resized, moved and otherwise manipulated. It lies at the heart of making multiuser systems user-friendly and points the way for presetting tomorrow's applications.
Ãâó: www.nettedautomation.com/glossary_menue/glossary_w...
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| window |
A wide band gap material chosen for its transparency to light. Generally used as the top layer of a photovoltaic device, the window allows almost all of the light to reach the semiconductor layers beneath.
Ãâó: www.kyocerasolar.com/learn/glossary.html
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| window |
A discrete portion of a gamma-ray spectrum or time-domain electromagnetic decay. The continuous energy spectrum or full-stream data are grouped into windows to reduce the number of samples, and reduce noise.
Ãâó: www.fugroairborne.com.au/Resources/glossary.shtml
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