| container |
Metal box structure of standard design, used to carry cargo in units. Containers can be 20 or 40 foot in length. The standard measure of a container is a TEU (20-foot equivalent unit). Container ships are specially designed to carry containers in slots (or cells). Containers are stacked and restrained (lashed) at all four corners by vertical posts. Some shipping lines now charter container slots on vessels operated by different companies.
Ãâó: www.poal.co.nz/glossary/glossary.htm
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| container |
The polypropylene or hard rubber case which holds the plates, straps and electrolyte.
Ãâó: www.autobatteries.com/basics/definitions.asp
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| container |
A truck trailer body that can be detached from the chassis for loading into a vessel, a rail car or stacked in a container depot. Containers may be ventilated, insulated, refrigerated, flat rack, vehicle rack, open top, bulk liquid or equipped with interior devices. A container may be 20 feet, 40 feet, 45 feet, 48 feet or 53 feet in length, 8'0" or 8'6" in width, and 8'6" or 9'6" in height.
Ãâó: www.epoi.com/jargon.html
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| container |
A set of partitions. It controls the way filesystem information is written for the purposes of efficiency or fault tolerance.
Ãâó: linux-ntfs.sourceforge.net/ldm/home/terms.html
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| container |
A container is an object that stores objects as its elements. Normally, it's implemented as a class template that has methods for traversing, storing, and removing elements. Examples of container classes are list and vector.
Ãâó: www.devx.com/tips/Tip/14102
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