Online Google Dictionary

cache 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/kaSH/,
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caches, plural;
  1. Store away in hiding or for future use

  2. Store (data) in a cache memory

  3. Provide (hardware) with a cache memory

Noun
  1. A collection of items of the same type stored in a hidden or inaccessible place
    • - an arms cache
    • - a cache of gold coins
  2. A hidden or inaccessible storage place for valuables, provisions, or ammunition

  3. An auxiliary memory from which high-speed retrieval is possible


  1. a hidden storage space (for money or provisions or weapons)
  2. hoard: save up as for future use
  3. hoard: a secret store of valuables or money
  4. (computer science) RAM memory that is set aside as a specialized buffer storage that is continually updated; used to optimize data transfers between system elements with different characteristics
  5. In computer science, a cache is a component that improves performance by transparently storing data such that future requests for that data can be served faster. ...
  6. Cache (Aosta) is a frazione in the Province of Aosta in the Aosta Valley region of Italy.
  7. Caches or food caches are stores of food made by many species of animals for future consumption. They are usually hidden from the sight of competing individuals of the same species as well as others.
  8. Caché (marketed as Hidden in the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland, Australia and New Zealand) is a 2005 French-language film, written and directed by Austrian filmmaker Michael Haneke. It stars Daniel Auteuil as Georges and Juliette Binoche as his wife Anne.
  9. Caché is the second album by Jazz musician Kirk Whalum.
  10. InterSystems Caché is an object database management system from InterSystems Corporation. It provides object and SQL access to the database, as well as allowing direct manipulation of Caché’s underlying data structures. The company claims Caché is the world’s fastest object database. ...
  11. A store of things that may be required in the future, which can be retrieved rapidly, protected or hidden in some way; A fast temporary storage where recently- or frequently-used information is stored to avoid having to reload it from a slower storage medium; A container containing treasure in ...
  12. Having been cached
  13. (Cached) This is a link that appears in the Google search results, along with the title, snippet, url, date, and similar pages link. By clicking on this link, you will get a version of the web page that Google saw when they visited. ...
  14. (Cached) users may see this alongside some of the results of a search and it can help users quickly find the information you want on a webpage. ...
  15. (Caches) Determine library cache hit ratio. If the hit ratio or reloads is high, increase the shared_pool_size init.ora parameter.
  16. (caches) Read and write operations to the devspaces are buffered in order to save on disk accesses. The pertinent main memory structures are called caches. They can be sized appropriately. ...
  17. (caches) p.250: A hiding place used especially for storing provisions.  After the riot was over, were, or were there not, caches of weapons found all over the neighborhood?
  18. (Caching) To make web surfing faster, web browsers store recently visited pages on the user’s disk. When the site is revisited, the browser displays pages from the cache instead of requesting them from the server. Reloading brings up the current page from the server. To prevent this:
  19. (Caching) A form of replication in which information learned during a previous transaction is used to process later transactions.
  20. (Caching) In Internet advertising, the caching of pages in a cache server or the user’s computer means that some ad views won’t be known by the ad counting programs and is a source of concern. There are several techniques for telling the browser not to cache particular pages. ...
  21. (Caching (of Images)) The temporary storage of image files on a hard disk for later migration to permanent storage.
  22. (caching) The storage of the results of expensive or length computations for later re-use at a point more quickly accessed by the end user.
  23. (Caching) A technique of temporarily storing frequently accessed data in random access memory (RAM) or in a special area of a hard disk drive, to reduce the time required to read and write data.
  24. (Caching) As related to caching reports, this involves storing the results of pre-run reports in tables (instead of caching to memory as the usage of the word implies) so that when the user accesses the report for the first time, it seems to run instantaneously. ...
  25. (Caching) Local storage of remote data designed to reduce network transfers.