Online Google Dictionary

concatenate 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/kənˈkatnˌāt/,
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concatenated, past participle; concatenates, 3rd person singular present; concatenating, present participle; concatenated, past tense;
  1. Link (things) together in a chain or series
    • - some words may be concatenated, such that certain sounds are omitted

  1. combine two strings to form a single one
  2. add by linking or joining so as to form a chain or series; "concatenate terms"; "concatenate characters"
  3. (concatenation) the state of being linked together as in a chain; union in a linked series
  4. (concatenation) the linking together of a consecutive series of symbols or events or ideas etc; "it was caused by an improbable concatenation of circumstances"
  5. In computer programming, string concatenation is the operation of joining two character strings end-to-end. For example, the strings "snow" and "ball" may be concatenated to give "snowball". In many programming languages, string concatenation is a binary infix operator.
  6. To join or link together, as though in a chain; Computer instruction to join two strings together
  7. Concatenated messages, also called multipart or segmented SMS or LongSMS, are used to overcome the limitation on the number of characters that can be sent in a single SMS (usually 160 characters for normal GSM text). ...
  8. (concatenation) (1) To unite in a series; to link together; to chain. (2) The linking of transmission channels (phone lines, coaxial cable, optical fiber) end-to-end.
  9. (concatenation) Combining text, numbers, or dates within a text box. In Access, you use the ampersand (&) symbol to join the contents of multiple cells.
  10. (CONCATENATION) A convention of all the nation's kitty cats.
  11. (Concatenation (from Latin concatenare, to link together)) is taking two or more separately located things and placing them side-by-side next to each other so that they can now be treated as one thing. ...
  12. (Concatenation) A mechanism for allocating very large amounts of bandwidth for transport of a payload associated with a 'superrate service', which is a service at a transmission rate greater than the normal maximum rate of OC-1. ...
  13. (Concatenation) Compression algorithms are designed to economise on bandwidth by eliminating parts of an image in a way that is least noticeable to the human eye. ...
  14. (Concatenation) State or condition of the correlated action of mutually interdependent processes. Situation where a number of distinct processes mesh or link together with a resulting cumulative effect in a well coordinated movement. ...
  15. (Concatenation) Storing data either on one disk (simple) or on disk space that spans more than one disk (spanned).
  16. (Concatenation) The ability of a reading system to join together that data from multiple symbologies and interpret the information in a single message. ...
  17. (Concatenation) The facility to link together specific items of data, held in data carriers, to form a single file or field of data.
  18. (Concatenation) The linking together of words in a consecutive chain or series, usually with the use of conjunctions. For example, in Charles Hamilton Sorley's "To Germany," he repeats the word "and" to concatenate the phrases of the sonnet. ...
  19. (Concatenation) The process of connecting pieces of fiber together.
  20. (Concatenation) or hierarchical assignment of probabilities.
  21. (Concatenation) specifies a flux pattern to guide the temporal behavior of the event object.
  22. (concatenation) An operation that combines two matrices by multiplying them together.
  23. (concatenation) The process of gluing one cat's nose to another cat's tail. Also, a similar operation on two strings.
  24. (concatenation) placing two or more sequences adjacent to form a new sequence consisting of the contents of both.
  25. To place two (or more) things together one directly after the other. For example, treehouse is the concatenation of the words tree and house.