- (concatenate) combine two strings to form a single one
- (concatenation) the state of being linked together as in a chain; union in a linked series
- 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.
- (concatenate) To join or link together, as though in a chain; Computer instruction to join two strings together
- (concatenate) To place two (or more) things together one directly after the other. For example, treehouse is the concatenation of the words tree and house.
- (Concatenate) To combine multiple text values and / or functions that generate text values into a single string using the " &" character, i.e. "Printed on: " & Date() could result in "Printed on April 30, 2008". This would be used to provide values for labels and text boxes, especially on reports.
- (concatenate) Adding one text string to the end of another.
- (concatenate) Causes the output of one command to act as the input to the next command.
- (concatenate) Name of the PIP operation that copies two or more separate files into one new file in the specified sequence.
- (concatenate) The combination of two items into one by placing one of the items after the other. In Fortran 95/90, the concatenation operator (//) is used to combine character items. See also character expression.
- (concatenate) To join together, or append one item to another. If you concatenate someone's first name with their last name, the result will be their full name. "Mary " + "Smith" = "Mary Smith"
- (concatenate) To join two operands end-to-end. See names.py for an example.
- (concatenate) which takes a list of Strings and flattens it into one long String. (Remember that Strings are really lists of Chars.) Use higher-order functions and/or operator sections in your solution as appropriate, but do not use the pre-existing concat function. ...
- (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.
- (concatenation) Combining text, numbers, or dates within a text box. In Access, you use the ampersand (&) symbol to join the contents of multiple cells.
- (CONCATENATION) A convention of all the nation's kitty cats.
- (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. ...
- (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. ...
- (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. ...
- (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. ...
- (Concatenation) Storing data either on one disk (simple) or on disk space that spans more than one disk (spanned).
- (Concatenation) The ability of a reading system to join together that data from multiple symbologies and interpret the information in a single message. ...
- (Concatenation) The facility to link together specific items of data, held in data carriers, to form a single file or field of data.
- (Concatenation) The process of connecting pieces of fiber together.
- (Concatenation) or hierarchical assignment of probabilities.