Online Google Dictionary

stub 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/stəb/,
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stubs, plural;
  1. Accidentally strike (one's toe) against something
    • - I stubbed my toe, swore, and tripped
  2. Extinguish (a lighted cigarette) by pressing the lighted end against something
    • - she stubbed out her cigarette in the overflowing ashtray
  3. Dig up (a plant) by the roots

Noun
  1. The truncated remnant of a pencil, cigarette, or similar-shaped object after use

  2. A truncated or unusually short thing
    • - he wagged his little stub of tail
  3. Denoting a projection or hole that goes only part of the way through a surface
    • - a stub tenon
  4. The part of a check, receipt, ticket, or other document torn off and kept as a record


  1. a short piece remaining on a trunk or stem where a branch is lost
  2. pull up (weeds) by their roots
  3. extinguish by crushing; "stub out your cigarette now"
  4. nub: a small piece; "a nub of coal"; "a stub of a pencil"
  5. a torn part of a ticket returned to the holder as a receipt
  6. clear of weeds by uprooting them; "stub a field"
  7. A stub in distributed computing is a piece of code used for converting parameters passed during a Remote Procedure Call (RPC).
  8. In microwave and radio-frequency engineering, a stub is a length of transmission line or waveguide that is connected at one end only. The free end of the stub is either left open-circuit or (especially in the case of waveguides) short-circuited. ...
  9. A stub is the stock representing the remaining equity in a corporation left over after a major cash or security distribution from a buyout, a spin-out, a demerger or some other form of restructuring removes most of the company's operations from the parent corporation. ...
  10. Something blunted, stunted, or cut short, such as stubble or a stump; A piece of certain paper items, designed to be torn off and kept for record or identification purposes; A placeholder procedure that has the signature of the planned procedure but does not yet implement the intended behavior. ...
  11. (Stubs) larcenist, forger and swingler
  12. (Stubs) Pages that have been started but have minimal content.
  13. (stubs) Pieces of programs, usually functions or procedures, that provide the correct interface but not the correct implementation of some other piece of program, typically a function or an abstract data structure. ...
  14. A narrow strip of paper usually remaining where a leaf has been cut away.
  15. The portion of the deck which has not been dealt.
  16. a new edge added to the tree graph attached to a new node introduced into the middle of an existing edge and associated creases added to the crease pattern. Adding a stub allows four path conditions to be simultaneously satisfied as equalities.
  17. A component containing functionality for testing purposes. A stub is either a pure "dummy", just returning some predefined values, or it is "simulating" a more complex behavior.
  18. Often used in risk arbitrage. Piece of equity security left over from a major cash or security distribution from a recapitalization.
  19. An page considered too short to give an adequate introduction to a subject (often one paragraph or less). Stubs are marked with stub templates, a specific type of cleanup template, which add the pages to stub categories sorted by subject matter.
  20. a stub page is a short page that needs further development. See Wikiversity:Stub.
  21. An article without much content, or without the headers used by article templates. See also Stub articles and Article status.
  22. An unterminated SCSI bus section branching off the main SCSI bus. The SCSI specification dictates that a stub is to be no longer than 0.1 meters (4 inches) for single ended or LVD SCSI and no longer than 0.2 meters (8 inches) for HVD SCSI. Stubs cause lots of difficult-to-trace problems. ...
  23. A test stub is a specific type of test double. A stub is used when you need to replicate an object and control the output, but without verifying any interactions with the stub object for correctness. Many types of stubs exist, such as the responder, saboteur, temporary, procedural, and entity chain.
  24. Represents the dependent variable as a heading in computer tables.
  25. A pattern page that is derived from the template. You can customize it and then ‘clone’ it to create other pages. When you create a stub, remember to set the ‘SubSiteRoot’ property to your path. (Example: /acad/english) ‘windows’ menu — found on the Dreamweaver top horizontal menu. ...