The reappearance of a disease after previous treatment had caused the disease to disappear
A dependency in a DO-loop whereby a result depends upon completion of the previous iteration of the loop Such dependencies inhibit vectorization For example: A(I) = A(I-1) + B(I) In a loop on I, this process would not be vectorizable on most vector computers without marked degradation in performance This is not an axiom or law, but rather is simply a fact resulting from current machine design
A computation in a loop in which the values produced in the current iteration depend on values produced in previous iterations A typical example is: DO I=1,N X(I)=X(I-1) + A(I) END DO
If there is a recurrence of something, it happens again. Police are out in force to prevent a recurrence of the violence. an occasion when something that has happened before happens again recurrence of
The return of cancer, at the same site as the original (primary) tumor or in another location, after it had disappeared
The reappearance of a disease after previous treatments had caused it to disappear
{i} repetition, return; instance of happening again, repeat occurrence; (Medicine) return of cancer or its symptoms after a remission, return of cancer after treatment
A return period also known as a recurrence interval is an estimate of the likelihood of events like an earthquake, flood or river discharge flow of a certain intensity or size. It is a statistical measurement denoting the average recurrence interval over an extended period of time, and is usually required for risk analysis (i.e. whether a project should be allowed to go forward in a zone of a certain risk) and also to dimension structures so that they are capable of withstanding an event of a certain return period (with its associated intensity)
She only replied with a laugh, and he evidently deemed futile the bid for sympathy on the score of religious or irreligious fellowship, for he recurred to it no more.
[ ri-'k&r ] (intransitive verb.) 1529. Middle English recurren to return, from Latin recurrere, literally, to run back, from re- + currere to run; more at CAR.