A series of links united; a series or order of things depending on each other, as if linked together; a chain, a succession
Try and penetrate with our limited means the secrets of nature and you will find that, behind all the discernible concatenations, there remains something subtle, intangible and inexplicable.
A metadevice created by sequentially mapping blocks on several physical slices (partitions) to a logical device Two or more physical components can be concatenated The slices are accessed sequentially rather than interlaced (as with stripes)
Concatenating two strings means sticking them together, one after another, giving a new string For example, the string `foo' concatenated with the string `bar' gives the string `foobar' See section String Concatenation
Creation of a longer string by combining two shorter strings, one on the end of the other In Java this can be effected with the concatenation operator '+'
A concatenation of things or events is their occurrence one after another, because they are linked. the Internet, the world's biggest concatenation of computing power. a series of events or things joined together one after another concatenation of (past participle of concatenare , from com- ( COM-) + catena )
The placing of a sequence of entities end-to-end onto a single communication channel where several of them were present (e g 4*STM1= concatenated none / STM4 = monolithic)
Concatenating two strings means sticking them together, one after another, producing a new string For example, the string `foo' concatenated with the string `bar' gives the string `foobar' (See section String Concatenation )
Combining text and values into one text string If the formula in cell D10 is ="Final Total is " + C4 + " " and the value of cell C4 is 560, then what you see in cell D10 is The Final Total is 560
A mechanism for allocating contiguous bandwidth for payload transport Through the use of Concatenation Pointers, multiple OC-1s can be linked together to provide contiguous bandwidth through the network, from end to end
\kon-kat-uh-NAY-shuhn; kuhn-\, noun: A series of links united; a series or order of things depending on each other, as if linked together; a chain, a succession
the act of linking together as in a series or chain the linking together of a consecutive series of symbols or events or ideas etc; "it was caused by an improbable concatenation of circumstances"
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 A good example of concatenation is the market process wherein the independent value judgments of all potential participants are simultaneously correlated or meshed together to produce market prices which allocate available supplies of economic goods and services See Human Action;, paragraph starting on the last line of page 652