slovo | definícia |
assemble (encz) | assemble,montovat v: Zdeněk Brož |
assemble (encz) | assemble,sestavit v: |
assemble (encz) | assemble,sestavovat v: Zdeněk Brož |
assemble (encz) | assemble,shromáždit (se) v: IvČa |
Assemble (gcide) | Assemble \As*sem"ble\, v. i.
To meet or come together, as a number of individuals; to
convene; to congregate. --Dryden.
[1913 Webster]
The Parliament assembled in November. --W. Massey.
[1913 Webster] |
Assemble (gcide) | Assemble \As*sem"ble\, v. i.
To liken; to compare. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]
Bribes may be assembled to pitch. --Latimer.
[1913 Webster] |
Assemble (gcide) | Assemble \As*sem"ble\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Assembled; p. pr. &
vb. n. Assembling.] [F. assembler, fr. LL. assimulare to
bring together to collect; L. ad + simul together; akin to
similis like, Gr. ? at the same time, and E. same. Cf.
Assimilate, Same.]
1. To collect into one place or body; to bring or call
together; to convene; to congregate.
[1913 Webster]
Thither he assembled all his train. --Milton.
[1913 Webster]
All the men of Israel assembled themselves. --1
Kings viii. 2.
[1913 Webster]
2. To collect and put together the parts of; as, to assemble
a bicycle, watch, gun, or other manufactured article.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.] |
assemble (wn) | assemble
v 1: create by putting components or members together; "She
pieced a quilt"; "He tacked together some verses"; "They
set up a committee" [syn: assemble, piece, {put
together}, set up, tack, tack together] [ant: {break
apart}, break up, disassemble, dismantle, {take
apart}]
2: collect in one place; "We assembled in the church basement";
"Let's gather in the dining room" [syn: meet, gather,
assemble, forgather, foregather]
3: get people together; "assemble your colleagues"; "get
together all those who are interested in the project";
"gather the close family members" [syn: assemble, gather,
get together] |
| podobné slovo | definícia |
assembler (mass) | assembler
- assembler |
disassemble (mass) | disassemble
- rozložiť, rozmontovať, rozobrať |
assembler (msas) | assembler
- assembler |
assembler (msasasci) | assembler
- assembler |
assemble (encz) | assemble,montovat v: Zdeněk Brožassemble,sestavit v: assemble,sestavovat v: Zdeněk Brožassemble,shromáždit (se) v: IvČa |
assembled (encz) | assembled,sestaven v: |
assembler (encz) | assembler,kompilátor n: Zdeněk Brožassembler,překladač n: Zdeněk Brožassembler,sestavovatel n: |
assemblers (encz) | assemblers,montéři n: Zdeněk Brožassemblers,sestavovatelé n: Zdeněk Brož |
disassemble (encz) | disassemble,rozebrat v: Zdeněk Broždisassemble,rozložit v: Zdeněk Broždisassemble,rozmontovat v: Zdeněk Brož |
disassembled (encz) | disassembled,rozebraný adj: Zdeněk Broždisassembled,rozložený adj: Zdeněk Broždisassembled,rozmontovaný adj: Zdeněk Brož |
disassembler (encz) | disassembler,nástroj programátora n: Zdeněk Brož |
preassemble (encz) | preassemble, v: |
reassemble (encz) | reassemble,opětovně složit Zdeněk Brož |
reassembled (encz) | reassembled,opětovně složený Zdeněk Brožreassembled,opětovně složil Zdeněk Brožreassembled,opětovně smontovaný Zdeněk Brož |
assembled (gcide) | assembled \assembled\ adj.
1. brought together into a group or crowd. the assembled
letters in my office
Syn: accumulated, collected, congregate, massed.
[WordNet 1.5]
2. 1 formed by fitting or joining components together.
Syn: built(prenominal), made-up.
[WordNet 1.5]Assemble \As*sem"ble\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Assembled; p. pr. &
vb. n. Assembling.] [F. assembler, fr. LL. assimulare to
bring together to collect; L. ad + simul together; akin to
similis like, Gr. ? at the same time, and E. same. Cf.
Assimilate, Same.]
1. To collect into one place or body; to bring or call
together; to convene; to congregate.
[1913 Webster]
Thither he assembled all his train. --Milton.
[1913 Webster]
All the men of Israel assembled themselves. --1
Kings viii. 2.
[1913 Webster]
2. To collect and put together the parts of; as, to assemble
a bicycle, watch, gun, or other manufactured article.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.] |
Assembled (gcide) | assembled \assembled\ adj.
1. brought together into a group or crowd. the assembled
letters in my office
Syn: accumulated, collected, congregate, massed.
[WordNet 1.5]
2. 1 formed by fitting or joining components together.
Syn: built(prenominal), made-up.
[WordNet 1.5]Assemble \As*sem"ble\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Assembled; p. pr. &
vb. n. Assembling.] [F. assembler, fr. LL. assimulare to
bring together to collect; L. ad + simul together; akin to
similis like, Gr. ? at the same time, and E. same. Cf.
Assimilate, Same.]
1. To collect into one place or body; to bring or call
together; to convene; to congregate.
[1913 Webster]
Thither he assembled all his train. --Milton.
[1913 Webster]
All the men of Israel assembled themselves. --1
Kings viii. 2.
[1913 Webster]
2. To collect and put together the parts of; as, to assemble
a bicycle, watch, gun, or other manufactured article.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.] |
Assembler (gcide) | Assembler \As*sem"bler\, n.
One who assembles a number of individuals; also, one of a
number assembled.
[1913 Webster]
2. (Computers) a computer program that takes as input a set
of instructions written in assembly language, and produces
a corresponding executable computer program in machine
language.
[PJC]
3. (Computers) same as assembly language. [informal]
[PJC]assembly language \assembly language\ n.
1. (Computers) an artificial computer language with mnemonic
codes representing the basic machine-language instructions
of a computer, which can be interpreted by an assembler to
produce a computer program in machine language. Also
informally referred to as assembler.
Note: Writing a program in assembly language is very much
simpler than writing the machine instructions in binary
code, and the use of such a language greatly increases
the efficiency of the process of writing computer
programs. See also programming language, FORTRAN,
BASIC.
[PJC] |
assembler (gcide) | Assembler \As*sem"bler\, n.
One who assembles a number of individuals; also, one of a
number assembled.
[1913 Webster]
2. (Computers) a computer program that takes as input a set
of instructions written in assembly language, and produces
a corresponding executable computer program in machine
language.
[PJC]
3. (Computers) same as assembly language. [informal]
[PJC]assembly language \assembly language\ n.
1. (Computers) an artificial computer language with mnemonic
codes representing the basic machine-language instructions
of a computer, which can be interpreted by an assembler to
produce a computer program in machine language. Also
informally referred to as assembler.
Note: Writing a program in assembly language is very much
simpler than writing the machine instructions in binary
code, and the use of such a language greatly increases
the efficiency of the process of writing computer
programs. See also programming language, FORTRAN,
BASIC.
[PJC] |
disassemble (gcide) | disassemble \dis`as*sem"ble\ v. t.
1. to take apart; to disconnect the parts of; to convert a
whole into its constituent pieces.
Syn: dismantle, take apart, break apart, break up. [PJC]
2. (Computers) to convert a computer program in machine
language into an equivalent assembly-language file.
[PJC]disassemble \dis`as*sem"ble\ v. i.
to be able to come apart easily; to be converted into
constituent parts; as, the rifle disassembles into small
pieces for concealment.
[PJC] |
disassembler (gcide) | disassembler \dis`as*sem"bler\ n. (Computers)
a computer program that takes as input a computer program in
machine language and produces an equivalent assembly-language
file.
[PJC] |
Re-assemble (gcide) | Reassemble \Re`as*sem"ble\, Re-assemble
\Re`-as*sem"ble\(r[=e]`[a^]s*s[e^]m"b'l), v. t. & i.
To assemble again; -- usually after having taking something
apart. Usually used without the hyphen.
[1913 Webster WordNet 1.5] |
Reassemble (gcide) | Reassemble \Re`as*sem"ble\, Re-assemble
\Re`-as*sem"ble\(r[=e]`[a^]s*s[e^]m"b'l), v. t. & i.
To assemble again; -- usually after having taking something
apart. Usually used without the hyphen.
[1913 Webster WordNet 1.5] |
assemble (wn) | assemble
v 1: create by putting components or members together; "She
pieced a quilt"; "He tacked together some verses"; "They
set up a committee" [syn: assemble, piece, {put
together}, set up, tack, tack together] [ant: {break
apart}, break up, disassemble, dismantle, {take
apart}]
2: collect in one place; "We assembled in the church basement";
"Let's gather in the dining room" [syn: meet, gather,
assemble, forgather, foregather]
3: get people together; "assemble your colleagues"; "get
together all those who are interested in the project";
"gather the close family members" [syn: assemble, gather,
get together] |
assembler (wn) | assembler
n 1: a program to convert assembly language into machine
language [syn: assembler, assembly program] |
disassemble (wn) | disassemble
v 1: take apart into its constituent pieces [syn: disassemble,
dismantle, take apart, break up, break apart] [ant:
assemble, piece, put together, set up, tack,
tack together] |
preassemble (wn) | preassemble
v 1: to manufacture sections of (a building), especially in a
factory, so that they can be easily transported to and
rapidly assembled on a building site of buildings [syn:
prefabricate, preassemble] |
reassemble (wn) | reassemble
v 1: assemble once again, after taking something apart |
assembler (foldoc) | assembler
A program which converts assembly language
into machine code.
(1996-03-25)
|
cas 8051 assembler (foldoc) | CAS 8051 Assembler
An experimental one-pass assembler for the 8051 with
C-like syntax by Mark Hopkins. Most features of a modern
assembler included except macros (soon to be added).
Requires an ANSI-C compiler. Ported to MS-DOS, Ultrix,
Sun-4. (July 1993).
Version 1.2. Assembler/linker, disassembler, documentation,
examples.
(ftp://lyman.pppl.gov/pub/8051/assem),
(ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/microprocs/MCS-51/csd4-archive/assem).
{Other software tools and applications
(ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/compilers/8051/)}.
(1995-01-26)
|
cheap assembler (foldoc) | CHeap ASseMbler
CHASM
(CHASM) A shareware assembler for MS-DOS.
(1994-11-15)
|
cross-assembler (foldoc) | cross-assembler
An assembler which runs on one type of processor and
produces machine code for another.
There is a set of 6502, 68xx and Zilog Z80 and 8085
cross-assemblers in C by and Alan
R. Baldwin. They run under MS-DOS and could be compiled to
run under Unix and on the Amiga and Atari ST.
See also fas.
(ftp://ccosun.caltech.edu/).
(1993-03-10)
|
gcos macro assembler program (foldoc) | GCOS Macro Assembler Program
GMAP
(GMAP) The macro assembler for the GCOS 8
operating system on Honeywell/Bull DPS-8 computers.
["GCOS8 OS GMAP User's Guide", Bull].
(2009-01-14)
|
gnu assembler (foldoc) | GNU assembler
gas
(GAS) A Unix assembler for the GNU project. Many CPU
types are handled and COFF and IEEE-695 formats are
supported as well as standard a.out.
Current version 2.2 ported to Sun-3, Sun-4, i386,
386BSD, BSD/386, Linux, PS/2-AIX, VAX, Ultrix,
BSD, VMS.
The assembler has been merged with GNU Binutils.
E-mail: .
(1995-04-18)
|
packet assembler/disassembler (foldoc) | Packet Assembler/Disassembler
PAD
(PAD) Hardware or software device for splitting a data stream
into discrete packets for transmission over some medium and
then reforming the stream(s) at the receiver.
The term is most often used for interfaces to X.25 lines.
(1995-01-31)
|
symbolic assembler program (foldoc) | Symbolic Assembler Program
(SAP) The assembly language for the IBM 704,
defined in the late 1950s.
(1994-12-12)
|
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