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Apple Inc.
Industry: Computer; Software
Number of terms: 54848
Number of blossaries: 7
Company Profile:
Apple Inc., formerly Apple Computer, Inc., is an American multinational corporation headquartered in Cupertino, California, that designs, develops, and sells consumer electronics, computer software and personal computers.
Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers. An organisation that publishes standards related to film, television, and audio.
Industry:Software; Computer
The target that Xcode uses when you build the project. See also string atom.
Industry:Software; Computer
A Core Foundation object associated with a video frame. This attachment, specified by a key-value pair, can hold any sort of information relevant to the frame, such as a timestamp.
Industry:Software; Computer
A unique identifying string used to locate an application’s bundle at runtime.
Industry:Software; Computer
In security, a named privilege. The Security Server authorises rights for a user to perform a privileged operation.
Industry:Software; Computer
(1) In programming, a data type whose value actually serves as a reference to a value stored in a specific location. (2) In a human interface, a cursor.
Industry:Software; Computer
A standard, time-based format for tagging film, video, and audio recordings to support synchronisation and editing. The SMPTE timecode represents a given time in the format hours:minutes:seconds:frames.
Industry:Software; Computer
A property list file, in a specific format, that provides AppleScript terminology—the English-like words and phrases a scripter can use in a script—for the class and command descriptions in the corresponding script suite file. A script terminology file has the extension .scriptTerminology. Together with a corresponding script suite file, it declares the scriptability information for a scriptable application. See also script suite file.
Industry:Software; Computer
The addition of a digital signature to an application or block of code.
Industry:Software; Computer
(1) In object-oriented programming, the ability of a superclass to pass its characteristics (methods and fields) on to its subclasses, allowing subclasses to reuse these characteristics. (2) In AppleScript, the ability of a child script object to take on the properties and handlers of a parent object.
Industry:Software; Computer
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