black art - Definition. Was ist black art
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Was (wer) ist black art - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Black arts; Black Art; Art negre; Art nègre; Black art (disambiguation)

black art         
Magic, conjuration, sorcery, diabolic art, necromancy, witchcraft, witchery, black magic (in contrast to white, or innocent), magical art.
Black art         
·- The art practiced by conjurers and witches; necromancy; conjuration; magic.
black art         
A collection of arcane, unpublished, and (by implication) mostly ad-hoc techniques developed for a particular application or systems area (compare black magic). VLSI design and compiler code optimisation were (in their beginnings) considered classic examples of black art; as theory developed they became deep magic, and once standard textbooks had been written, became merely heavy wizardry. The huge proliferation of formal and informal channels for spreading around new computer-related technologies during the last twenty years has made both the term "black art" and what it describes less common than formerly. See also {voodoo programming}. [Jargon File]

Wikipedia

Black art

Black art may refer to:

  • African-American art
  • Black Art, record label run by Jamaican producer Lee "Scratch" Perry
  • Black Arts Movement
    • Black Art (poem), written by Amiri Baraka
  • Black art (theatre), an optical effect in stage magic
Beispiele aus Textkorpus für black art
1. For those who are indeed looking for Sui to provide real–world wardrobe solutions, she offered a plaid jacket–and–jumpsuit set –– worn with a colorful print blouse underneath –– as well as a white–and–black, Art Deco–themed dress.
2. By commercialising cloning, Sperling‘s company is taking steps to turn the tedious, painstaking black art of cloning out of the hands of lab experts and into a high–throughput money–making process.
3. To hear the candidates in this presidential campaign, you‘d think lobbying is just one notch below waterboarding, a black art practiced by the great malefactors of wealth to keep the middle class in a vise and loose upon the nation every manner of scourge: oil dependency, greenhouse gases, unpayable mortgages and those tiny entrees you get at French restaurants.
4. It concluded that the ‘scientific information genealogy tests could provide might not be as precise as some of the companies may be suggesting‘. The Nobel prize–winning scientist Sir John Sulston, the pioneer of the human genome project and deputy chairman of the commission, said: ‘While there is no doubt that these tests can be a bit of fun, people should not believe them to be 100 per cent accurate. ‘The worry is an individual might be sent on wild goose chases or told things about parentage that are subsequently found not to be the case.‘ Dr Helen Wallace, of the pressure group Genewatch, was much more critical, calling the tests a ‘black art‘. She believes the science behind them is not sufficiently developed to give accurate results.