dynamic allocation - traducción al holandés
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dynamic allocation - traducción al holandés

COMPUTER MEMORY MANAGEMENT METHODOLOGY IN WHICH THE PROGRAMMER EXPLICITLY CONTROLS ALLOCATION AND DEALLOCATION
Dynamic allocation; Custom memory allocation; Heap allocation

dynamic allocation         
dynamische toewijzing (over het algemeen geheugen) gedurende lopen van een programma (computers))
resource allocation         
ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES AMONG POSSIBLE USES
Distributed resource allocation; Allocation of resources; Resource allocation problems; Resource allocation problem; Allocation of Resources; Resource allocation mechanism; Resource Allocation; Algorithms for resource allocation
hulpbron toekenning
dynamic analysis         
METHOD OF ANALYSING THE IMPACT OF FISCAL POLICY CHANGES BY FORECASTING THE EFFECTS OF ECONOMIC AGENTS' REACTIONS TO INCENTIVES CREATED BY POLICY
Dynamic analysis
dynamische analyse (onderzoek van veranderingen en nieuwe richtingen)

Definición

memory management
<memory management, storage> A collection of techniques for providing sufficient memory to one or more processes in a computer system, especially when the system does not have enough memory to satisfy all processes' requirements simultaneously. Techniques include swapping, paging and virtual memory. Memory management is usually performed mostly by a hardware memory management unit. (1995-01-23)

Wikipedia

Manual memory management

In computer science, manual memory management refers to the usage of manual instructions by the programmer to identify and deallocate unused objects, or garbage. Up until the mid-1990s, the majority of programming languages used in industry supported manual memory management, though garbage collection has existed since 1959, when it was introduced with Lisp. Today, however, languages with garbage collection such as Java are increasingly popular and the languages Objective-C and Swift provide similar functionality through Automatic Reference Counting. The main manually managed languages still in widespread use today are C and C++ – see C dynamic memory allocation.