heat-sink - définition. Qu'est-ce que heat-sink
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est heat-sink - définition

COMPUTING DEVICE OR COMPONENT DESIGNED TO RECEIVE SIGNALS FROM OTHER COMPONENTS
Data sink; Sink interface; Event sink

Sink (computing)         
In computing, a sink, event sink or data sink is a class or function designed to receive incoming events from another object or function. This is commonly implemented in C++ as callbacks.
Kitchen sink realism         
  • ''[[A Taste of Honey]]'' is an influential "kitchen sink drama". In this photo of the 1960 Broadway production, [[Joan Plowright]] plays the role of Jo, a 17-year-old schoolgirl who has a love affair with a black sailor (played by [[Billy Dee Williams]]).
BRITISH SOCIAL REALIST ARTISTIC MOVEMENT
Kitchen Sink Drama; Kitchen sink drama; Kitchen Sink Dramas; Kitchen-sink drama; Kitchen Sink School; Kitchen Sink Cinema; Kitchen Sink cinema
Kitchen sink realism (or kitchen sink drama) is a British cultural movement that developed in the late 1950s and early 1960s in theatre, art, novels, film and television plays, whose protagonists usually could be described as "angry young men" who were disillusioned with modern society. It used a style of social realism which depicted the domestic situations of working-class Britons, living in cramped rented accommodation and spending their off-hours drinking in grimy pubs, to explore controversial social and political issues ranging from abortion to homelessness.
Heat         
  • Joseph Black
  • Rudolf Clausius
  • radiation]].
ENERGY THAT IS TRANSFERRED FROM ONE BODY TO ANOTHER AS THE RESULT OF A DIFFERENCE IN TEMPERATURE
Heating; Heat change; Heat energy; Heat (thermodynamics); Sources of heat; Thermal enegy; Heat as energy; Heat source
·noun Sexual excitement in animals.
II. Heat ·noun Fermentation.
III. Heat ·noun Animation, as in discourse; ardor; fervency.
IV. Heat ·noun Agitation of mind; inflammation or excitement; exasperation.
V. Heat ·Impf & ·p.p. Heated; as, the iron though heat red-hot.
VI. Heat ·vt To excite or make hot by action or emotion; to make feverish.
VII. Heat ·noun Utmost violence; rage; vehemence; as, the heat of battle or party.
VIII. Heat ·vt To excite ardor in; to rouse to action; to excite to excess; to inflame, as the passions.
IX. Heat ·vt To make hot; to communicate heat to, or cause to grow warm; as, to heat an oven or furnace, an iron, or the like.
X. Heat ·noun A single complete operation of heating, as at a forge or in a furnace; as, to make a horseshoe in a certain number of heats.
XI. Heat ·vi To grow warm or hot by the action of fire or friction, ·etc., or the communication of heat; as, the iron or the water heats slowly.
XII. Heat ·vi To grow warm or hot by fermentation, or the development of heat by chemical action; as, green hay heats in a mow, and manure in the dunghill.
XIII. Heat ·noun A violent action unintermitted; a single effort; a single course in a race that consists of two or more courses; as, he won two heats out of three.
XIV. Heat ·noun High temperature, as distinguished from low temperature, or cold; as, the heat of summer and the cold of winter; heat of the skin or body in fever, ·etc.
XV. Heat ·noun The sensation caused by the force or influence of heat when excessive, or above that which is normal to the human body; the bodily feeling experienced on exposure to fire, the sun's rays, ·etc.; the reverse of cold.
XVI. Heat ·noun Indication of high temperature; appearance, condition, or color of a body, as indicating its temperature; redness; high color; flush; degree of temperature to which something is heated, as indicated by appearance, condition, or otherwise.
XVII. Heat ·noun A force in nature which is recognized in various effects, but especially in the phenomena of fusion and evaporation, and which, as manifested in fire, the sun's rays, mechanical action, chemical combination, ·etc., becomes directly known to us through the sense of feeling. In its nature heat is a mode if motion, being in general a form of molecular disturbance or vibration. It was formerly supposed to be a subtile, imponderable fluid, to which was given the name caloric.

Wikipédia

Sink (computing)

In computing, a sink, or data sink generally refers to the destination of data flow.

The word sink has multiple uses in computing. In software engineering, an event sink is a class or function that receives events from another object or function, while a sink can also refer to a node of a directed acyclic graph with no additional nodes leading out from it, among other uses.

Exemples du corpus de texte pour heat-sink
1. LEDs are made of semiconductor wafers inside a small polymeric lens up to half a centimetre across and set on a metallic heat sink.