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Definition of Concurrency
1. Noun. Agreement of results or opinions.
2. Noun. Acting together, as agents or circumstances or events.
Definition of Concurrency
1. n. Concurrence.
Definition of Concurrency
1. Noun. The property or an instance of being concurrent; something that happens at the same time as something else. ¹
2. Noun. (computer science) a property of systems where several processes execute at the same time ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Concurrency
1. [n -CIES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Concurrency
Literary usage of Concurrency
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Concrete Abstractions: An Introduction to Computer Science Using Scheme by Max. Hailperin, Barbara. Kaiser, Karl. Knight (1999)
"concurrency In the introduction to this chapter, we defined a concurrent system
... This goal can indeed be a motivation for concurrency, but it is not the ..."
2. The Law of Nations Considered as Independent Political Communities by Travers Twiss (1861)
"... Maris—Piracy justiciable everywhere—concurrency of Admiralty with National
Jurisdiction—National Jurisdiction over the open Sea—Maritime Jurisdiction of ..."
3. SAS(R) 9.1 Companion for OpenVMS Alpha by Sas Institute, Institute SAS Institute (2004)
"concurrency Engine Errors under OpenVMS ERROR: Creating files with concurrency
engine requires version limit greater than one Severity Level: error When a ..."
4. Database Management Systems in Engineering by Katherine Morris (1994)
"concurrency Control One of the primary functions of any database management system
is to regulate the concurrent use of data in a meaningful way. ..."
5. Reference Model For Frameworks Of Software Engineering Environments (see) by DIANE Publishing Company (1994)
"4.7 concurrency Service This service provides capabilities which ensure reliable
concurrent access (by users or processes) to the object management system. ..."
6. Euclid Revised: Containing the Essentials of the Elements of Plane Geometry by Euclid (1890)
"... SECTION ii—concurrency AND COLLINEARITY. I THEOREM (1)—IfX, Y, Z are points
in the sides BC, CA, AB of a triangle ABC, such that the perpendiculars to ..."