View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Descriptor.
Descriptor meaning
That which describes; a word, phrase, etc. serving as a description. | A name associated with certain data or documents in an information storage and retrieval system; an index term. | That which describes; a word, phrase, etc. serving as a description.
Synonyms of Descriptor
Example sentences (20)
Required deployment descriptor With EJB 2.1 and earlier, the EJB specification required a deployment descriptor to be present.
There are two such tables, the Global Descriptor Table (GDT) and the Local Descriptor Table (LDT), each holding up to 8192 segment descriptors, each segment giving access to 64 KB of memory.
At some point, "walking simulator" started to be treated as a negative descriptor to signal games with almost no content.
Britain often treats “working class” and “white working class” as synonymous, the implication being that people of color don’t fit that descriptor.
In Cameron's script she's introduced with the descriptor "in human age she would be 18," but that raises as many questions as it answers.
It's interesting considering how close it is, because the how-the-whale-got-its-name part is spot on--using the whaler's fieldwork descriptor and all.
Scam Likely would go on to generate an almost cult-like following – if the name Scam Likely is on a bill, there’s also a great chance that the words “sold out” will eventually become a descriptor of that show.
The diocese has since transferred Vaillancourt – again, a cleric alleged to have abused children – from one parish to another, as if it wasn’t a move so abhorrent and common the world over that it has a slang descriptor: priest shuffling.
Unfortunately for Musk (and recently appointed Twitter CEO Linda Yaccarinoesignating a basic descriptor like “cisgender” as a slur probably doesn’t count.
And history illuminates why their interpretation — that the descriptor “Black jobs” is loaded with a veiled, racially charged message — is correct.
Calling someone 'delulu' is often not a neutral descriptor of their behavior or presentation but rather a judgment or a negative one," she points out.
And if it were true, why was he traded for another defenceman who, despite being more physical and having a frame that frequently earns the “man-mountain” descriptor, is himself not an enforcer?
DC has confirmed today that the 12-issue maxi-series will carry an Ages 17+ content descriptor on Gerads and Shaner’s card stock covers.
Each celebrity has a tabloid quintessence as distinctive as a fingerprint: a pithy descriptor that distills their intrinsic scandal-value for those whose idea of journalism begins and ends at the supermarket check-out.
For most of them, the descriptor of socialism as "a way to make things fairer for working people" matches their view a great deal (25 percent) or somewhat (51 percent).
He says focusing on the descriptor made him more aware of how to convey a message to his audience.
Honey was later asked by the panel if she felt there was nothing wrong with using the word fat, to which she said: 'It's a descriptor.
That coupled with her unrealistic stupidity, for a lack of a better descriptor, produces wonders.
That’s a perfect descriptor for Reaves, though he’s not going to turn the series around by himself.
The problem is that the right and left are not unified in their motives for using the term. When the left uses “Bigness” as a descriptor, it is meant to lump together industries that they find problematic, and to dismiss these companies outright.