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- compounds - Life cycle, life-cycle or lifecycle? - English Language . . .
The ngrams for life cycle,lifecycle,life-cycle,life - cycle is more informative, showing that life-cycle is used much more than lifecycle
- Expression for an end-to-end product development process
Product cycle Lifecycle Product lifecycle Development cycle Wikipedia seems to prefer product lifecycle management (PLM): In industry, product lifecycle management (PLM) is the process of managing the entire lifecycle of a product from inception, through engineering design and manufacture, to service and disposal of manufactured products
- One word describing a status that is either unstarted, started or . . .
Is there a word that symbolize a status of either unstarted, started or completed ? For example a football match can be either unstarted, started or completed I would like another word than quot;
- What is a nester? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The family lifecycle (FLC) idea has been particularly threatened The FLC traces the development of a person’s life along a path from young and single, to married with no children, married with
- Word for software which has been killed or is no longer supported
Abandonware is a variant of the general concept of orphan works Legacy code is source code that relates to a no-longer supported Note: Microsoft Lifecycle Policy refers to Windows 95 (an unsupported product) as "obsolete" or support retired -see link for chart of 'Desktop operating systems Date of availability Support retired' dating format
- From A to B to C to D - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Let's assume that a lifecycle of a software development is requirement specification -> development -> testing -> validation -> maintenance Now, may I say that "our tool will help in the entire lifecycle of a software development from requirement specification, to development, to testing, to validation, to maintenance "?
- Capitalization of process names, specific terms etc (when is something . . .
If you have your own specific names for events and processes for which you often use an abbreviation, the document would be clearer if you capitalise TEM as "Time and Energy Monitoring" when you use it in full It's then plain that isn't a casual phrase but a specific term People generally only read the manual when they need to know something So the clearer, the better Perhaps even bolden
- etymology - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I was thinking that the parasite known as the "fluke" came to be associated with unexplained phenomena (because its lifecycle was a mystery) and that the semantic leap from unexplained phenomena to the results of Luck or Chance is not that big of a leap
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