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(Software Engineering) anything that is required to get the project done, people, hardware, materials, information, etc.
(Software Engineering) any application that delivers meaningful content or functionality to end users via the Web.
(english) A system of forces which is statically equivalent to a stress distribution over an area.
(english) Stiff bright wire of hard temper. Normally wire is drawn down to size without annealing.
(english) A preliminary forging operation to give the piece approximately the correct shape for subsequent forming.
(Software Engineering) the activities required to elicit, elaborate, negotiate, specify, and validate system or software requirements
(Software Engineering) the ability to reuse a portion of a model, source code, test case, etc.
(english) Connection is similar to the concept of support, except that connection refers to a relationship between members in a structural model. A connection restrains degrees of freedom of one member with respect to another. For each restrained degree of freedom, there is a corresponding force transferred from one member to the other; forces associated with unrestrained degrees of freedom are zero. See fixed connection and pin connection.
(english) A widely traded form of steel scrap consisting of sheet clips and stampings from metal production. Bushel baskets were used to collect the material through World War II, giving rise to the term.
(english) Ductility generally refers to the amount of inelastic deformation which a material or structure experiences before complete failure. Quantitatively, ductility can be defined as the ratio of the total displacement or strain at failure, divided by the displacement or strain at the elastic limit.
(english) A force considered to act along a single line in space. Concentrated forces are useful mathematical idealizations, but cannot be found in the real world, where all forces are either body forces acting over a volume or surface forces acting over an area.
(Concrete Engineering) A form which is raised or pulled as concrete is placed; may move vertically to form wails, stacks, bins or silos, usually of uniform cross section from bottom to top; or a generally horizontal direction to lay concrete evenly for highways, on slopes and inverts of canals, tunnels, and siphons.