Abstracted in a sentence as an adjective

Which is itself abstracted as mentioned above. --- Why do all this?

All in all, your comments read like you want something at a more abstracted level, you should look at, say, OCaml or Go. Which is fine, just not what Rust aims to provide.

You can always take this piece of code you wrote and notice that it can be abstracted to solve a class of problems. And then that this class of problems is in turn a subclass of a larger set of problems.

These things should be completely abstracted away from any corporate logo. If I want to store things in the cloud, for instance, I could care less who actually keeps the bytes.

His freedom is a narrow-minded ideology, abstracted from what freedom means in the real world. In the real world the only freedom I care about is the freedom to spend my time the way I want.

All that has been abstracted away for you. The fact that you can access memory locations directly gives you some low-level access, but in a very real sense C is a high-level language.

If all the effort and risk of selling an item is abstracted away as I suggested above, then that would be a great deal of value added, at least for me. > Now if I were selling lots of things in a fairly regular interval...

To manage this complexity, many of the events in the game used a text scripting language that abstracted away the underlying routines. This scripting was a series of in-line hex sequences, each its own set of instructions for how sprites, character entities, etc.

These are some minor elements of the value of the larger communities, much in the same way that Hipmunk, AirBnb etc have abstracted value away from Craigslist. Hyperlocal is the next big thing with FrontPorchForum and NextDoor tacking non-technical local discussion.

At that point any SQL queries have already been abstracted away inside functions that have meaningful names like associate-product-to-customer or whatever. I don't want to talk about SQL ever in my problem domain abstraction layer.

Org/grants/20083268/ Which is still active and widely used among news organizations, but is probably better known for the JavaScript libraries that were abstracted from it during development: Underscore and Backbone

I think you can now see some distinctions between what internet vigilantes tend to complain about and what actually happened with TheOatmeal, and the contradction only appears because you've abstracted and stereotyped way too much.

Because the folks who designed PostgreSQL do understand what B-trees are, and they have been very successful at their goal: To encapsulate that knowledge in an abstracted system that other people can learn to drive without entirely understanding how it works. This is not a problem with the web developers, nor is it a problem with this exam, which at first glance looks reasonable people with CS degrees should be able to answer these questions.

From a programmer's POV, the link to the torrent can be abstracted endlessly into new and distinct forms, each of which you believe needs to be legislated away in turn. From a lawyer's point of view, the specifics are really not important, but rather the end result: is the user illegally procuring copyrighted material, or is the distributor providing them with a readily accessible means of doing so?

To build this utopian hypercard-like stack which allow just anyone to build web things, and be so high-quality that it just worked without having to understand the things it's abstracted on top of, and to maintain it as web technology and desires continue to evolve, etc... .

I think this is ultimately always a problem between ultra-smart people who live in something of an abstracted world that frequently approaches fantasy and the reality of industry, which generally doesn't care about how pretty something is unless someone will buy it because it is pretty. That's a pretty large gap, and, while in my opinion there is no need for arrogance, it is pretty clear why most of the smartest people in history end up on the former side of that divide.

Abstracted definitions

adjective

lost in thought; showing preoccupation; "an absent stare"; "an absentminded professor"; "the scatty glancing quality of a hyperactive but unfocused intelligence"

See also: absent absentminded scatty