Comp in a sentence as a noun

Or just click "ok" until it stops complaining.

Executive comp is a bubble, these people aren't worth anything near this much, but I have no idea when it will pop.

She has a much better understanding of why her computer behaves the way it does and therefore feels more at ease.

I'm sure he uses a computer and I'm willing to bet the less time the mayor spends screwing around with a computer or waiting for tech support the better.

It's really sad how wildly distorted executive compensation has gotten.

Many people were complaining "but he's only showing how to make these characters and objects", that the author didn't explain why the circles go where they should and what a proper shadow should look like.

She had absolutely no idea of even the most fundamental workings of a computer except that it had something vaguely to do with "ones and zeros".I taught her binary.

Leo Apotheker made $25 million on his way out the door from HP, after vaporizing over $6 billion in buying a fraudulent company and doing virtually no due diligence.

We no longer have the time to let skills sink into the autonomous nervous system, as it were, and even if we try, the criminal in Redmond, WA, has a new, incompatible version out by the time we learned the last version...

Who are you to say that NaCl/Pepper is better for developers or anyone else than a cross-browser approach targeting JS VMs, which are already there and getting fast enough with typed array memory models to compete with PNaCl?

For anyone building a competitive browser that is not Chrome or chromium-based, what you propose is a money pit in direct and opportunity costs, with no clear path to standardization, where Firefox would always be behind in "Pepper conformance" compared to Chrome.

Comp definitions

noun

an intensive examination testing a student's proficiency in some special field of knowledge; "she took her comps in English literature"

See also: comprehensive