Closure in a sentence as a noun

I tried to fix it by having it use the same reuse closure mechanism as the normal compiler.

He's talking about his thought processes which is a **** of a lot more "closure" than you typically get in a trial.

Seems to me that some such feature is absolutely and utterly necessary in any environment where you're doing a lot of closure creation ..

> If you run this through closure-compiler it's reduced to 2000 lines which is nothing next to Underscore [...]Underscore is under 1000 lines unminified and with all comments.

Closure in a sentence as a verb

Honestly, I'm not really sure I'd call this a "memory leak" -- I just always assumed that all the variables present in a closure are maintained, if there's an existing reference to any function defined within.

'game' 'closure' - the operating system i wrote senior year had one bug: i set the 'virtual memory' bit high on the _return_ stack frame instead of the _current_ one because i was thinking about how what was 'logically correct' instead of what would make the virtual-physical memory mechanism work.

Currently it looks like: for [1,2,3].each |i| { /* a closure */ } Where eventually it might look something like: for i in [1,2,3] { /* just a regular block */ } I'm actually surprised that the author praises the "freedom and flexibility" of our old `for` loops... the reason for making this switch at all is because we found our old semantics to be neither sufficiently composable nor sufficiently flexible!

Closure definitions

noun

approaching a particular destination; a coming closer; a narrowing of a gap; "the ship's rapid rate of closing gave them little time to avoid a collision"

See also: closing

noun

a rule for limiting or ending debate in a deliberative body

See also: cloture

noun

a Gestalt principle of organization holding that there is an innate tendency to perceive incomplete objects as complete and to close or fill gaps and to perceive asymmetric stimuli as symmetric

noun

something settled or resolved; the outcome of decision making; "they finally reached a settlement with the union"; "they never did achieve a final resolution of their differences"; "he needed to grieve before he could achieve a sense of closure"

See also: settlement resolution

noun

an obstruction in a pipe or tube; "we had to call a plumber to clear out the blockage in the drainpipe"

See also: blockage block occlusion stop stoppage

noun

the act of blocking

See also: blockage occlusion

noun

termination of operations; "they regretted the closure of the day care center"

See also: closedown closing shutdown

verb

terminate debate by calling for a vote; "debate was closured"; "cloture the discussion"

See also: cloture