Innards in a sentence as a noun

If you want a board of Erlang innards, go for it.

Javascript blurs that line, but it's mostly kept away from the innards of the host.

In this case, Marek spent a bunch of time with me walking through the innards of how Linux sets up a socket.

--The FBI really did not want anyone tampering with the innards of their tracking devices.

* Low latency and liveliness has to be baked into the innards of the system/VM/framework.

You bind a specific data representation to an interface for working with that representation opaquely, in the hope that no one inadvertently depends on your innards.

As the innards of the program itself is better understood, I expect dfhack to supplant more and more of the original UI; it already has a dwarf therapist like mode, a much better job manager, and has started venturing into fundamentally reworking the UI.

Innards definitions

noun

internal organs collectively (especially those in the abdominal cavity); "`viscera' is the plural form of `viscus'"

See also: viscera entrails