Long-lived in a sentence as an adjective

This mirrors my experience with MS. The DOJ case had long-lived and wide-ranging effects.

Even then, you could use both: short-lived instances on EC2 and stable, well-supported, long-lived stuff on Rackspace.

Isn't Node's event-loop style programming ideal for long-lived requests?

In this case, the blocking is sometimes acceptable to generate appropriate entropy, since the fact that the key is long-lived implies that you don't do this very often.

You know, for example, that a Vector{Int} definitely does not require any additional heap allocation besides the inline Int values and that arithmetic operations on Ints will just be machine arithmetic ops. I think that the transparency of the C data and performance models has been one of the major reasons for C's long-lived success.

Furthermore, some vegetarian populations are extremely long-lived compared to the their omnivorous peers.>it's very sustainableMeat eating is not sustainable at our current technological level.

Long-lived definitions

adjective

existing for a long time; "hopes for a durable peace"; "a long-lasting friendship"

See also: durable lasting long-lasting