Offset in a sentence as a noun

In order to read a field from a struct, you have to do a vtable lookup to find the offset?

" is offset by the fact that major alliances tend to have strong reimbursement programs.

That is, you can seek to a particular offset and start decompressing a record.

The filesystem will not allocate blocks before this offset.

To be able to access fields regardless of these uncertainties, we go through a vtable of offsets.

My confusion as to which doge represents which number is offset by my drive to get to the next tier and see what doge will come next.

Even given a specific time of year, the time zone offset may not uniquely identify the time zone.

Offset in a sentence as a verb

When we fired him, we not only paid him what we owed, but we paid him an extra 15 days of work in addition to $1000 dollars to offset any unexpected costs.

This may be more efficient than a 30 minute run and burn the same net amount of calories, but you'll offset the entire effect of this workout by eating a cookie.

In the current state, it thrives partially because the reception provides the safety-checks and balances needed to prevent and offset these black swan events.

You could read this table in, add the pointer representing where the file starts in memory, to the offset from the table representing where the machine-code is in the file... and bam, you've got a function pointer!

The main reason for this is relatively obvious if you spend a few moments examining the gameplay footage: The sprites all have a simple traditional 2D drop shadow, where the size of the shadow is the same as the size of the sprite and it's offset by a few pixels.

As an early hire you will work as hard as the founders, and take at least as much personal financial risk as them if it doesn't work out, yet with minimal exposure to any upside - so the sane options are, full co-founder, or double market rate salary to offset the risk.

Offset definitions

noun

the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the get-go that he was the man for her"

noun

a compensating equivalent

See also: counterbalance

noun

a horizontal branch from the base of plant that produces new plants from buds at its tips

See also: stolon runner

noun

a natural consequence of development

See also: outgrowth branch offshoot

noun

a plate makes an inked impression on a rubber-blanketed cylinder, which in turn transfers it to the paper

noun

structure where a wall or building narrows abruptly

See also: set-back setoff

verb

compensate for or counterbalance; "offset deposits and withdrawals"

See also: countervail

verb

make up for; "His skills offset his opponent's superior strength"

See also: cancel

verb

cause (printed matter) to transfer or smear onto another surface

verb

create an offset in; "offset a wall"

verb

produce by offset printing; "offset the conference proceedings"