different between closure vs callback

closure

English

Etymology

From Middle English closure, from Old French closure, from Late Latin clausura, from Latin claudere (to close); see clausure and cloture (etymological doublets) and close.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: kl?'zhûr
    • (UK) IPA(key): /?kl??.??(?)/
    • (US) IPA(key): /?klo?.??/, /?klo?.??/

Noun

closure (countable and uncountable, plural closures)

  1. An event or occurrence that signifies an ending.
  2. A feeling of completeness; the experience of an emotional conclusion, usually to a difficult period.
  3. A device to facilitate temporary and repeatable opening and closing.
  4. (programming) An abstraction that represents a function within an environment, a context consisting of the variables that are both bound at a particular time during the execution of the program and that are within the function's scope.
  5. (mathematics) The smallest set that both includes a given subset and possesses some given property.
  6. (topology, of a set) The smallest closed set which contains the given set.
    • 1955 [Van Nostrand Reinhold], John L. Kelley, General Topology, 2017, Dover, page 42,
      The closure ( T {\displaystyle {\mathfrak {T}}} -closure) of a subset A of a topological space ( X , T ) {\displaystyle (X,{\mathfrak {T}})} is the intersection of the members of the family of all closed sets containing A. []
      7 THEOREM The closure of any set is the union of the set and the set of its accumulation points.
  7. The act of shutting; a closing.
    the closure of a door, or of a chink
  8. That which closes or shuts; that by which separate parts are fastened or closed.
    • 1729 November 28, Alexander Pope, Letter to Jonathan Swift, 1824, The Works of Jonathan Swift: Containing Additional Letters, Volume 17, 2nd Edition, page 284,
      I admire on this consideration your sending your last to me quite open, without a seal, wafer, or any closure whatever, manifesting the utter openness of the writer.
  9. (obsolete) That which encloses or confines; an enclosure.
    • c. 1593, William Shakespeare Richard III, Act 3, Scene 3, 1765, Samuel Johnson, George Steevens (editors) The Plays of William Shakespeare, Volume XI, 1808, page 97,
      O thou bloody prison [] / Within the guilty closure of thy walls / Richard the Second here was hacked to death.
  10. (politics) A method of ending a parliamentary debate and securing an immediate vote upon a measure before a legislative body.
  11. (sociology) The phenomenon by which a group maintains its resources by the exclusion of others from their group based on varied criteria. Wp
  12. The process whereby the reader of a comic book infers the sequence of events by looking at the picture panels.
    • 2009, Randy Duncan, Matthew J. Smith, The Power of Comics: History, Form and Culture (page 166)
      The comic book reader performs closure within each panel, between panels, and among panels.

Hyponyms

  • (computing): function closure, lexical closure
  • (device): clasp, hasp, latch, hook and eye

Troponyms

  • (computer science) thunk

Derived terms

  • closure operator
  • closure space

Translations

See also

  • cloture

References

  • closure on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • Clouser, colures

closure From the web:

  • what closure means
  • what closure length should i get
  • what closure property
  • what closures are in tier 3
  • what's closure in a relationship
  • what's closure in javascript
  • what closure length do i need
  • what's closures in st john's today


callback

English

Etymology

call +? back

Noun

callback (plural callbacks)

  1. The return of a situation to a previous position or state.
  2. (telephony) A return telephone or radio call; especially one made automatically to authenticate a logon to a computer network.
    • 2007, James M. Lepkowski, Clyde Tucker, J. Michael Brick, Advances in Telephone Survey Methodology (page 318)
      For example, multiple callbacks might be made to a nonanswered number to increase the response rate.
  3. A product recall because of a defect or safety concern.
  4. (programming) A function pointer passed as an argument to another function.
  5. (theater) A follow-up audition in casting.
  6. (comedy) A joke which references an earlier joke in the same routine.

Synonyms

  • (joke): running gag

Derived terms

Related terms

  • call back

Translations

callback From the web:

  • what callback means
  • what callback a language feature of
  • what's callback function
  • what callback does
  • what callback methods
  • what callback number
  • what is callback function in javascript
  • what is callback hell
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like