flex

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flex

Brit a flexible insulated electric cable, used esp to connect appliances to mains
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

flex

[fleks]
(science and technology)
To bend.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

FLEX

(language)
1. Faster LEX.

2. A real-time language for dynamic environments.

["FLEX: Towards Flexible Real-Time Programs", K. Lin et al, Computer Langs 16(1):65-79, Jan 1991].

3. An early object-oriented language developed for the FLEX machine by Alan Kay in about 1967. The FLEX language was a simplification of Simula and a predecessor of Smalltalk.

Flex

(software, hardware)
A system developed by Ian Currie (Iain?) at the (then) Royal Signals and Radar Establishment at Malvern in the late 1970s. The hardware was custom and microprogrammable, with an operating system, (modular) compiler, editor, garbage collector and filing system all written in Algol-68. Flex was also re-implemented on the Perq(?).

[I. F. Currie and others, "Flex Firmware", Technical Report, RSRE, Number 81009, 1981].

[I. F. Currie, "In Praise of Procedures", RSRE, 1982].
This article is provided by FOLDOC - Free Online Dictionary of Computing (foldoc.org)

Flex

A development system for Flash-based applications from Adobe. Introduced in 2004 as a J2EE application, Flex compiles ActionScript programming code and XML-based user interface descriptions (MXML) into binary Flash files (.SWF files). It also includes a variety of user interface functions for creating rich client applications. See Adobe AIR, Flash, MXML and ActionScript.
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References in periodicals archive ?
* Avoid changes in conductor width in flexing areas.
Therefore, we hypothesized that beryllium particles would enter the epidermis to activate the cutaneous immune response and that flexing motion, as at the wrist, would provide the energy necessary for particle penetration of the stratum corneum.
Collectively, these structures are responsible for extending, laterally flexing, and rotating the vertebral column.
UTiFLEX[R] high flex life cables were designed to excel in environments, where flexing is often continuous.