event
111Event-Handler — [zu engl. event »Ereignis«], Handler …
112event manager — UK US noun [C] (also events manager) ► someone whose job is to plan and manage large events such as conferences, trade shows, and parties: »Applicants for the position of event manager must have experience in running sales events and trade… …
113event marketing — UK US noun [uncountable] business activities that are designed to advertise an event Thesaurus: advertising, marketing and prhyponym …
114event horizon — e*vent ho*ri zon . (Physics, Astron.) the boundary surface surrounding a {black hole}, from outside of which nothing inside can be observed, because nothing inside that surface, even light, can escape beyond it. See also {black hole} and {escape… …
115Event-driven Processing — [engl.], ereignisgesteuerte Verarbeitung …
116event-history — analysis …
117event horizon — event′ hori zon n. astron. the boundary around a black hole on and within which no matter or radiation can escape • Etymology: 1970–75 …
118event horizon — n. Astron. the spherical boundary surrounding a black hole, within which there is such strong gravity that nothing, not even light, can escape …
119Event (computing) — In computing an event is an action that is usually initiated outside the scope of a program and that is handled by a piece of code inside the program. Typically events are handled synchronous with the program flow, that is, the program has one or …
120Event-driven programming — Programming paradigms Agent oriented Automata based Component based Flow based Pipelined Concatenative Concurrent computin …