Open soraliu opened 4 years ago
This page lists material that will help you get started with Bazel
此页面列出了可帮助您开始使用Bazel的材料
(Cǐ yèmiàn liè chūle kě bāngzhù nín kāishǐ shǐyòng Bazel de cáiliào)
Translations of This page lists material that will help you get started with Bazel
[ English -> 简体中文 ]
This page lists material that will help you get started with Bazel
此页面列出了可帮助您开始使用Bazel的材料, 此页面列出的材料,这将帮助您开始使用巴泽尔
If you find yourself unsure of how Workspace, Packages, Targets and Rules relate to each other, jump to the Bazel Concepts page.
如果您不确定工作区,程序包,目标和规则如何相互关联,请跳至“ Bazel概念”页面。
(Rúguǒ nín bù quèdìng gōngzuò qū, chéngxù bāo, mùbiāo hé guīzé rúhé xiānghù guānlián, qǐng tiào zhì “Bazel gàiniàn” yèmiàn.)
Translations of If you find yourself unsure of how Workspace, Packages, Targets and Rules relate to each other, jump to the Bazel Concepts page.
[ English -> 简体中文 ]
If you find yourself unsure of how Workspace, Packages, Targets and Rules relate to each other, jump to the Bazel Concepts page.
如果您不确定工作区,程序包,目标和规则如何相互关联,请跳至“ Bazel概念”页面。, 如果你发现自己无法确定工作区,包,目标和规则如何相互关联,跳转到巴泽尔概念页。
terminology
/ˌtərməˈnäləjē/
noun
the body of terms used with a particular technical application in a subject of study, theory, profession, etc..
- "So far, attempts to create universal terminology standards or automate the translation between different terminologies have met with limited success, Kaufman says."
Synonyms: phraseology, terms, expressions, words, language, lexicon, parlance, vocabulary, wording, nomenclature, usage, idiom, jargon, cant, argot, lingo, -speak, -ese
Synonyms
noun
- phraseology, terms, expressions, words, language, lexicon, parlance, vocabulary, wording, nomenclature, usage, idiom, jargon, cant, argot, lingo, -speak, -ese
- language, nomenclature
Examples
- Consumers may well be confused by the technical terminology surrounding lighting.
- Students were required to perform individual self study of medical terminology.
- the terminology of semiotics
- This new terminology did not, however, replace the old terms of female and male sex hormones.
- Because our inability to make head or tail of complex financial terminologymay be hitting us where it hurts most - in our pockets.
- I realise that the army's history and terminology is an unknown jungle to many.
- Tea terminology is a matter of concern to tea drinkers and also to cooks who are using tea as a flavouring.
- Such changes in medical terminology often reflect new cultural attitudes.
- I'd like journalists to be as creative as songwriters and come up with some new terminology.
- So for all you ladies out there with a need to know, here are some of football's general terminologies explained.
- Many new terminologieshave evolved in recent times related to the reportage of HIV / AIDS, which are neutral, non-judgemental and positive.
- We need a distributed way, he said, to provide organizing terms and terminologies and deploy them on the Web.
- The current debate has sometimes gone beyond terminological quibbles.
- The terminologist drafts definitions and recommends the adoption of new terms for standardization purposes.
- My argument is a terminological one, not in order to have tidy semantics, but because words can govern other behaviors.
- The tasks of terminologists vary from updating single term records to projects on certain subject fields.
- In other
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words, you need to standardize your IT terminology, and you hire terminologists to do that for you.
- When Tom isn't trying to change the subject through ad hominem or terminological arguments, he's often making a wordy confession of his political tendencies or saying things that are just plain wrong.
- Recommendations on terms to be used in a given context remain the domain of the terminologist.
- Many aspects of museum Web sites require visitors to understand the specialized terminologies and controlled vocabularies used by museum professionals.
- The two subjects have developed such completely different disciplines and terminologies that it is hard to think of them together.
- We figure the last one is terminologically OK, but ominous.
- Amid all this terminological disputation, it is important, though not always easy, to keep in mind the real-world consequences of these ideas.
- Classifying business models based on these viewpoints creates confusion because the interests of individual observers vary and so do the terminologies they use.
- This survey of the parties' functions indicates the need to be terminologically precise in discussing their strengths and weaknesses.
- The point is that the holders of the opposite position have nowhere to go terminologically.
- As in many other areas, both of social science and of popular discourse, there are competing terminologies and conceptual schemes in terms of which diversity and difference are described and explained.
- Words and terminologies that were once accepted or unquestioned are now being changed in all languages because over a period of time these words have lost their original meaning and acquired negative connotations.
- So I can illustrate those mindsets by using more familiar western terminologies and that sort of thing.
- So far, attempts to create universal terminology standards or automate the translation between different terminologies have met with limited success, Kaufman says.
In particular, repositories depended upon transitively are not added automatically.
特别是,不会自动添加依赖于传递的存储库。
(Tèbié shì, bù huì zìdòng tiānjiā yīlài yú chuándì de cúnchú kù.)
Translations of In particular, repositories depended upon transitively are not added automatically.
[ English -> 简体中文 ]
In particular, repositories depended upon transitively are not added automatically.
特别是,不会自动添加依赖于传递的存储库。, 特别是,库依赖于及物不会自动添加。
consequently
/-ˌkwentlē,ˈkänsikwəntlē/
adverb
as a result.
- "Cranks and charlatans abound when we are all experts in our own field, and consequently nobody is a real expert at all."
Synonyms: as a result, as a consequence, so, thus, therefore, ergo, accordingly, hence, for this/that reason, because of this/that, on this/that account, inevitably, necessarily
Synonyms
adverb
- as a result, as a consequence, so, thus, therefore, ergo, accordingly, hence, for this/that reason, because of this/that, on this/that account, inevitably, necessarily
- accordingly
- therefore
Examples
- It's said that each pair of lederhosen has a story to tell and consequently they are never washed.
- she studied a lot and consequently got great results
- flexible workers find themselves in great demand, and consequently gain high salaries
- We demand it all and consequently miss what we should be looking for.
- On the farm diesel and silage wrap will rise and consequently the farmers margin of profit will be cut.
- The heavy rain made for slippery conditions and consequently mistakes on both sides.
- When they reach a certain age, they stop believing and consequently stop writing.
- I have no expectation that you would consequently disclose any information to me.
- Cranks and charlatans abound when we are all experts in our own field, and consequently nobody is a real expert at all.
- flexible workers find themselves in great demand, and consequently earn high salaries
- The first time we tried it, about a year ago, we loved it and consequently raved about it.
- We are more individualised than ever before, and consequently less social.
- The boat is wider than a racing craft and consequently is safer for beginners.
- Many corporates have not been able to cope up with this change and have consequently become sick.
- In a lawless and consequently weak state, man is defenceless and unfree.
- The council consequently decided to carry out a peer review on the whole project, he said.
- These effects result in nutrient imbalances in plants, consequently reducing plant growth.
- It means we can go into those games and maybe enjoy them a little bit more and, consequently, be a little bit m
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ore relaxed.
- The separate dish of butter was hard and consequentlydifficult to spread - a minor difficulty.
- So for me the gig does have some cache in its own right and consequently I do feel a little excited when I chance to think about it.
- he didn't train and consequently lost his place on the team
- I consequently spent a lot of time avoiding the kitchen, holed up in my room reading.
- She suffered from insomnia and depression and consequently was prescribed anti depressants.
- Paris is a smaller city than London and consequently has less of a suburban sprawl.
Package groups are sets of packages whose purpose is to limit accessibility of certain rules
软件包组是一组软件包,其目的是限制某些规则的可访问性
(Ruǎnjiàn bāo zǔ shì yī zǔ ruǎnjiàn bāo, qí mùdì shì xiànzhì mǒu xiē guīzé de kě fǎngwèn xìng)
Translations of Package groups are sets of packages whose purpose is to limit accessibility of certain rules
[ English -> 简体中文 ]
Package groups are sets of packages whose purpose is to limit accessibility of certain rules
软件包组是一组软件包,其目的是限制某些规则的可访问性, 包组套包装,其目的是对某些规则的限制无障碍
colon
/ˈkōlən/
noun
the main part of the large intestine, which passes from the cecum to the rectum and absorbs water and electrolytes from food that has remained undigested. Its parts are called the ascending, transverse, descending, and sigmoid colon.
- "It colonises the newborn's colon within hours of birth, and serves important intestinal physiological functions for the rest of the host's life."
a punctuation mark (:) indicating.
- "Programming languages often consist of a seemingly random usage of parenthesis, brackets, asterisks, slashes, colons and semi-colons."
Examples
- This antioxidant effect may also reduce the risk of some cancers, particularly of the breast and colon.
- A second surgery the following day revealed a hole the size of pencil eraser in the colon where the two sections had been sutured together.
- Add a bracket to a colon and you get the text-message version of a smiley badge.
- He sustained a punctured colon, a collapsed lung, and a lacerated liver and kidney.
- In less formal writing, the dash is often a catch-all mark to take the place of both colon and semicolon, obviating the need to distinguish them or think about more subtle kinds of punctuation.
- Its goal is the purification and rejuvenation of the colon, because the colon is linked to all the other organs and tissues of the body.
- It colonises the newborn's colon within hours of birth, and serves important intestinal physiological functions for the rest of the host's life.
- Time is in army format without the colon between hours and minutes.
- I have been finding too many contradictory sources on the use of colons versus semicolons, and now can remember neither quite right.
- But it's hard enough for some people to acquire an instinctive sense of the different uses of commas, let alone the employment of colons and semi-colons.
- Programming languages often consist of a seemingly random usage of parenthesis, brackets, asterisks, slashes, colons and semi-colons.
unadorned
/ˌənəˈdôrnd/
adjective
not adorned; plain.
- "Its plain blued barrel is unadorned except for a fluorescent orange front bead."
Synonyms: unembellished, unornamented, undecorated, unvarnished, unfussy, no-nonsense, no-frills, plain, basic, restrained, unshowy, unflashy, bare, simple, austere, stark, spartan, clinical, chaste
Synonyms
adjective
- unembellished, unornamented, undecorated, unvarnished, unfussy, no-nonsense, no-frills, plain, basic, restrained, unshowy, unflashy, bare, simple, austere, stark, spartan, clinical, chaste
- undecorated
Examples
- It's a good performance, light and simple, unadorned like the film itself.
- Instead, the corridor was unadorned, though spotlessly clean, the wood walls shining as if polished.
- The typical two-slice serving of plain, unadorned cheese pizza packs about a half a day's worth of saturated fat.
- At first listen, all the songs are fragile things, built from simple acoustic instruments and unadorned arrangements.
- Its quality of the plain and unadorned could rake the form of words only as in the various text altarpieces illustrated here.
- We do not expect him to portray the world creatively, but to tell us the unadorned truth about things as they really are.
- This is acting of the purest and most unostentatious kind, unadorned by self-pity or visible virtuosity.
- I like the modesty and relatively unadorned character of her presentation.
- However, the simple and unadorned style has a homely taste.
- Clifton is a seeker who speaks in the unadornedtongue of truth - telling.
- Flores invited us into an unadorned, simple, rectangular wood structure.
- At the same time, the rich and ornamental pews set up by the status-conscious clergy were to be removed and replaced by plain, unadorned ones.
- The door was plain and unadorned, but its size indicated its importance.
- Plums, a bird that he saw in the Discovery channel, a week ago, is now in his home in unadorned and plain wood form.
- Its plain blued barrel is unadorned except for a fluorescent orange front bead.
- If I try making recipes more complicated than a simple roast beef or unadorned pasta, he usually doesn't like them.
- The hilt of the rapier was unadorned, wrapped with plain sharkskin, like so many weapons were that are from
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seaside towns.
- So, naturally, humanist funerals tend to be simple and unadorned, stripped of any ritualistic trappings.
- The building was very plain and unadorned, but she could tell by the smell alone that it was very expensive.
- We are hardly used to being told the unadorned truth.
force
/fôrs/
verb
make a way through or into by physical strength; break open by force.
- "She went downstairs and noticed a window at the rear of the house had been forced ."
Synonyms: break open, burst open, knock down, smash down, kick in
make (someone) do something against their will.
- "Most of all, I enjoyed the cappuccino and large piece of cake I was forced into having to warm up afterwards!"
Synonyms: compel, coerce, make, constrain, oblige, impel, drive, pressurize, pressure, press, push, press-gang, bully, dragoon, bludgeon, put the screws on, lean on, twist someone's arm
noun
strength or energy as an attribute of physical action or movement.
- "None the less, muscles on the whole can be controlled to produce a wide range of force and delicate motions."
Synonyms: strength, power, energy, might, effort, exertion, impact, pressure, weight, impetus
coercion or compulsion, especially with the use or threat of violence.
- "You can't get somebody to do something by force , by duress, by overcoming their will."
Synonyms: coercion, compulsion, constraint, duress, oppression, harassment, intimidation, threats, arm-twisting, bullying tactics
mental or moral strength or power.
- "As a mother, I appreciate the moral and emotional force of this recourse to the maternal."
an organized body of military personnel or police.
- "This includes supporting foreign police and military forces ."
Synonyms: body, body of people, group, outfit, party, team, detachment, unit, squad, border patrol, bunch
a force-out.
- "The fielder threw to second to get the force and then threw to third to tag me out."
Synonyms
verb
- break open, burst open, knock down, smash down, kick in
- extract, elicit, exact, extort, wrest, wring, drag, screw, squeeze
- compel, coerce, make, constrain, oblige, impel, drive, pressurize, pressure, press, push, press-gang, bully, dragoon, bludgeon, put the screws on, lean on, twist someone's arm
- propel, push, thrust, shove, drive, press, pump
- drive, ram
- squeeze, wedge
- push
- pull, draw
- storm
- hale, squeeze, coerce, pressure
- impel
- thrust
noun
- cogency, potency, weight, effectiveness, soundness, validity, strength, power, significance, influence, authority, punch, efficacy
- body, body of people, group, outfit, party, team, detachment, unit, squad, border patrol, bunch
- strength, power, energy, might, effort, exertion, impact, pressure, weight, impetus
- agency, power, influence, instrument, vehicle, means
- coercion, compulsion, constraint, duress, oppression, harassment, intimidation, threats, arm-twisting, bullying tactics
- military unit, military force
- violence
- power
- forcefulness, strength
- personnel
- effect
- force out, force-out, force play
Examples
- professional standards don't have the force of law
- to be the driving force behind sth
- It took every speck of willpower and strength she had to force them back to an even position.
- thieves tried to force open the cash register
- There is a sponginess underfoot; a greater upward force to your movements.
- he was thrown backwards by the force of the explosion
- Typhoon Rananim brought hurricanes of force 12 on the Beaufort scale when it landed.
- Since the end of the Second World War, Canada has prided itself on being a force for international justice.
- It prevented student organization by enlisting a force of students to report on political activity.
- In many ways, however, the weak force resembles the electromagnetic force.
- The Pump Engine adjoining the tread wheels was put in motion by human force.
- The bombs on the inside edge exploded first, and their force sent my body hurling faster.
- This is analogous to the way in which electrons experience the weak force while photons do not.
- Nara too pointed out that only if Japan, India and China could form an alliance, Asia could prove to be a force for peace.
- One horse is biddable and can learn to obey commands, but the other is both deaf and violent, and so can be controlled only by force.
- The brand evangelists will tell you that brands are a force for good.
- She said the burglar had to scale a secure six-feet high fence at the rear of the property to get in and tried to force open the back door and window before breaking it.
- If the guilty won't hold up their hands and confess, he and the Generals will ferret them out by force.
- The most nervous moment of the trip so far was when a storm blew up gale force 6 winds.
- As Ibrahim counsels, it is a mistake to believe that force can eliminate Islamist movements.
- Secondly, China continues to threaten to resolve the Taiwan issue by force.
- Does ‘our culture of spectatorship neutralise the moral force of photographs of atrocities’?
- But we civil society groups have the moral force of conviction that all human beings have rights and must be treated with dignity.
- You can't get somebody to do something by force, by duress, by overcoming their will.
- It may not be fashionable to say it but America has long been a force for good in international relations.
- The killings by the military force and the police have legal sanction.
- Originally, this force was attributed to an actomyosin system similar to muscle.
- We now have the situation where the entire force has been tarnished by the Minister as corrupt on the basis of a newspaper article.
- to force somebody to change
- Are we aware of evil's reality yet blind to its force and effects, unable to name and describe it?
forcely
forcely
Translations of forcely
[ Italiano -> English ]
强制地
(Qiángzhì de)
Mandatory
Translations of 强制地
[ 简体中文 -> English ]
强制地
Mandatory, Forcibly
forcibly
/ˈfôrsəblē/
adverb
using force or violence.
- "These kids at the orphanage are from troubled homes, often forcibly removed by the state."
Examples
- Our offices, our shops, our industries, our businesses, our trades are all forcibly closed.
- Executions frequently follow a mock trial held in front of forcibly assembled villagers.
- The new conversation must be about how to achieve stability, not how we can forcibly pacify the place.
- In fact over the past ten days about 290,000 people have been forcibly expelled from Kosovo.
- They were then forcibly returned to Iran, where they immediately disappeared.
- Officers found evidence that the family was forcibly kept in the house, including a padlock on a bedroom door, he said.
- The ship that was heading for the most logical port of call in Indonesia was forcibly routed to Australia.
- they argued forcibly against the proposal
- These kids at the orphanage are from troubled homes, often forcibly removed by the state.
- no one will be forcibly evicted
- The action was opposed by Morocco, which forcibly removed the boundary stones laid by the Spaniards.
- Smaller fish will be forcibly removed from their domain by bullying tactics.
dash
/daSH/
短跑
(Duǎnpǎo)
Definitions of dash
[ English -> 简体中文 ]
noun
短跑
sprint, dash
冲撞
dash
长划
dah, dash
冲劲儿
kick, dash, strength
verb
冲撞
collide, dash, bump, ram, offend, give offense
突
dash, charge
闯
rush, dash, temper oneself, venture out into the world
长划
dash
dash
短跑, 破折号
slash
/slaSH/
削减
(Xuējiǎn)
Definitions of slash
[ English -> 简体中文 ]
noun
削减
slash, cutback
砍
chop, slash
剸
slash
砍痕
slash
砍口
slash
verb
削减
reduce, cut down, slash, pare, whittle down, put down
砍
cut, chop, hack, slash, hew
乱砍
hackle, slash, mangle, cut and carve
割伤
slash
剌
slash
剸
slash
砍击
slash
slash
削减, 斜线
encyclopedia
/enˌsīkləˈpēdēə/
noun
a book or set of books giving information on many subjects or on many aspects of one subject and typically arranged alphabetically.
- "The bulk of the book is an encyclopedia covering 700 species of ferns found in cultivation."
Synonyms
noun
- cyclopaedia, cyclopedia, encyclopaedia
Examples
- The bulk of the book is an encyclopedia covering 700 species of ferns found in cultivation.
- This book is an encyclopedia of common sewing techniques from Appliqué to Zippers.
- If you are unable to find a biography, check an encyclopedia or reference book at your library.
- The book resembles an encyclopedia, with 3,000 recipes from five other countries in addition to Italy.
- Her citations, however, include only an encyclopedia and four books on Africa.
- ‘Most textbooks belong in the reference category along with encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses’.
- Well we learned how to use encyclopedias and almanacs and handbooks.
- Students can also access electronic multimedia encyclopedias, library references, and online publications.
- In addition to leveling churches, houses, and graveyards, ethnic cleansers burn books, encyclopedias, and dictionaries.
- There were lots of bookshelves filled with books, encyclopedias and dictionaries.
- Some of my favorite books are old, gorgeously illustrated encyclopedias and atlases.
- It stocks a vast selection of books and magazines going far beyond the expected reference books and encyclopaedias.
- She has long been considered the authority on Walker's life and has been a contributor to books, encyclopedias and articles about Walker.
- The major e-library sites will offer on-line reference tools like encyclopedias and dictionaries along with thousands of books and journal articles.
- Besides the standard dictionaries, encyclopedias and almanacs, I have shelf upon shelf of volumes that perhaps even a professional librarian wouldn't recognise as reference books.
- There were also some dictionaries, encyclopedias and travel books, so I could say that their library was complete.
- On the internet, there are vast chunks of information in
2d4
online encyclopaedias and digital directories, all of which can be instantly updated.
- The wooden headboard held many books including, the Bible, a dictionary, encyclopedias, books, songs, and poems she had written.
- Exploring encyclopedias and resource books in both languages can enhance children's construction of new concepts.
- I am looking at encyclopaedias and reference books to decide what I am best at.
trivial
/ˈtrivēəl/
不重要的
(Bù chóng yào de)
Definitions of trivial
[ English -> 简体中文 ]
adjective
琐
petty, trivial, trifling, fragmentary
琐细
trivial, petty, insignificant, fameless, inessential, potty
细小
small, tiny, little, petty, trivial, trifling
区区
trivial
怭
frivolous, trivial, rude
过份挑剔的
fastidious, finicking, choosey, nice, finicky, trivial
trivial
不重要的, 琐碎的, 琐细