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  2. Futures and promises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Futures_and_promises

    In the Dojo Toolkit's Deferred API as of version 1.5, a consumer-only promise object represents a read-only view. [7] In Alice ML, futures provide a read-only view, whereas a promise contains both a future and the ability to resolve the future [8] [9] In .NET System.Threading.Tasks.Task<T> represents a read-only view.

  3. Async/await - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Async/await

    A function using async/await can use as many await expressions as it wants, and each will be handled in the same way (though a promise will only be returned to the caller for the first await, while every other await will utilize internal callbacks). A function can also hold a promise object directly and do other processing first (including ...

  4. Ajax (programming) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ajax_(programming)

    The webpage can be modified by JavaScript to dynamically display (and allow the user to interact with) the new information. The built-in XMLHttpRequest object is used to execute Ajax on webpages, allowing websites to load content onto the screen without refreshing the page. Ajax is not a new technology, nor is it a new language.

  5. ECMAScript version history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECMAScript_version_history

    Its features include the Object.values, Object.entries and Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptors functions for easy manipulation of Objects, async / await constructions that use generators and promises, and additional features for concurrency and atomics. It also includes String.prototype.padStart(). [35] [6]

  6. Promise problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Promise_problem

    The promise is the set of directed acyclic graphs. In this example, the promise is easy to check. In particular, it is very easy to check if a given graph is cyclic. However, the promised property could be difficult to evaluate. For instance, consider the problem "Given a Hamiltonian graph, determine if the graph has a cycle of size 4."

  7. Object-oriented programming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object-oriented_programming

    Sometimes objects represent more abstract entities, like an object that represents an open file, or an object that provides the service of translating measurements from U.S. customary to metric. Objects can contain other objects in their instance variables; this is known as object composition. For example, an object in the Employee class might ...

  8. Fully qualified name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fully_qualified_name

    It is somewhat equivalent on the Internet to a URL specifying the full name of the computer and the entire name of a particular document as a file. The alternative is an unqualified file name or a partially qualified file name. On Unix-style systems, DOS, and Microsoft Windows, the name "sample" refers to a file in the current directory named ...

  9. BQP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BQP

    Promise-BQP is the class of promise problems that can be solved by a uniform family of quantum circuits (i.e., within BQP). [10] Completeness proofs focus on this version of BQP. Similar to the notion of NP-completeness and other complete problems, we can define a complete problem as a problem that is in Promise-BQP and that every other problem ...