Characterized vs Iframe - What's the difference?
characterized | iframe |
(characterize)
to depict someone or something a particular way (often negative)
to determine the characteristics of
* {{quote-book, passage=This glossary includes terminology used in coastal science, engineering, geology, management, nearshore oceanography and the technologies that characterize , measure, describe or quantify the physical properties, processes and changes of the coastal zone.
, title=Department of Ecology Publication No. 98-105
, chapter=Glossary of Coastal Terminology
, author=Brian Voigt
, year=1998
(Internet) A section of a web page that can act as the container for a second separate page or resource.
* 2006 , Nicholas C. Zakas, Jeremy McPeak, Joe Fawcett, Professional Ajax (page 4)
* 2011 , Richard Wagner, Building Facebook Applications For Dummies
As a verb characterized
is (characterize).As a noun iframe is
(internet) a section of a web page that can act as the container for a second separate page or resource.characterized
English
Verb
(head)characterize
English
(Characterization)Alternative forms
* characteriseVerb
(characteriz)citation
Derived terms
* characterizationExternal links
* *iframe
English
Noun
(en noun)- This enabled developers to forego framesets altogether and simply place invisible iframes (through the use of CSS) on a page to enable client-server communication.
- Although you can use standard JavaScript and AJAX in sandboxed iframe pages to your heart's content, the Facebook Platform places restrictions over the amount of scripting capabilities you can add to the more tightly integrated FBML pages.