Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The layouts of the panels can influence the way the panels interact with each other to the reader. This interaction can lend more meaning to the panels than what they have individually. Encapsulation is distinctive to comics, and an essential consideration in the creation of a work of comics. [27]
Expendable parts may include a topper (a small separate comic strip, no longer used in mainstream comics), "throwaway" panels (a short throw-away gag, still common), or a large title panel or tier. Due to the desire to re-arrange, comics may use a conventional layout of the panels (as demonstrated below) to allow them to be cut up and displayed ...
Yonkoma manga (4コマ漫画, "four cell manga" or 4-koma for short) is a comic strip format that generally consists of gag comic strips within four panels of equal size ordered from top to bottom.
A pair of CIPs mounted on the side of an M1A1 Abrams' turret. The Combat Identification Panel (CIP), also known as a Coalition Identification Panel, is an Identification friend or foe device mounted on military ground vehicles used by United States Armed Forces' United States Army with United States Marine Corps and its allies to distinguish them from the enemy during battle.
A panel discussion, or simply a panel, involves a group of people gathered to discuss a topic in front of an audience, typically at scientific, business, or academic conferences, fan conventions, and on television shows. Panels usually include a moderator who guides the discussion and sometimes elicits audience questions, with the goal of being ...
Control panel (engineering), a flat area containing controls and indicators, used to operate machinery; Flat panel display, in (for example) laptops and mobile devices; Solar panel, a flat module of photovoltaic solar cells; Panel switch, a type of electromechanical telephone switching system developed by the Bell System in the 1920s
In ISPF, a panel is "a predefined display image that you see on a display screen". [2]: p.16 In modern multiple-document interface software a panel refers to a particular arrangement of information grouped together and presented to users docked (by default) in the user interface rather than floating in a window, pop-up or dialog box.
The 1965 edition of the NEC, article 384-15 was the first reference to the circuit total limitation of panelboards. [1] As of 2008, the location of this language is at Article 408.54 now titled "Maximum Number of Overcurrent Devices."