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Use the nutshell summary to make Wikipedia more inviting to new users. Nutshell entries must be brief overviews, with a very high meaning to number of words ratio. Make sure each word in the nutshell carries significant weight, "make every word tell". Wikilink to other pages to create a "nut trail" of pages with nutshells.
CRS—Computer Reservations System; CRT—Cathode-ray tube; CRUD—Create, read, update and delete; CS—Cable Select; CS—Computer Science; CSE—Computer science and engineering; CSI—Common System Interface; CSM—Compatibility support module; CSMA/CD—Carrier-sense multiple access with collision detection; CSP—Cloud service provider
Nutshell is a web and mobile customer relationship management (CRM) and email marketing automation service. It is composed of a web application, as well as mobile applications for the iOS and Android platforms.
A nutshell is the outer shell of a nut. Nutshell may also refer to: Nut graph, a nutshell paragraph explaining the context of a story; Nutshell (program), a data engine in the early 1980s, succeeded by FileMaker; Nutshell (band), a folk group from Great Britain; Nutshell, a 2016 novel by English author Ian McEwan
Names of many computer terms, especially computer applications, often relate to the function they perform, e.g., a compiler is an application that compiles (programming language source code into the computer's machine language). However, there are other terms with less obvious origins, which are of etymological interest. This article lists such ...
A computer program written in an imperative language. Imperative languages specify a sequential algorithm using declarations, expressions, and statements: [52] A declaration introduces a variable name to the computer program and assigns it to a datatype [53] – for example: var x: integer; An expression yields a value – for example: 2 + 2 ...
[1] [2]: 261f [3] The abbreviated term can be spelled in these two ways, but also in ways that join the words in these compound expressions (e.g., nutgraph). [4] In the case of a two-paragraph extended lede, the nut graph follows those two, as needed; hence, the nut graph is generally the second or third paragraph following a journalistic lede.
See also References External links A Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP) A dedicated video bus standard introduced by INTEL enabling 3D graphics capabilities; commonly present on an AGP slot on the motherboard. (Presently a historical expansion card standard, designed for attaching a video card to a computer's motherboard (and considered high-speed at launch, one of the last off-chip parallel ...