1) [вычислительная техника] пиктограмма 2) графический символ (в машинной графике) 3) изображение; образ (в СТЗ и электронной почте)
= ikon 1) пиктограмма, иконка (в терминологии Microsoft - "значок") небольшое растровое символическое изображение в графическом интерфейсе пользователя, служащее для выбора (вызова) того или иного инструмента (программы), устройства, папки и управления им (ею) Смотри также: application icon, GUI, icon bar, icon editor, pictogram, toolbar 2) образ, изображение
имя существительное 1) [религия]; то же, что и ikon - икона Например: to paint an icon — писать икону 2) а) символ, знаковый образ (чего-либо) Например: to become an icon for something — символизировать собой что-либо; стать символом чего-либо The house became an icon of 1860's residential architecture. — Это здание стало символом жилого дома образца 1860-х годов. Синоним(ы): emblem, symbol б) идол, кумир, икона Например: a fashion / style icon — кумир в мире моды; икона моды / стиля a pop icon — поп-идол the living icon and double Oscar nominee — живая легенда и дважды номинант на "Оскара" Diana was an ideal icon for a post-Christian society. — Диана была идеальным объектом для поклонения в постхристианском обществе. No icon is safe from his keyhole. — Ни один кумир не скроется от любопытных глаз. Синоним(ы): idol 3) [информатика и компьютерные технологии] иконка, пиктограмма; значок
финансы сокращение от indexed currency option note
also ikon noun Etymology: Latin, from Greek eikōn, from eikenai to resemble 1. a usually pictorial representation; image 2. [Late Greek eikōn, from Greek] a conventional religious image typically painted on a small wooden panel and used in the devotions of Eastern Christians 3. an object of uncritical devotion; idol 4. emblem, symbol Example: the house became an icon of 1860's residential architecture — Paul Goldberger 5. a. a sign (as a word or graphic symbol) whose form suggests its meaning b. a graphic symbol on a computer display screen that usually suggests the type of object represented or the purpose of an available function • iconic adjective • iconically adverb
A descendant of SNOBOL4 with Pascal-like syntax, produced by Griswold in the 1970's. Icon is a general-purpose language with special features for string scanning. It has dynamic types: records, sets, lists, strings, tables. If has some object oriented features but no modules or exceptions. It has a primitive Unix interface. The central theme of Icon is the generator: when an expression is evaluated it may be suspended and later resumed, producing a result sequence of values until it fails. Resumption takes place implicitly in two contexts: iteration which is syntactically loop-like ('every-do'), and goal-directed evaluation in which a conditional expression automatically attempts to produce at least one result. Expressions that fail are used in lieu of Booleans. Data backtracking is supported by a reversible assignment. Icon also has co-expressions, which can be explicitly resumed at any time. Version 8.8 by Ralph Griswold includes an interpreter, a compiler (for some platforms) and a library (v8.8). Icon has been ported to Amiga, Atari, CMS, Macintosh, Macintosh/MPW, MS-DOS, MVS, OS/2, Unix, VMS, Acorn. See also Ibpag2.
A small picture intended to represent something (a file, directory, or action) in a graphical user interface. When an icon is clicked on, some action is performed such as opening a directory or aborting a file transfer. Icons are usually stored as bitmap images. Microsoft Windows uses a special bitmap format with file name extension ".ico" as well as embedding icons in executable (".exe") and Dynamically Linked Library (DLL) files. The term originates from Alan Kay's theory for designing interfaces which was primarily based on the work of Jerome Bruner. Bruner's second developmental stage, iconic, uses a system of representation that depends on visual or other sensory organization and upon the use of summarising images.