释义 |
frames
frame F0293200 (frām)n.1. a. A structure that gives shape or support: the frame of a house.b. The structure or physique of a human or animal body: a worker's sturdy frame.c. An open structure or rim for encasing, holding, or bordering: a window frame; the frame of a mirror.2. a. A closed, often rectangular border of drawn or printed lines.b. The edge, usually rectangular, delimiting the boundaries of an image.c. The bounded area of a visual image, as in photography or film: filled the frame with a cast of thousands.d. One of the set of still images that constitute a film or video.e. A single image, as in a comic strip or graphic novel, usually bounded by a rectangular line.f. Computers A rectangular area in which text or graphics can be shown, especially one of several rectangular areas on a web page displaying different documents simultaneously.3. a. A general structure or system: the frame of government.b. A general state or condition: The news put me into a better frame of mind.c. A frame of reference.4. The presentation of events in a narrative work, especially a work of literature or film, such that characters in the narrative exist in isolation, uninfluenced by, unaware of, and unable to interact with the narrator or audience.5. Linguistics a. The context in which discourse occurs.b. A pattern for a syntactic construction in which one of a group of words can vary.6. a. A round or period of play in some games, such as bowling and billiards.b. Baseball An inning.7. often frames A pair of eyeglasses, excluding the lenses: had new lenses fitted into an old pair of frames.8. See cold frame.9. Informal A frame-up.10. Obsolete Shape; form.v. framed, fram·ing, frames v.tr.1. a. To enclose in a frame: frame a painting.b. To put together the structural parts of; construct the frame of: frame a house.2. To conceive or design: framed an alternate proposal.3. To establish the context for and terminology regarding (a subject of discussion or debate), especially so as to exclude an unwanted point of view: The question was framed to draw only one answer.4. a. To put into words; formulate: frame a reply.b. To form (words) silently with the lips.5. a. To make up evidence or contrive events so as to incriminate (a person) falsely.b. To prearrange (a contest) so as to ensure a desired fraudulent outcome; fix: frame a prizefight.c. Baseball To catch (a pitch) in such a way as to make it appear to have passed through the strike zone.v.intr. Archaic To go; proceed: "Frame upstairs, and make little din" (Emily Brontë). [Middle English, from framen, to make progress, to frame, from Old English framian, to avail, profit, from fram, forward; see from.] fram′a·ble, frame′a·ble adj.frames (freɪmz) pl nthe frame for a pair of eyeglassesframesThe individual still pictures which make up a film.TranslationsIdiomsSeeframeframes
frames[frāmz] (computer science) Subdivisions of a browser window, with each section containing a separate Web page. framesAn HTML layout feature that renders multiple documents (HTML files) on a Web page at the same time. Frames are used on websites similar to the way applications display multiple windows. It enables static data to be visible all the time while other data are scrolled. For example, a menu can be located at the top of the page with links to articles below. The articles can be scrolled without changing the position of the menu on the page.
The frame may contain content from a different site, just like links on websites can retrieve Web pages from any server. Frames automatically provide scroll bars if the content is larger than the frame window.
A Contentious Feature Frames have been controversial since day one on the Web. Earlier browsers did not render frames the same or perhaps not at all, which is why framed sites typically offer a "no-frames" version. Users cannot always bookmark a frame, and clicking the browser's Back and Forward buttons may not move the content in the frame you want.
Frames can also point to an HTML document on any third-party server and give the appearance that the content is coming from the same site. This enables content to be easily aggregated, but also lets third-party content be stolen from another site unless precautions are taken on that site (see framekiller).
In addition, frames may be avoided by the Web developer because search engines may not index the content correctly. Frames are also not that friendly to audio browsers for the visually impaired (see audio browser). See frameset, iFrame and Xframes.
| HTML Frames |
---|
The HTML frames feature is used to partition the page into windows, and the content within a window can be scrollable or static. The iFrame is an independent HTML frame that can be placed anywhere on the page just like text and graphics. If the iFrame is in a scrollable frame, then it would scroll off screen like any other objects on the page. |
FRAMES
Acronym | Definition |
---|
FRAMES➣Fire Research and Management Exchange System | FRAMES➣Future Radio Wideband Multiple Access System |
|