“being edited” or “in Process of Editing” in the singular word
From my native language, I am not English speaking. I don’t speak a native language. You can just stare at my screen and you get a picture. How how does someone tell if a new blog post is being edited or a new one? Thank you
so much.
In data management, there is a term less than six letters – Dirty; in this sense it’s invariably used as a flag to indicate an unsaved modified state.
If you need to be cleaned up while a segment of data is unfilled (e.g., lines of code that are created with a dirty bit) then this segment of data can be separated to make a tile. This is an incremental computing method. It is used to mark segments of data that are not processed or that have not been processed. This technique can be used with delays to avoid unnecessary processing of objects or states that have not changed. When the model is updated (usually by multiple sources), only the segments that need to be reprocessed will be marked dirty. In a simulation, an algorithm will scan a model for dirty segments and process them, marking them as clean. This ensures the unchanged segments are not recalculated and saves processor time. Wikipedia): Wikipedia
is an online resource.
I call it a work in progress. If it is, for me, the result of (could be) a “tool in progress”? If you have one word, you can hyphenate it or call it a WIP informally.): work with which an
artist or writer is engaged but which is not completed or approaching completion Alternatively, if you need
an adjective: incomplete, unfinished, crude, unpolished, wanting… etc.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
I call it a work in progress. If it is, for me, the result of (could be) a “tool in progress”? If you have one word, you can hyphenate it or call it a WIP informally.): work with which an
artist or writer is engaged but which is not completed or approaching completion Alternatively, if you need
an adjective: incomplete, unfinished, crude, unpolished, wanting… etc.
I call it a work in progress. If it is, for me, the result of (could be) a “tool in progress”? If you have one word, you can hyphenate it or call it a WIP informally.): work with which an
artist or writer is engaged but which is not completed or approaching completion Alternatively, if you need
an adjective: incomplete, unfinished, crude, unpolished, wanting… etc.
I call it a work in progress. If it is, for me, the result of (could be) a “tool in progress”? If you have one word, you can hyphenate it or call it a WIP informally.): work with which an
artist or writer is engaged but which is not completed or approaching completion Alternatively, if you need
an adjective: incomplete, unfinished, crude, unpolished, wanting… etc.
For online content management systems, the usual idiom is ‘checked out’/’checked in’.
For example, a user’s product can be ‘checked out’ after a first edit. It is then ‘checked in’ after a third edit. It is also available to many people for editing.
Users sometimes find this meaning a bit opaque, but an analogy to library books usually clears things up for them.
I call it a work in progress. If it is, for me, the result of (could be) a “tool in progress”? If you have one word, you can hyphenate it or call it a WIP informally.): work with which an
artist or writer is engaged but which is not completed or approaching completion Alternatively, if you need
an adjective: incomplete, unfinished, crude, unpolished, wanting… etc.
I call it a work in progress. If it is, for me, the result of (could be) a “tool in progress”? If you have one word, you can hyphenate it or call it a WIP informally.): work with which an
artist or writer is engaged but which is not completed or approaching completion Alternatively, if you need
an adjective: incomplete, unfinished, crude, unpolished, wanting… etc.
I call it a work in progress. If it is, for me, the result of (could be) a “tool in progress”? If you have one word, you can hyphenate it or call it a WIP informally.): work with which an
artist or writer is engaged but which is not completed or approaching completion Alternatively, if you need
an adjective: incomplete, unfinished, crude, unpolished, wanting… etc.