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| Dependency | In context of classes, a dependency is an object required by another object to perform its functions. Often, dependencies are provided via dependency injection. | |
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| Dependency Cycle | A situation where two or more classes depend on each other to be instantiated. This situation creates a circular dependency that makes object creation impossible. The dependency graph should be a directed acyclic graph rather than a cycle. | |
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| [[Dependency Injection|doc:Software Engineering.Architecture.Dependency Injection.WebHome]] (DI) | A technique where an object's dependencies are provided from outside, rather than being created within the object itself. | |
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-| Developer | Skilled programmer with advanced technical knowledge in areas such as software design, coding best practices, technical concepts, etc. | |
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| Dirty (Code) | Code that is messy, unreadable, or poorly designed. | |
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| Distribution | A version of an OS packaged with specific software and configurations, designed for specific use cases. Examples: Ubuntu, Fedora, and Arch Linux, all based on Linux. | |
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| Dynamic | Behaviors/properties determined at runtime. Examples: dynamic dependencies can be replaced at runtime; dynamically-typed languages determine an object's type at runtime. | |