in⋅ter⋅ac⋅tive
[in-ter-ak-tiv]
| 1. | acting one upon or with the other. |
| 2. | of or pertaining to a two-way system of electronic communications, as by means of television or computer: interactive communications between families using two-way cable television. |
| 3. | (of a computer program or system) interacting with a human user, often in a conversational way, to obtain data or commands and to give immediate results or updated information: For many years airline reservations have been handled by interactive computer systems. |
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.
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| Spanish: | interactivo, | Italian: | interattivo, | Japanese: |
| in·ter·ac·tive
(ĭn'tər-āk'tĭv) Pronunciation Key
adj.
in'ter·ac'tive·ly adv. |
Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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| interactive | |
adjective | |
| 1. | used especially of drugs or muscles that work together so the total effect is greater than the sum of the two (or more) [syn: synergistic] [ant: antagonistic] |
| 2. | capable of acting on or influencing each other [syn: interactional] |
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Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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INTERACTIVE
A network simulation language.
["Design and Implementation of a Pascal Based Interactive Network Simulation Language", R. Lakshmanan, PhD Thesis, Oakland U, Rochester MI 1983].
(1995-01-12)
interactive programming
A term describing a program whose input and output are interleaved, like a conversation, allowing the user's input to depend on earlier output from the same run.
The interaction with the user is usually conducted through either a text-based interface or a graphical user interface. Other kinds of interface, e.g. using speech recognition and/or speech synthesis, are also possible.
This is in contrast to batch processing where all the input is prepared before the program runs and so cannot depend on the program's output.
(1996-06-21)
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