In computing, the term
stream is used in a number of ways, in all cases referring to a succession of data elements made available over time.On
Unix and related systems based on the
C programming language, a stream is a source or sink of data, usually individual bytes or characters. Streams are an abstraction used when reading or writing files, or communicating over network sockets. The
standard streams are three streams made available to all programs.
Pipelines can also be understood as streams as well as any unlimited (non-packaged) information that is inserted by a device.In the
Scheme programming language and some others, a stream is a
lazily evaluated or delayed sequence of data elements. A stream can be used similarly to a list, but later elements are only calculated when needed. Streams can therefore represent infinite
sequences and
series.
[1]Stream processing — in
parallel processing, especially in graphic processing, the term stream is applied to
hardware as well as
software. There it defines the quasi-continuous flow of data which is processed in a
dataflow programming language as soon as the
program state meets the starting condition of the stream. Hence the pure hardware description of a stream computer is explained in
HiDISC - Hierarchical Decoupled Instruction Stream ComputerFilesystems can store multiple named
independent streams against a single filename. There is one main stream which makes up the normal file data. Additional streams can be used to store icons, summary and indexing information, zone information (i.e., where the file was downloaded from) etc. Microsoft's API is explained
at MSDNAny other continuous flow of data may also be a stream, e.g., a
stock ticker or the intercepted traffic of a
numbers station can be considered to be a stream, regardless of of the nature of the data source.
Streams (networking API)
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