iterate - meaning and definition. What is iterate
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What (who) is iterate - definition

REPETITION OF A PROCESS IN ORDER TO GENERATE AN OUTCOME
Reiterative; Iterative; Iterate; Iterations; Itteration; Iterate (math); Iterated; Iteration (computer science)

iterate         
what you do before you reiterate
John iterated the subject..then he reiterated
Iterate         
·adv By way of iteration.
II. Iterate ·adj Uttered or done again; repeated.
III. Iterate ·vt To utter or do a second time or many times; to Repeat; as, to iterate advice.
iterate         
v. a.
Repeat, reiterate.

Wikipedia

Iteration

Iteration is the repetition of a process in order to generate a (possibly unbounded) sequence of outcomes. Each repetition of the process is a single iteration, and the outcome of each iteration is then the starting point of the next iteration.

In mathematics and computer science, iteration (along with the related technique of recursion) is a standard element of algorithms.

Pronunciation examples for iterate
1. Iterate.
The Creative Media Efficiency Myth _ Martin Atkins _ Talks at Google
2. Iterate.
Change Talkship - Transforming Education for the 21st Century _ Tony Wagner _ Talks at Google
3. continually iterate.
Scratch - Coding for Everyone! _ Mitchel Resnick _ Talks at Google
4. to iterate.
Moonshots in Education _ Esther Wojcicki _ Talks at Google
5. You can iterate.
How to Have a Bad Career _ David Patterson _ Talks at Google
Examples of use of iterate
1. We re–iterate our òÀØbuy‘ recommendation." French media services group Thomson reported an 8.5 per cent rise in full–year core sales, but missed expectations due to slowing sales of DVD players and set–top boxes.
2. The observation in the official Indian statement that «military force can never solve political problems» would be read very differently across the border, but it is nevertheless a useful principle for both countries to iterate.
3. More polls» The statement said: "We re–iterate that we do not want to be involved in the criminal and political processes of another country." Mrs Horton was previously quoted as saying she "never believed in the death penalty" in newspapers and the BBC.
4. I want to re–iterate my clear message that the children of Afghanistan should not be targeted by such violence and must be left alone in peace,» he added. «We know that all Afghan communities and the entire international community will join us in condemning this atrocity.»