Common code patterns are repeated through different ebooks, so the code never surprises you.
Not exact matches
Research published this month in Nature Neuroscience identified a surprisingly small set of molecular
patterns that dominate gene expression in the human brain and appear to be
common to all individuals, providing key insights into the core of the genetic
code that makes our brains distinctly human.
Interviews were recorded,
coded, and categorized to establish the
common themes,
patterns, and experiences.
As the incidents were
coded, we compared them with the previous incidents that
coded in the same category to find
common patterns, as well as differences in the data (as in Glaser, 1965).
Assertions were developed by searching the data corpus for
common codes and
coding themes, which in turn, were compiled into matrices (in the style of Miles & Huberman, 1994) to facilitate trend and
pattern recognition across participants.
In addition to general tuning throughout the product, we've specifically improved performance in the Chakra JavaScript engine with memory optimizations in functions and deferred parsing for event handlers, as well as optimizing performance for
common JavaScript APIs like frame.contentDocument, iframe.contentWindows, scriptElement.src, and requestAnimationFrame, and dramatically reducing callback overhead, for a better experience with many of the most popular frameworks and
coding patterns we see in the wild.
The 27 possible combinations were dummy -
coded into a categorical variable with eight levels, reflecting the most
common transition
patterns (table 2).