netwise
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English nettwyse, nette wise, nette wyse, equivalent to net + -wise.
Adverb
[edit]netwise (comparative more netwise, superlative most netwise)
- (rare) In the manner or configuration of a net
- 1859, John Milton, Thomas Keightley, Poems, volume 1, page 126:
- “They have also other ornaments, which they call cawles, made netwise, to the end, as I think, that the cloth of gold, cloth of silver, or else tinsel (for that is the worst), wherewith their heads are covered and attired withal […] ”
- 1883, Transactions of the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science:
- Nature, as Bacon pithily says, joins her work rather 'netwise than chainwise.'
- 2007, Gi-Joon Nam, Jingsheng Jason Cong, Modern Circuit Placement, page 16:
- From Observation 2.2.1, it is evident that a placement has optimal HPWL if all its nonlocal nets can be partitioned into netwise-disjoint monotone chains with fixed endpoints. […] Starting from the placement of the real benchmark, sets of nets are identified that can be grouped together into netwise-disjoint monotone chains between well-separated fixed terminals.
Adjective
[edit]netwise (comparative more netwise, superlative most netwise)
- (rare) Like a net or lattice; netlike, latticelike.
- 2006, Larry Sabato, Divided States of America, page 212:
- Yet despite its collapse, this long-shot to front-runner campaign stands out as the best example to date of what a netwise operation can achieve.