reflect on
English
Verb
reflect on (third-person singular simple present reflects on, present participle reflecting on, simple past and past participle reflected on)
- (transitive) To think carefully about (something), and give it due consideration.
- She reflected on her country's role in history.
- 2023 December 27, David Turner, “Silent lines...”, in RAIL, number 999, page 29:
- The Leicester Daily Mercury reflected on how these concerns were the result of changing ways of getting around: "It might sound a bit crazy or just a little revolting that at Christmas works parties, some should drink themselves into a near-insensible state... This was not serious when they used public transport, but today more men and women use their own cars."
- (transitive, computing) To access details of (a data type, etc.) at run-time using reflection.
- 1999, Sheng Liang, The Java Native Interface:
- It is sometimes useful to be able to reflect on class or interface types in native code as well.
- 2001, Jørgen Lindskov Knudsen, ECOOP 2001 - Object-oriented Programming: 15th European Conference:
- Load-time MOPs reflect on the bytecode and make use of a modified class loader.
- 2005, Eric Gunnerson, Nick Wienholt, Anders Hejlsberg, A Programmer's Introduction to C# 2.0:
- To define attribute classes and reflect on them at runtime, you have to consider a few more issues.
- To give an impression of (used with an adverb).
- The recent spate of vandalism by pupils does not reflect well on the school.
Derived terms
Anagrams
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