Input vs Involvement - What's the difference?
input | involvement |
The act or process of putting in; infusion.
That which is put in, as in an amount.
Contribution, or share in a contribution.
Something fed into a process with the intention of it shaping or affecting the outputs of that process.
To put in; put on.
To data.
To accept data that is entered.
* 2009 , J Stanley Warford, Computer Systems
The act of involving, or the state of being involved.
*{{quote-news, year=1988, date=July 8, author=, title=Portfolio Without Artist, work=Chicago Reader
, passage=His colorful life span might be regarded as the story of an adventurer rather than that of an artist; despite his lengthy involvements in many of the arts--painting, fiction, theater, and film--one often feels from his autobiography that it was the adventures that counted most for him. }}
As nouns the difference between input and involvement
is that input is the act or process of putting in; infusion while involvement is the act of involving, or the state of being involved.As a verb input
is to put in; put on.input
English
(wikipedia input)Noun
(en noun)Derived terms
* input deviceVerb
- The user inputs his date of birth and the computer displays his age.
- The program inputs a value for the integer variable num and compares it with the constant integer limit.
involvement
English
Alternative forms
* envolvementNoun
(en-noun)citation
