Interface

In general usage, an interface is the point, area, or surface along which two substances or other qualitatively different things meet; it is also used metaphorically for the juncture between items. The word interface is sometimes (perhaps only in engineering) shortened to "i/f".

The verb to interface means to interconnect two or more entities at a common point or shared boundary, or to prepare either entity for that purpose.

The word interface also has the following specialized meanings:

  • The user interface is the functional and sensorial attributes of a system (appliance, software, vehicle, etc.) that are relevant to its operation by users.
  • In electronics and computer engineering, an interface may be
    • The physical boundary between two subsystems or devices.
    • A part or circuit in some subsystem that sends or receives signals to or from other subsystems: network interface, video interface, network card.
    • A standard specifying a set of functional characteristics, common physical interconnection characteristics, and signal characteristics for the exchange of data or signals: USB interface, SCSI interface.
  • In telecommunications, a point of interconnection between user terminal equipment and commercial communications facilities.
  • In software engineering, it is a specification of those properties of a software component that other components may rely upon: see interface (computer science).
  • In chemistry, it is the surface between two distinct phases in a heterogeneous mixture.
  • In geology, it may be a surface or anomalous layer between two distincive geological epochs or rock types.

See also:

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