In outdoor recreation (such as sailing or camping) rope splicing involves joining two pieces of rope or wire by weaving the strands of each into the other.
In film technique or audio recording, splicing means to join the ends of two pieces of film or magnetic tape, for example, in editing.
In genetics, gene splicing is the process of joining together or insert pieces of genetic material when altering the genetic structure of something or when forming a new combination.
In electrical wiring it means to join together two or more wires to make a path or circuit for electricity to flow.
In optical fiber it means to join together two or more optical fibers by the use of a fusion machine or a mechanical coupler.
The splice on a cricket bat is where the handle is joined to the body of the bat.
In mass production it means switching from one web roll to another by joining the beginning of one roll to the end of the other roll thus avoiding machine stoppage.
A modern rock band based in New Haven, Connecticut who's claim to fame was the phrase
"E-Yeah". The band came about as a result of members from different musical backgrounds. They recorded two albumns at Horizon's Studio's in Westhaven, Connecticut. Rope splicing is the forming of a semi-permanent join between two ropes or two parts of the same rope by partly untwisting and then interweaving their strands. ... Genetic engineering, genetic modification (GM), and gene splicing (once in widespread use but now deprecated) are terms for the process of manipulating genes in an organism, usually outside of the organisms normal reproductive process. ... In genetics, splicing is a modification of genetic information after transcription, in which introns are removed and exons are joined. ... The front of a cricket bat, showing the names for the different parts of the bat A cricket bat is used by the batsmen in the sport of cricket. ... A kernel connects the software and hardware of a computer. ...
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The cable splicing techniques described here are for in-building applications using single sheath cable (yet to be activated), and fire-retardant, 25-pair connector modules in a two-bank, in-line configuration.
The splice wrap should be snug, yet not too tight, so that modules and cable pairs aren't lodged in the splice closure seams.
Based on the splice hardware you use and the type of cable you're splicing, determine the proper amount of each cable element to strip (outer jacket, strength members, buffer tube, or subunit jacket) before beginning the splice.
Splice diagrams are graphs decorated with integer labels at each end of each edge and a number of arrows, often none at all, attached to each vertex.
The distinction between a splice diagram and its underlying directed graph, as well as that between a splice diagram vertex and its underlying vertex, is often left implicit.
The regular splice diagram at infinity of the jacobian pencil P. This diagram is considered to be rooted at vertex 1 corresponding to the line at infinity of the ambient plane of P. Its underlying graph is directed away from this root.