Strings can refer to thin pieces of fiber which are used to tie, bind, or hang other objects.
Strings is also the name of a magazine published specially for students, performers, and teachers of stringed instruments, especially instruments in the violin and bass families.
Strings is a 2004 movie that was perfomed by puppets.
This is a disambiguation page — a list of articles associated with the same title. If an internal link referred you to this page, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
Its earliest form was a strip of cloth between the legs secured by a string around the waist and called a "G-string," a name that was in use at least as far back as the late 1800s.
Some speculate that it may have been an analogy to the thickest string on a violin or a euphemistic abbreviation of girdle string or groin string.
A style that has a narrow band of fabric in the rear that just covers the cleft in the buttocks is often called a "Brazilian" rear, because it is often seen at Brazilian Samba carnivals.
Strings are constant; their values cannot be changed after they are created.
If two strings are different, then either they have different characters at some index that is a valid index for both strings, or their lengths are different, or both.
Two strings are considered equal ignoring case if they are of the same length, and corresponding characters in the two strings are equal ignoring case.