untrace

English

Etymology

un- + trace

Verb

untrace (third-person singular simple present untraces, present participle untracing, simple past and past participle untraced)

  1. (transitive) To remove from the traces; to unharness.
  2. (computing, programming, transitive) To remove a trace from.
    • 1998, John M. Chambers, Programming with Data: A Guide to the S Language (page 268)
      It is important to untrace a function before modifying its definition, since some tools may not be smart enough to realize that the version of reScale on the session frame is only for debugging!

Anagrams

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