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Frames

A frame is a rigid boundary or structural skeleton that defines shape or provides support. It can be a physical frame in architecture (door frames, window frames), a structural frame in engineering (steel or timber frame buildings), or a decorative container such as a picture frame.

In film, video, and animation: A frame is a single still image in a sequence; moving images

In computing and digital media: A frame can refer to an individual image in a frame buffer

Frame of reference: In physics and geometry, a frame of reference is a coordinate system used to

Other uses: In sports, a frame denotes a single game, as in snooker or billiards. In everyday

are
produced
by
displaying
many
frames
in
rapid
succession.
Frame
rate
measures
how
many
frames
are
shown
per
second;
common
rates
include
24
fps
for
cinema
and
30
or
60
fps
for
video
and
games.
Key
frames
define
important
states
in
animation;
in-between
frames
fill
the
gaps.
used
by
graphics
hardware;
historically,
HTML
frames
(and
the
frameset
element)
allowed
multiple
documents
in
one
window,
but
frames
are
now
largely
deprecated
in
favor
of
CSS
layouts
and
iframes
for
embeds.
In
web
design,
an
iframe
embeds
another
document
within
a
page.
measure
positions,
velocities,
and
other
quantities.
Observers
in
different
frames
may
measure
different
values;
transformations
relate
them.
Special
and
general
relativity
address
how
frames
move
relative
to
each
other.
language,
frame
can
mean
a
contextual
boundary
or
framework
for
understanding
a
topic,
or
a
physical
border
around
an
object
like
a
picture
frame.