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Jump

Jump refers to the act of propelling the body or an object off a surface, usually by applying force from the ground or another point of contact. The movement consists of takeoff, flight (if any), and landing, and it can be performed for athletic, practical, or recreational purposes.

In humans, jumping is a dynamic action that relies on leg muscles, timing, and body coordination. It

In physics and mathematics, jumps describe abrupt changes in a quantity. A jump discontinuity occurs when a

In computing, a jump is a control-flow operation that transfers execution to a different part of a

Other uses of the word appear in idiomatic expressions and as part of technical terminology in fields

is
used
in
sports
such
as
the
long
jump,
high
jump,
and
triple
jump,
as
well
as
in
everyday
tasks
that
require
stepping
over
obstacles.
Techniques
vary
by
discipline,
with
emphasis
on
takeoff
angle,
propulsion,
and
safe
landing
to
reduce
injury
risk.
function's
value
changes
suddenly
as
the
input
crosses
a
threshold.
In
stochastic
processes,
a
jump
process
models
sudden
events
that
change
the
state
of
a
system,
separated
from
continuous
evolution.
program.
Unconditional
jumps
transfer
unconditionally,
while
conditional
jumps
depend
on
a
condition.
Jump
instructions
are
common
in
low-level
languages
(assembly)
and
influence
program
structure
by
enabling
loops,
branches,
and
subroutines,
often
via
labels
or
addresses.
such
as
computing
and
statistics,
where
it
conveys
a
transition
or
abrupt
change
rather
than
a
physical
action.