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Peek

Peek is a term with two general senses. As a verb, it means to look quickly or briefly at something, often with a sense of secrecy or curiosity. A related noun form, a peek, refers to the act of taking such a quick look. The word is used across everyday language, technology, and culture to describe glimpsing something without a full or sustained view.

In computing and data processing, peek denotes an operation that lets a program inspect the next item

Peeking is common in algorithms, parsers, and user-interface workflows where decisions must be made without altering

Outside technical usage, Peek is also used as a brand or product name in various industries, including

in
a
sequence
or
stream
without
removing
it
from
the
source.
The
precise
behavior
depends
on
the
data
structure:
in
a
stack,
peek
returns
the
top
element;
in
a
queue,
it
returns
the
front
element;
in
a
stream
or
buffer,
it
allows
viewing
the
next
unit
without
consuming
it.
The
peek
operation
is
typically
contrasted
with
remove,
pop,
or
read,
which
retrieve
and
often
consume
the
item.
the
underlying
data
structure.
It
enables
lookahead
behavior,
conditional
processing,
and
safe
inspection,
especially
in
situations
where
consuming
data
prematurely
could
disrupt
subsequent
steps.
consumer
electronics
and
travel
services.
As
a
general
term,
it
appears
in
titles
and
marketing
rather
than
signifying
a
single,
unified
concept.
See
also
related
terms
like
peekaboo,
which
reflects
the
playful,
partial
visibility
implied
by
the
root
idea
of
peeking.