Search Result for "complexity": 
Wordnet 3.0

NOUN (1)

1. the quality of being intricate and compounded;
- Example: "he enjoyed the complexity of modern computers"
[syn: complexity, complexness]


The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:

Complexity \Com*plex"i*ty\, n.; pl. Complexities. [Cf. F. complexit['e].] 1. The state of being complex; intricacy; entanglement. [1913 Webster] The objects of society are of the greatest possible complexity. --Burke. [1913 Webster] 2. That which is complex; intricacy; complication. [1913 Webster] Many-corridored complexities Of Arthur's palace. --Tennyson. [1913 Webster]
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):

complexity n 1: the quality of being intricate and compounded; "he enjoyed the complexity of modern computers" [syn: complexity, complexness] [ant: simpleness, simplicity]
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0:

31 Moby Thesaurus words for "complexity": abstruseness, arduousness, bothersomeness, burdensomeness, complication, convolution, crabbedness, crampedness, deepness, difficultness, difficulty, esoterica, hairiness, hardness, inscrutability, intricacy, involvement, knottiness, laboriousness, onerousness, oppressiveness, profoundness, profundity, reconditeness, rigor, rigorousness, ruggedness, strenuousness, toilsomeness, toughness, troublesomeness
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (30 December 2018):

complexity The level in difficulty in solving mathematically posed problems as measured by the time, number of steps or arithmetic operations, or memory space required (called time complexity, computational complexity, and space complexity, respectively). The interesting aspect is usually how complexity scales with the size of the input (the "scalability"), where the size of the input is described by some number N. Thus an algorithm may have computational complexity O(N^2) (of the order of the square of the size of the input), in which case if the input doubles in size, the computation will take four times as many steps. The ideal is a constant time algorithm (O(1)) or failing that, O(N). See also NP-complete. (1994-10-20)