Instance (computer science) explained

In computer science, an instance is an occurrence of a software element that is based on a type definition. When created, an occurrence is said to have been instantiated, and both the creation process and the result of creation are called instantiation.

Examples

Class instance

A class instance is an object-oriented programming (OOP) object created from a class. Each instance of a class shares a data layout but has its own memory allocation.

Computer instance

A computer instance is an occurrence of a virtual machine which typically includes storage, a virtual CPU.

Polygonal model

A computer graphics polygonal model can be instantiated in order to be drawn several times in different locations in a scene which can improve the performance of rendering since a portion of the work needed to display each instance is reused.

Program instance

In a POSIX-oriented operating system, program instance refers to an executing process. It is instantiated for a program via system calls such as fork and exec. Each executing process is an instance of a program which it has been instantiated from.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bach, Maurice J. . [{{Google books|id=NrBQAAAAMAAJ |plainurl=yes}} The Design of the UNIX Operating System ]. Prentice Hall . 1986 . 0-13-201799-7 . https://archive.org/details/designofunixoper00bach . 2010-03-15 . 10, 24 .