Definitions for "Trellis"
A structure or frame of crossbarred work, or latticework, used for various purposes, as for screens or for supporting plants.
Lots of plants climb when they grow. They may find their own poles up which to climb, or we could provide a pole network for them. Trellises are used for climbing plants like flowers and fruits. Clematis, roses and grape vines are all better grown with something to climb up. Remember this when you are trying to put as much as possible in a small amount of space
An arrangement of vertical posts and horizontal wires on which vines are trained.
TriUniversity Electronic Library Information System - the name of the combined library catalogues of the universities of Guelph, Waterloo, and Wilfrid Laurier.
the name given to the Library online catalogue which contains records from U Guelph, U Waterloo, and Wilfrid Laurier U.
a structure of light bars crossing each other with open squares or diamond-shaped spaces between them
a wonderful structure for a flower garden garden structure
A criss-cross decorative pattern made on the surface of foodstuffs using very hot iron bars.
Trellis is A Java framework for building user interfaces. It builds tool interfaces based on the Java Swing package. It is designed to simplify the creation of graphical user interfaces, and provides a fully functional JFrame-based wrapper, into which JInternalFrame modules are dynamically loaded.
Trellis is an interactive environment that allows users to add their observations, viewpoints, and conclusions as they analyze information by making semantic annotations to documents and other on-line resources.
a stunning focal point for the well-dressed backyard
a risk if it is either made of a combustible flammable material, or covered with flammable vegetation
a transition diagram, that takes time into account, for a finite state machine
a time indexed graph that represents a particular code