Noun
internals pl (plural only)
The internal workings of a mechanism or system that are normally hidden from view
Gambas does not try to be compatible with Visual Basic, and will never be. I'm convinced that its syntax and internals are far better than the one's of its proprietary cousin. Benoît Minisini
Word and Excel and PowerPoint and other Microsoft programs have intimate - one might say promiscuous - knowledge of each others' internals. In Unix, one tries to design programs to operate not specifically with each other, but with programs as yet unthought of. Doug McIlroy
My own perception of that is somewhat colored by where people ask my advice, which is still, of course, about changes to Python internals or at least standard libraries. Guido van Rossum
A DevTools instance opens showing the content and internals of the Fireworks! app as it is on your mobile device. Source: Internet
All three of Apple's specialty lines sport the Series 3 GPS + Cellular internals, but they all offer something a bit different than the standard aluminum casing. Source: Internet
Features such as the withdrawn POSIX draft ACL proposal and the withdrawn extended attribute proposal were generally implemented first on ext2 because it was relatively simple to extend and its internals were well-understood. Source: Internet