wizard
1. A person who knows how a complex piece of software or hardware works (that
is, who groks it); especially someone who can find and fix bugs quickly in an
emergency. Someone is a hacker if he or she has general hacking ability, but is
a wizard with respect to something only if he or she has specific detailed
knowledge of that thing. A good hacker could become a wizard for something given
the time to study it.
2. A person who is permitted to do things forbidden to ordinary people; one who
has wheel privileges on a system.
3. A Unix expert, especially a Unix systems programmer. This usage is well
enough established that "Unix Wizard" is a recognised job title at some
corporations and to most headhunters.
See guru, lord high fixer. See also deep magic, heavy wizardry, incantation,
magic, mutter, rain dance, voodoo programming, wave a dead chicken.
4. An interactive help utility that guides the user through a potentially
complex task, such as configuring a PPP driver to work with a new modem. Wizards
are often implemented as a sequence of dialog boxes which the user can move
forward and backward through, filling in the details required. The implication
is that the expertise of a human wizard in one of the above senses is
encapsulated in the software wizard, allowing the average user to perform
expertly.
[Jargon File]
(1998-09-07)
Nearby terms:
Wisp « within delta of « within epsilon of «
wizard » Wizard Book » wizardly » wizard mode
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