shared logic: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples

C1+
UK/ʃeəd ˈlɒdʒɪk/US/ʃɛrd ˈlɑːdʒɪk/

Formal, Technical

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Quick answer

What does “shared logic” mean?

A foundational set of rules, principles, or reasoning processes that are common to and used by multiple systems, people, or components.

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Pronunciation

Definition

Meaning and Definition

A foundational set of rules, principles, or reasoning processes that are common to and used by multiple systems, people, or components.

In computing, it refers to code, functions, or algorithms used across different parts of a software system to ensure consistency and reduce duplication. In broader contexts, it denotes a common framework of reasoning or decision-making adopted by a group or integrated into multiple processes.

Dialectal Variation

British vs American Usage

Differences

No significant difference in meaning. Potential minor spelling differences in surrounding text (e.g., 'centralise the shared logic' vs. 'centralize the shared logic').

Connotations

Identical technical connotations in both varieties.

Frequency

Slightly more frequent in American English due to the larger volume of technical documentation and software discourse originating there, but the term is standard internationally in tech fields.

Grammar

How to Use “shared logic” in a Sentence

[Verb] + shared logic (e.g., extract, reuse)shared logic + [Preposition] + [Noun] (e.g., shared logic across modules, shared logic for validation)[Adjective] + shared logic (e.g., reusable shared logic)

Vocabulary

Collocations

strong
centralise/centralizeencapsulatemodularbusinessunderlyingreusablecommoncore
medium
extractimplementdefinesystemapplicationcomponentserviceserver-side
weak
complexsimpleefficientseparateexternal

Examples

Examples of “shared logic” in a Sentence

verb

British English

  • The team decided to share the validation logic across both services.
  • We should share more of the core logic to improve consistency.

American English

  • The developers need to share the business logic between the app and the website.
  • We can share that logic to reduce code duplication.

adverb

British English

  • The functions were shared-logic-based, making them very efficient.
  • The system is designed shared-logic-centrally.

American English

  • The code was written shared-logic-style to promote reuse.
  • They architectured the solution very shared-logic-focused.

adjective

British English

  • The shared-logic module needs an update.
  • They adopted a shared-logic approach for the new API.

American English

  • We built a shared-logic library for the whole department.
  • The shared-logic component failed, causing issues in two applications.

Usage

Meaning in Context

Business

Refers to standardised decision-making rules or business rules applied uniformly across departments.

Academic

Used in philosophy or cognitive science to discuss common reasoning frameworks among individuals or systems.

Everyday

Very rare. Might be used to describe a mutual understanding or way of thinking in a group.

Technical

The primary domain. Refers to programming functions, algorithms, or business rules written once and used by multiple software modules or services.

Vocabulary

Synonyms of “shared logic”

Strong

unified logic (emphasises singularity more)base logic

Neutral

common logiccentralised logicreusable codecore logic

Weak

overlapping logic (less intentional)similar reasoning

Vocabulary

Antonyms of “shared logic”

dedicated logicduplicated logicisolated logicseparate logicad-hoc logic

Watch out

Common Mistakes When Using “shared logic”

  • Using 'share logic' (verb + noun) when the compound noun 'shared logic' is needed (e.g., 'We need to shared logic' is wrong).
  • Confusing it with 'shared resource', which is broader (could be data, hardware).

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

No, but that is its most frequent and precise use. It can describe any common framework of reasoning used by multiple people or systems, such as in business processes or philosophical arguments.

Yes. If the shared logic contains a bug or needs to change, it can cause widespread failures in all systems that depend on it. This is a 'single point of failure' risk.

'Common sense' is informal, culturally influenced practical judgement. 'Shared logic' is a formal, often deliberately designed, set of rules or algorithms for consistent operation within a defined system.

Look for identical or very similar code, algorithms, or decision rules repeated in different parts of the codebase or described in different process documents. These are candidates for being consolidated into shared logic.

A foundational set of rules, principles, or reasoning processes that are common to and used by multiple systems, people, or components.

Shared logic is usually formal, technical in register.

Shared logic: in British English it is pronounced /ʃeəd ˈlɒdʒɪk/, and in American English it is pronounced /ʃɛrd ˈlɑːdʒɪk/. Tap the audio buttons above to hear it.

Phrases

Idioms & Phrases

  • None. It is a technical term, not an idiom.

Learning

Memory Aids

Mnemonic

Think of a SHARED kitchen in a flat. Everyone uses the same LOGIC: the same rules for cleaning, the same appliances, the same storage ideas. 'Shared Logic' is the common set of rules or code that different parts of a system all 'use'.

Conceptual Metaphor

A COMMON TOOLBOX (used by different workers for different tasks, but containing the same essential tools).

Practice

Quiz

Fill in the gap
The software engineers decided to the shared logic into a central library to prevent inconsistencies.
Multiple Choice

In which context is the term 'shared logic' MOST commonly and precisely used?

shared logic: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples | Lingvocore