See also: back off

English edit

Etymology edit

Deverbal from back off.

Noun edit

backoff (countable and uncountable, plural backoffs)

  1. (computing) The situation where an algorithm or process refrains from taking an action it would otherwise have taken.
    a backoff strategy to avoid collisions
  2. (surfing) The situation where an incoming wave passes from shallower water to a deeper area, making the wave less steep and potentially unsurfable.
    • 1997, James MacLaren, Learn to Surf, page 82:
      The surfer is in the middle of a backoff. Paddle for unbroken waves butterfly-style, with both arms at the same time, instead of using the crawl stroke that got you out to where the waves are breaking.
    • 2012, Kimberly Young Chopin, Metamorphosis: A Love Story, page 22:
      I fastened the board's leash to my ankle, jumped on and paddled past the backoff.