Smoke and mirrors is an idiom for a deceptive, fraudulent or insubstantial explanation or description. The source of the name is based on magicians' illusions, where magicians make objects appear or disappear by extending or retracting mirrors amid a distracting burst of smoke. Another source is based on the aztec god of night sky, a trickster also in charge of temptation, illusion and magic, named Tezcatlipoca (lit: Smoking Mirror). The expression may have a connotation of virtuosity or cleverness in carrying out such a deception.
In mathematics, 'Name is Smoke and Mirrors' ('Name ist Schall und Rauch', literally: 'name is sound and smoke' in German) from Goethe's tragic play Faust was Henri Poincare's response to Felix Klein's vexation of Poincare's creation of the term 'the Kleinian function for all other cases of S'.
In the field of computer programming, it is used to describe a program or functionality that does not yet exist, but appears as though it does. This is often done to demonstrate what a resulting project will function/look like after the code is complete--at a trade show, for example.
Video Smoke and mirrors
See also
- Red herring
- Mirror Flower, Water Moon
- Smoke + Mirrors
Maps Smoke and mirrors
External links
- 'Smoke and mirrors' at the Jargon File
- 'Smoke and mirrors' at Respectfully Quoted: A Dictionary of Quotations
- Smoke + Mirrors
Source of the article : Wikipedia