sketch vs viewport

sketch

noun
  • A lookout; vigilant watch for something. 

  • A rough design, plan, or draft, as a rough draft of a book. 

  • A rapidly executed freehand drawing that is not intended as a finished work, often consisting of a multitude of overlapping lines. 

  • An amusing person. 

  • A brief, light, or informal literary composition, such as an essay or short story. 

  • A formal specification of a mathematical structure or a data type described in terms of a graph and diagrams (and cones (and cocones)) on it. It can be implemented by means of “models”, which are functors which are graph homomorphisms from the formal specification to categories such that the diagrams become commutative, the cones become limiting (i.e., products), the cocones become colimiting (i.e., sums). 

  • A humorous newspaper article summarizing political events, making heavy use of metaphor, paraphrase and caricature. 

  • A brief description of a person or account of an incident; a general presentation or outline. 

  • A brief musical composition or theme, especially for the piano. 

adj
  • Sketchy, shady, questionable. 

verb
  • To make a brief, basic drawing. 

  • To describe briefly and with very few details. 

viewport

noun
  • A viewing window. 

  • A typically rectangular region representing the range or area currently visible (within a window, screen, etc.). 

verb
  • To clip (an image or region) so that it fits in a viewport. 

How often have the words sketch and viewport occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )