slovodefinícia
cursive
(mass)
cursive
- kurzíva
cursive
(encz)
cursive,kurziva n: Zdeněk Brož
Cursive
(gcide)
Cursive \Cur"sive\ (k?r"s?v), a. [LL. cursivus: cf. F. cursif
See Cursitor.]
Running; flowing.
[1913 Webster]

Cursive hand,a running handwriting.
[1913 Webster]
Cursive
(gcide)
Cursive \Cur"sive\, n.
1. A character used in cursive writing.
[1913 Webster]

2. A manuscript, especially of the New Testament, written in
small, connected characters or in a running hand; --
opposed to uncial. --Shipley.
[1913 Webster]
cursive
(wn)
cursive
adj 1: having successive letter joined together; "cursive
script"
n 1: rapid handwriting in which letters are set down in full and
are cursively connected within words without lifting the
writing implement from the paper [syn: longhand, {running
hand}, cursive, cursive script]
podobné slovodefinícia
cursive
(mass)
cursive
- kurzíva
recursive
(mass)
recursive
- rekurzívny
cursive
(encz)
cursive,kurziva n: Zdeněk Brož
cursive script
(encz)
cursive script, n:
cursive writing
(encz)
cursive writing,spojované písmo
cursively
(encz)
cursively,
discursive
(encz)
discursive,odbíhající od tématu webdiscursive,rozvláčný adj: Zdeněk Brož
discursively
(encz)
discursively,rozvláčně adv: Zdeněk Brož
discursiveness
(encz)
discursiveness,rozvláčnost n: Zdeněk Broždiscursiveness,upovídanost n: Zdeněk Brož
excursive
(encz)
excursive,zabíhavý adj: Zdeněk Brož
excursively
(encz)
excursively,
excursiveness
(encz)
excursiveness,
incursive
(encz)
incursive, adj:
nonrecursive
(encz)
nonrecursive,nerekurzivní
procursive epilepsy
(encz)
procursive epilepsy, n:
recursive
(encz)
recursive,rekurzivní adj: [it.] IvČa
recursive definition
(encz)
recursive definition, n:
recursive routine
(encz)
recursive routine, n:
recursively
(encz)
recursively,rekurzívně adv: Zdeněk Brož
cursive flowing
(gcide)
connected \connected\ adj.
1. p. p. of connect. [Narrower terms: {abutting, adjacent,
adjoining, bordering(prenominal), conterminous,
coterminous, contiguous}] [Narrower terms: adjunctive]
[Narrower terms: affined] [Narrower terms: attached]
[Narrower terms: contiguous, in contact] [Narrower
terms: coupled, joined, linked] [Narrower terms:
cursive, flowing] [Narrower terms: siamese] [Narrower
terms: socially connected, well-connected] unconnected
[WordNet 1.5]

2. being joined in close association.

Syn: affiliated, attached.
[WordNet 1.5]

3. connected by a conductor so as to allow the flow of
electric signals. [Narrower terms: wired (vs. wireless)]
WordNet 1.5]

4. (Music) legato. staccato

Syn: flowing, smooth.
[WordNet 1.5]

5. associated with or accompanying.

Syn: associated.
[WordNet 1.5]

6. (Computers) stored in, controlled by, or in direct
communication with a central computer. [Narrower terms:
on-line (vs. off-line), online, on line(predicate)]

Syn: machine-accessible.
[WordNet 1.5]

7. switched on. [Narrower terms: {on-line (vs. off-line),
online, on line(predicate)}]

Syn: ready, on.
[WordNet 1.5]

8. having some relation.

Syn: related.
[WordNet 1.5]
Cursive hand
(gcide)
Cursive \Cur"sive\ (k?r"s?v), a. [LL. cursivus: cf. F. cursif
See Cursitor.]
Running; flowing.
[1913 Webster]

Cursive hand,a running handwriting.
[1913 Webster]
Decursive
(gcide)
Decursive \De*cur"sive\, a. [Cf. F. d['e]cursif. See
Decurrent.]
Running down; decurrent.
[1913 Webster]
Decursively
(gcide)
Decursively \De*cur"sive*ly\, adv.
In a decursive manner.
[1913 Webster]

Decursively pinnate (Bot.), having the leaflets decurrent,
or running along the petiole; -- said of a leaf.
[1913 Webster]
Decursively pinnate
(gcide)
Decursively \De*cur"sive*ly\, adv.
In a decursive manner.
[1913 Webster]

Decursively pinnate (Bot.), having the leaflets decurrent,
or running along the petiole; -- said of a leaf.
[1913 Webster]
Discursive
(gcide)
Discursive \Dis*cur"sive\, a. [Cf. F. discursif. See
Discourse, and cf. Discoursive.]
1. Passing from one thing to another; ranging over a wide
field; roving; digressive; desultory. "Discursive
notices." --De Quincey.
[1913 Webster]

The power he [Shakespeare] delights to show is not
intense, but discursive. --Hazlitt.
[1913 Webster]

A man rather tacit than discursive. --Carlyle.
[1913 Webster]

2. Reasoning; proceeding from one ground to another, as in
reasoning; argumentative.
[1913 Webster]

Reason is her being,
Discursive or intuitive. --Milton.
-- Dis*cur"sive*ly, adv. -- Dis*cur"sive*ness, n.
[1913 Webster]
Discursively
(gcide)
Discursive \Dis*cur"sive\, a. [Cf. F. discursif. See
Discourse, and cf. Discoursive.]
1. Passing from one thing to another; ranging over a wide
field; roving; digressive; desultory. "Discursive
notices." --De Quincey.
[1913 Webster]

The power he [Shakespeare] delights to show is not
intense, but discursive. --Hazlitt.
[1913 Webster]

A man rather tacit than discursive. --Carlyle.
[1913 Webster]

2. Reasoning; proceeding from one ground to another, as in
reasoning; argumentative.
[1913 Webster]

Reason is her being,
Discursive or intuitive. --Milton.
-- Dis*cur"sive*ly, adv. -- Dis*cur"sive*ness, n.
[1913 Webster]
Discursiveness
(gcide)
Discursive \Dis*cur"sive\, a. [Cf. F. discursif. See
Discourse, and cf. Discoursive.]
1. Passing from one thing to another; ranging over a wide
field; roving; digressive; desultory. "Discursive
notices." --De Quincey.
[1913 Webster]

The power he [Shakespeare] delights to show is not
intense, but discursive. --Hazlitt.
[1913 Webster]

A man rather tacit than discursive. --Carlyle.
[1913 Webster]

2. Reasoning; proceeding from one ground to another, as in
reasoning; argumentative.
[1913 Webster]

Reason is her being,
Discursive or intuitive. --Milton.
-- Dis*cur"sive*ly, adv. -- Dis*cur"sive*ness, n.
[1913 Webster]
Excursive
(gcide)
Excursive \Ex*cur"sive\, a.
Prone to make excursions; wandering; roving; exploring; as,
an excursive fancy.
[1913 Webster]

The course of excursive . . . understandings. --I.
Taylor.
-- Ex*cur"sive*ly, adv. -- Ex*cur"sive*ness,, n.
[1913 Webster]
Excursively
(gcide)
Excursive \Ex*cur"sive\, a.
Prone to make excursions; wandering; roving; exploring; as,
an excursive fancy.
[1913 Webster]

The course of excursive . . . understandings. --I.
Taylor.
-- Ex*cur"sive*ly, adv. -- Ex*cur"sive*ness,, n.
[1913 Webster]
Excursiveness
(gcide)
Excursive \Ex*cur"sive\, a.
Prone to make excursions; wandering; roving; exploring; as,
an excursive fancy.
[1913 Webster]

The course of excursive . . . understandings. --I.
Taylor.
-- Ex*cur"sive*ly, adv. -- Ex*cur"sive*ness,, n.
[1913 Webster]
Incursive
(gcide)
Incursive \In*cur"sive\, a.
Making an incursion; invasive; aggressive; hostile.
[1913 Webster]
Precursive
(gcide)
Precursive \Pre*cur"sive\, a.
Preceding; introductory; precursory. "A deep precursive
sound." --Coleridge.
[1913 Webster]
recursive
(gcide)
algorithmic \algorithmic\ adj.
1. of or pertaining to an algorithm. recursive
[1913 Webster]

2. definitively solvable by a finite number of steps; -- said
of mathematical or logical problems. Contrasted with
heuristic.
[WordNet 1.5]
cursive
(wn)
cursive
adj 1: having successive letter joined together; "cursive
script"
n 1: rapid handwriting in which letters are set down in full and
are cursively connected within words without lifting the
writing implement from the paper [syn: longhand, {running
hand}, cursive, cursive script]
cursive script
(wn)
cursive script
n 1: rapid handwriting in which letters are set down in full and
are cursively connected within words without lifting the
writing implement from the paper [syn: longhand, {running
hand}, cursive, cursive script]
cursively
(wn)
cursively
adv 1: in a cursive manner
discursive
(wn)
discursive
adj 1: proceeding to a conclusion by reason or argument rather
than intuition [syn: dianoetic, discursive]
2: (of e.g. speech and writing) tending to depart from the main
point or cover a wide range of subjects; "amusingly
digressive with satirical thrusts at women's fashions among
other things"; "a rambling discursive book"; "his excursive
remarks"; "a rambling speech about this and that" [syn:
digressive, discursive, excursive, rambling]
discursively
(wn)
discursively
adv 1: in a rambling manner [syn: discursively, ramblingly]
discursiveness
(wn)
discursiveness
n 1: the quality of being discursive
excursive
(wn)
excursive
adj 1: (of e.g. speech and writing) tending to depart from the
main point or cover a wide range of subjects; "amusingly
digressive with satirical thrusts at women's fashions
among other things"; "a rambling discursive book"; "his
excursive remarks"; "a rambling speech about this and
that" [syn: digressive, discursive, excursive,
rambling]
incursive
(wn)
incursive
adj 1: involving invasion or aggressive attack; "invasive war"
[syn: incursive, invading, invasive]
procursive epilepsy
(wn)
procursive epilepsy
n 1: epilepsy in which a seizure is induced by whirling or
running
recursive
(wn)
recursive
adj 1: of or relating to a recursion
recursive definition
(wn)
recursive definition
n 1: (mathematics) a definition of a function from which values
of the function can be calculated in a finite number of
steps
recursive routine
(wn)
recursive routine
n 1: a routine that can call itself
kent recursive calculator
(foldoc)
Kent Recursive Calculator
KRC

(KRC) A lazy functional language
developed by David Turner in 1981, based on SASL,
with pattern matching and ZF expressions.

["Functional Programming and its Applications",
David A. Turner, Cambridge U Press 1982].

See also continental drift.

(2011-11-30)
mutually recursive
(foldoc)
recursion
mutually recursive
mutual recursion
recurse
recursive

When a function (or procedure)
calls itself. Such a function is called "recursive". If the
call is via one or more other functions then this group of
functions are called "mutually recursive".

If a function will always call itself, however it is called,
then it will never terminate. Usually however, it first
performs some test on its arguments to check for a "base case"
- a condition under which it can return a value without
calling itself.

The canonical example of a recursive function is
factorial:

factorial 0 = 1
factorial n = n * factorial (n-1)

Functional programming languages rely heavily on recursion,
using it where a procedural language would use iteration.

See also recursion, recursive definition, tail recursion.

[Jargon File]

(1996-05-11)
recursive
(foldoc)
recursion
mutually recursive
mutual recursion
recurse
recursive

When a function (or procedure)
calls itself. Such a function is called "recursive". If the
call is via one or more other functions then this group of
functions are called "mutually recursive".

If a function will always call itself, however it is called,
then it will never terminate. Usually however, it first
performs some test on its arguments to check for a "base case"
- a condition under which it can return a value without
calling itself.

The canonical example of a recursive function is
factorial:

factorial 0 = 1
factorial n = n * factorial (n-1)

Functional programming languages rely heavily on recursion,
using it where a procedural language would use iteration.

See also recursion, recursive definition, tail recursion.

[Jargon File]

(1996-05-11)
recursive acronym
(foldoc)
recursive acronym

A hackish (and especially MIT) tradition is to
choose acronyms and abbreviations that refer humorously to
themselves or to other acronyms or abbreviations. The classic
examples were two MIT editors called EINE ("EINE Is Not
Emacs") and ZWEI ("ZWEI Was EINE Initially"). More
recently, there is a Scheme compiler called LIAR (Liar
Imitates Apply Recursively), and GNU stands for "GNU's Not
Unix!" - and a company with the name CYGNUS, which expands
to "Cygnus, Your GNU Support".

See also mung.

[Jargon File]

(1995-04-28)
recursive definition
(foldoc)
recursive definition

See recursive definition.
recursive descent parser
(foldoc)
recursive descent parser

A "top-down" parser built from a set of
mutually-recursive procedures or a non-recursive equivalent
where each such procedure usually implements one of the
productions of the grammar. Thus the structure of the
resulting program closely mirrors that of the grammar it
recognises.

["Recursive Programming Techniques", W.H. Burge, 1975, ISBN
0-201-14450-6].

(1995-04-28)
recursive functional algorithmic language
(foldoc)
Recursive Functional Algorithmic Language
REFAL

(REFAL) A language developed by V.F. Turchin (later
at CUNY?) in Moscow in about 1972.

See also supercompilation.

[V.F. Turchin, "An algorithm of generalisation in the
supercompiler", Workshop on partial evaluation and mixed
computations, Oct 1987, Denmark, Eds. D. Bjorner, A.P. Ershov,
N.D. Jones].

[V. Turchin, "Supercompiler System Based on the Language
Refal", V. Turchin, SIGPLAN Notices 14(2):46-54 (Feb 1979)].

(1998-06-29)
recursive macro actuated generator
(foldoc)
Recursive Macro Actuated Generator
RMAG

(RMAG) Robert A. Magnuson, NIH ca 1970.

A stand-alone macroprocessor for IBM 360/370 under VS or
OS. Many built-in features and a library of several hundred
macros. Several large systems were written in RMAG to
generate source code for languages such as IBM JCL, IBM
assembly language, COBOL.

There was also a system (SLANG: Structured LANGuage compiler)
which would generate 370 assembly language from a
pseudo-structured-programming language, based on Michael
Kessler's structure programming macros developed at IBM.

["Project RMAG--RMAG22 User's Guide", R.A. Magnuson,
NIH-DCRT-DMB-SSS-UG103, NIH, DHEW, Bethesda, MD 20205 (1977)].

(1995-11-23)
recursive type
(foldoc)
recursive type

A data type which contains itself. The commonest example is
the list type, in Haskell:

data List a = Nil | Cons a (List a)

which says a list of a's is either an empty list or a {cons
cell} containing an 'a' (the "head" of the list) and another
list (the "tail").

Recursion is not allowed in Miranda or Haskell {synonym
types}, so the following Haskell types are illegal:

type Bad = (Int, Bad)
type Evil = Bool -> Evil

whereas the seeminly equivalent algebraic data types are
acceptable:

data Good = Pair Int Good
data Fine = Fun (Bool->Fine)
recursive acronym
(jargon)
recursive acronym
n.

A hackish (and especially MIT) tradition is to choose acronyms/
abbreviations that refer humorously to themselves or to other acronyms/
abbreviations. The original of the breed may have been TINT (“TINT Is Not
TECO”). The classic examples were two MIT editors called EINE (“EINE Is Not
EMACS”) and ZWEI (“ZWEI Was EINE Initially”). More recently, there is a
Scheme compiler called LIAR (Liar Imitates Apply Recursively), and GNU
(q.v., sense 1) stands for “GNU's Not Unix!” — and a company with the name
Cygnus, which expands to “Cygnus, Your GNU Support” (though Cygnus people
say this is a backronym). The GNU recursive acronym may have been
patterned on XINU, “XINU Is Not Unix” — a particularly nice example because
it is a mirror image, a backronym, and a recursive acronym. See also {mung
}, EMACS.

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