slovo | definícia |
continuation (mass) | continuation
- pokračovanie |
continuation (encz) | continuation,pokračování Pavel Machek; Giza |
Continuation (gcide) | Continuation \Con*tin`u*a"tion\, n. [L. continuatio: cf. F.
connuation.]
1. That act or state of continuing; the state of being
continued; uninterrupted extension or succession;
prolongation; propagation.
[1913 Webster]
Preventing the continuation of the royal line.
--Macaulay.
[1913 Webster]
2. That which extends, increases, supplements, or carries on;
as, the continuation of a story.
[1913 Webster]
My continuation of the version of Statius. --Pope.
[1913 Webster] |
continuation (wn) | continuation
n 1: the act of continuing an activity without interruption
[syn: continuance, continuation] [ant:
discontinuance, discontinuation]
2: a part added to a book or play that continues and extends it
[syn: sequel, continuation]
3: a Gestalt principle of organization holding that there is an
innate tendency to perceive a line as continuing its
established direction [syn: good continuation,
continuation, law of continuation]
4: the consequence of being lengthened in duration [syn:
lengthiness, prolongation, continuation, protraction] |
continuation (foldoc) | continuation passing style
continuation
continuations
(CPS) A style of programming in which every user
function f takes an extra argument c known as a "continuation".
Whenever f would normally return a result r to its caller, it
instead returns the result of applying the continuation to r. The
continuation thus represents the whole of the rest of the
computation. Some examples:
normal (direct style) continuation passing style
square x = x * x square x k = k (x * x)
g (square 23) square 23 g
(square 3) + 1 square 3 ( \ s . s + 1 )
(1995-04-04)
|
| podobné slovo | definícia |
continuations (encz) | continuations,pokračování pl. Zdeněk Brož |
discontinuation (encz) | discontinuation,přerušení n: Zdeněk Brož |
good continuation (encz) | good continuation, n: |
law of continuation (encz) | law of continuation, n: |
Continuation (gcide) | Continuation \Con*tin`u*a"tion\, n. [L. continuatio: cf. F.
connuation.]
1. That act or state of continuing; the state of being
continued; uninterrupted extension or succession;
prolongation; propagation.
[1913 Webster]
Preventing the continuation of the royal line.
--Macaulay.
[1913 Webster]
2. That which extends, increases, supplements, or carries on;
as, the continuation of a story.
[1913 Webster]
My continuation of the version of Statius. --Pope.
[1913 Webster] |
Discontinuation (gcide) | Discontinuation \Dis`con*tin`u*a"tion\, n. [Cf. F.
discontinuation.]
Breach or interruption of continuity; separation of parts in
a connected series; discontinuance.
[1913 Webster]
Upon any discontinuation of parts, made either by
bubbles or by shaking the glass, the whole mercury
falls. --Sir I.
Newton.
[1913 Webster] |
discontinuation (wn) | discontinuation
n 1: the act of discontinuing or breaking off; an interruption
(temporary or permanent) [syn: discontinuance,
discontinuation] [ant: continuance, continuation] |
good continuation (wn) | good continuation
n 1: a Gestalt principle of organization holding that there is
an innate tendency to perceive a line as continuing its
established direction [syn: good continuation,
continuation, law of continuation] |
law of continuation (wn) | law of continuation
n 1: a Gestalt principle of organization holding that there is
an innate tendency to perceive a line as continuing its
established direction [syn: good continuation,
continuation, law of continuation] |
call-with-current-continuation (foldoc) | call-with-current-continuation
call/cc
(call/cc) A Lisp control function that
implements the continuation passing style of programming.
In continuation passing style (CPS), every function f takes an
extra final argument k called the "continuation". The
continuation is itself a function and represents the rest of the
program. Instead of just returning a value in the normal way, f
passes it as an argument to k and returns the result of that.
call/cc takes a function f as its argument and calls f, passing it
the current continuation k. It thus allows a CPS function to be
called in a non-CPS (direct) context.
For example, if the final result is to print the value returned by
call/cc then anything passed to k will also be printed.
E.g, in Scheme:
(define (f k)
(k 1)
(k 2)
3)
(display (call-with-current-continuation f))
Will display 1.
[Is this correct?]
(2014-09-24)
|
continuation passing style (foldoc) | Continuation Passing Style
(CPS) An intermediate language for Scheme that
implements continuation passing style. The CPS language is
semantically clean and is used for the SML/NJ compiler.
["Rabbit: A Compiler for Scheme", G.L. Steele, AI-TR-474, MIT
(May 1978)].
["Compiling With Continuations", A. Appel, Cambridge U Press
1992].
(2014-09-24)
continuation passing style
continuation
continuations
(CPS) A style of programming in which every user
function f takes an extra argument c known as a "continuation".
Whenever f would normally return a result r to its caller, it
instead returns the result of applying the continuation to r. The
continuation thus represents the whole of the rest of the
computation. Some examples:
normal (direct style) continuation passing style
square x = x * x square x k = k (x * x)
g (square 23) square 23 g
(square 3) + 1 square 3 ( \ s . s + 1 )
(1995-04-04)
|
continuations (foldoc) | continuation passing style
continuation
continuations
(CPS) A style of programming in which every user
function f takes an extra argument c known as a "continuation".
Whenever f would normally return a result r to its caller, it
instead returns the result of applying the continuation to r. The
continuation thus represents the whole of the rest of the
computation. Some examples:
normal (direct style) continuation passing style
square x = x * x square x k = k (x * x)
g (square 23) square 23 g
(square 3) + 1 square 3 ( \ s . s + 1 )
(1995-04-04)
|
|