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The Concept of a Linguistic Variable and its Application to Approximate Reasoning

by L. A. Zadeh - Journal of Information Science , 1975
"... By a linguistic variable we mean a variable whose values are words or sentences in a natural or artificial language. I:or example, Age is a linguistic variable if its values are linguistic rather than numerical, i.e., young, not young, very young, quite young, old, not very oldand not very young, et ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1430 (9 self) - Add to MetaCart
, etc., rather than 20, 21, 22, 23, In more specific terms, a linguistic variable is characterized by a quintuple (&?, T(z), U, G,M) in which &? is the name of the variable; T(s) is the term-set of2, that is, the collection of its linguistic values; U is a universe of discourse; G is a syntactic

Knowledge Interchange Format Version 3.0 Reference Manual

by Michael Genesereth, Richard E. Fikes, Ronald Brachman, Thomas Gruber, Patrick Hayes, Reed Letsinger, Vladimir Lifschitz, Robert Macgregor, John Mccarthy, Peter Norvig, Ramesh Patil , 1992
"... : Knowledge Interchange Format (KIF) is a computer-oriented language for the interchange of knowledge among disparate programs. It has declarative semantics (i.e. the meaning of expressions in the representation can be understood without appeal to an interpreter for manipulating those expressions); ..."
Abstract - Cited by 484 (14 self) - Add to MetaCart
for the definition of objects, functions, and relations. Table of Contents 1. Introduction................................................... 5 2. Syntax......................................................... 7 2.1. Linear KIF................................................ 7 2.2. Structured KIF

MPI: A Message-Passing Interface Standard

by Message Passing Interface Forum , 1994
"... process naming to allow libraries to describe their communication in terms suitable to their own data structures and algorithms, ffl The ability to "adorn" a set of communicating processes with additional user-defined attributes, such as extra collective operations. This mechanism should ..."
Abstract - Cited by 410 (0 self) - Add to MetaCart
6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 5.1. INTRODUCTION 131 5.1.2 MPI's Support for Libraries The corresponding concepts that MPI provides, specifically to support robust libraries, are as follows: ffl

A Safe Approximate Algorithm for Interprocedural Pointer Aliasing

by William Landi, Barbara G. Ryder , 1992
"... Aliasing occurs at some program point during execution when two or more names exist for the same location. In a language which allows pointers, the problem of determining the set of pairs of names at a program point which may refer to the same location during program execution is NP-hard. We present ..."
Abstract - Cited by 351 (31 self) - Add to MetaCart
Department of Computer Science, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08903 Contents 1 Introduction 3 2 Problem Representation 6 2.1 Interprocedural Control Flow Graph : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : 6 2.2 Types

TSQL2 language specification

by Richard T. Snodgrass, Ilsoo Ahn, Gadi Ariav, Don Batory, James Clifford, Curtis E. Dyreson, Ramez Elmasri, Fabio Grandi, Christian S. Jensen, Nick Kline, Krishna Kulkarni, T. Y. Cliff, Leung Nikos, Lorentzos John, F. Roddick - SIGMOD Record , 1994
"... ..."
Abstract - Cited by 45 (9 self) - Add to MetaCart
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2.2. The Specification: A Summary............................... 4

by Simon P. Booth, Simon B. Jones , 1994
"... language ..."
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language

X10 language specification, version 2.2

by Vijay Saraswat, Bard Bloom, Igor Peshansky, Olivier Tardieu, David Grove, David Grove, Sreedhar Kodali, Nathaniel Nystrom, Igor Peshansky, Vijay Saraswat, Mikio Takeuchi, Olivier Tardieu, Yoav Zibin, Bowen Alpern, Ben Herta, Yan Li, Yuki Makino, Hai Chuan Wang, Past Members Include Shivali Agarwal, David Bacon, Raj Barik, Ganesh Bik, Bob Blainey, Perry Cheng, Christopher Donawa, Julian Dolby, Stephen Fink, Patrick Gallop, Christian Grothoff, Allan Kielstra, Paul Mckenney, Andrew Myers, Filip Pizlo, Ram Rajamony, V. T. Rajan, Frank Tip, Ana Vaziri, Hanhong Xue , 2012
"... This report provides a description of the programming language X10. X10 is a class-based object-oriented programming language designed for high-performance, high-productivity computing on high-end computers supporting ≈ 105 hardware threads and ≈ 1015 operations per second. X10 is based on state-of- ..."
Abstract - Cited by 6 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
This report provides a description of the programming language X10. X10 is a class-based object-oriented programming language designed for high-performance, high-productivity computing on high-end computers supporting ≈ 105 hardware threads and ≈ 1015 operations per second. X10 is based on state

2.2 Example Domain-Specific Languages.................... 5

by Aran Donohue, Aran Donohue
"... Much research focuses on the techniques, tools, and benefits of domain-specific language creation and use. However, since software maintenance is an important part of software projects, we should consider the maintainability of domain-specific language programs. These programs differ in many ways fr ..."
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Much research focuses on the techniques, tools, and benefits of domain-specific language creation and use. However, since software maintenance is an important part of software projects, we should consider the maintainability of domain-specific language programs. These programs differ in many ways

SAMOS: an Active Object-Oriented Database System

by Stella Gatziu, Klaus R. Dittrich , 1992
"... events are not detected by SAMOS, but users/applications have to notify the system about their occurrence by issuing an explicit raise operation. 2.2 Composite events The kinds of primitive events described above correspond to elementary occurrences and are not adequate for handling events that occu ..."
Abstract - Cited by 220 (9 self) - Add to MetaCart
events are not detected by SAMOS, but users/applications have to notify the system about their occurrence by issuing an explicit raise operation. 2.2 Composite events The kinds of primitive events described above correspond to elementary occurrences and are not adequate for handling events

2.2 Filler Specification.................................. 3

by Volker Haarslev
"... † This paper is a major revision combining and extending two other papers [15, 16]. ∗ This paper has mainly been written when the author was a visiting scientist at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center. This paper describes two aspects of visualizing program systems within the object-oriented paradigm: l ..."
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: layout specifications for graphical objects and associations of visualization and application objects. The layout approach is based on a notation similar to the TEX text formatting language. It has been extended and generalized for specifying graphical layout of user interfaces and arbitrary objects. Our
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