Constrainedly
[kuh n-streynd] /kənˈstreɪnd/
adjective
1.
forced, compelled, or obliged:
a constrained confession.
2.
stiff or unnatural; uneasy or embarrassed:
a constrained manner.
/kənˈstreɪnd/
adjective
1.
embarrassed, unnatural, or forced: a constrained smile
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[kuh n-streynt] /kənˈstreɪnt/ noun 1. limitation or restriction. 2. repression of natural feelings and impulses: to practice constraint. 3. unnatural restraint in manner, conversation, etc.; embarrassment. 4. something that . 5. the act of . 6. the condition of being . 7. Linguistics. a restriction on the operation of a linguistic rule or the occurrence […]
- Constraint handling in prolog
language (CHIP) A constraint logic programming language developed by M. Dincbas at ECRC, Munich, Germany in 1985 which includes Boolean unification and a symbolic simplex-like algorithm. CHIP introduced the domain-variable model. [“The Constraint Logic Programming Language CHIP”, M. Dincbas et al, Proc 2nd Intl Conf on Fifth Generation Computer Sys, Tokyo (Nov 1988), pp.249-264]. [“Constraint […]
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(CLP) A programming framework based (like Prolog) on LUSH (or SLD) resolution, but in which unification has been replaced by a constraint solver. A CLP interpreter contains a Prolog-like inference engine and an incremental constraint solver. The engine sends constraints to the solver one at a time. If the new constraint is consistent with the […]
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[kuh n-streynt] /kənˈstreɪnt/ noun 1. limitation or restriction. 2. repression of natural feelings and impulses: to practice constraint. 3. unnatural restraint in manner, conversation, etc.; embarrassment. 4. something that . 5. the act of . 6. the condition of being . 7. Linguistics. a restriction on the operation of a linguistic rule or the occurrence […]