English Dictionary
◊ DID YOU MEAN MELD?
meld
n : a form of rummy using two decks and four jokers; jokers and
deuces are wild; the object is to meld groups of seven of
the same rank [syn: {canasta}, {basket rummy}]
v 1: announce for a score; of cards in a card game
2: mix together different elements; "The colors blend well";
"fuse the clutter of detail into a rich narrative"--A.
Schlesinger [syn: {blend}, {mix}, {conflate}, {commingle},
{immix}, {fuse}, {coalesce}, {combine}, {merge}]
English Computing Dictionary
◊ MELDC
MELDC
A {reflective} {object-oriented} {concurrent} programming
language developed in 1990 by the MELD Project of the
Programming Systems Laboratory at {Columbia University}.
MELDC is a redesign of {MELD} based on {C}.
The core of the architecture is a {micro-kernel} (the MELDC
kernel), which encapsulates a minimum set of entities that
cannot be modelled as objects. All components outside of the
kernel are implemented as objects in MELDC itself and are
modularised in the MELDC libraries. MELDC is reflective in
three dimensions: structural, computational and architectural.
The structural reflection indicates that classes and
meta-classes are objects, which are written in MELDC. The
computational reflection means that object behaviours can be
computed and extended at run-time. The architectural
reflection indicates that new features/properties
(e.g. persistency and remoteness) can be constructed in MELDC.
Version 2.0 runs on {Sun-4}/{SunOS} 4.1 and {DECstation} and
{MIPS}/{Ultrix} 4.2.
E-mail: Gail Kaiser .
MELDC is available under licence from
and may not be used for commercial purposes.
(1992-12-15)
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