English Dictionary
◊ STRAND
strand
n 1: a pattern forming a unity within a larger structural whole;
"he tried to pick up the strands of his former life"; "I
could hear several melodic strands simultaneously"
2: a complex of fibers or filaments that are twisted together
to form a thread or a rope or a cable
3: a necklace made by a stringing objects together; "a string
of beads" or "a strand of pearls" [syn: {chain}, {string}]
4: a very slender natural or synthetic fiber [syn: {fibril}, {filament}]
5: a poetic term for a shore (as the area periodically covered
and uncovered by the tides)
6: a street in west central London famous for its theaters and
hotels [syn: {Strand}]
v : leave stranded; put ashore on a desolate island and abandon
[syn: {maroon}]
English Computing Dictionary
◊ STRAND
Strand
1. {AND-parallel} {logic programming} language. Essentially
flat {Parlog83} with sequential-and and sequential-or
eliminated.
["Strand: New Concepts on Parallel Programming", Ian Foster et
al, P-H 1990]. {Strand88} is a commercial implementation.
2. A query language, implemented on top of {INGRES} (an
{RDBMS}). ["Modelling Summary Data", R. Johnson, Proc ACM
SIGMOD Conf 1981].