KRC - Definition. Was ist KRC
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Was (wer) ist KRC - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
KRC (disambiguation); Krc

KRC         
Kent Recursive Calculator. A lazy functional language developed by David Turner in 1981 based on SASL, with pattern matching and {ZF expressions}. ["Functional Programming and its Applications", David A. Turner, Cambridge U Press 1982]. See also continental drift. (1994-12-06)
Kent Recursive Calculator         
PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
KRC programming language
KRC (Kent Recursive Calculator) is a lazy functional language developed by David Turner from November 1979 to October 1981Dates in the commentary to the BCPL KRC source code for EMAS. based on SASL, with pattern matching, guards and ZF expressions (now more usually called list comprehensions).
Erpe-Mere United         
ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL CLUB
KRC Bambrugge; K.R.C. Bambrugge
Erpe-Mere United is a Belgian association football club based in Bambrugge, East Flanders. The club has matricule number 5343 and the club's colours are black and yellow.

Wikipedia

KRC

KRC or krc may stand for:

  • Kurdish Red Crescent a humanitarian non-profit responsible for aid throughout Kurdistan areas
  • Kappa recognition factor or HIVEP3 protein
  • Kent Recursive Calculator, a functional programming language
  • Kenya Railways Corporation
  • Kingston Rowing Club, on River Thames, England
  • Korean Resource Center, Los Angeles, CA, US
  • Sudan Khartoum Refinery Company
  • Karachay-Balkar language, ISO 639 code
  • Depati Parbo Airport IATA code
  • K&R C, the original dialect of the C programming language, described in 1978 book by Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie
Beispiele aus Textkorpus für KRC
1. SINGAPORE, Aug 16 (Reuters) – Sudans 70,000–barrel–per–day (bpd) Khartoum Refinery Co. (KRC) is shut down for regular maintenance until mid–September, a senior official at the refinery said on Tuesday.
2. In another sign of misunderstanding, 5' percent said cloning involves genetic modification, when in fact clones are genetically identical to founder animals. (The FDA has said that food derived from genetically modified animals will have to pass more stringent safety tests than have been demanded for food from clones.) That lack of knowledge means attitudes are still malleable, and hearts and minds can still be mollified, if not entirely won, said David Richards, a senior vice president at KRC Research, a District–based opinion research firm.