I"ll$37185$ - translation to
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I"ll$37185$ - translation to

LEFT-TO-RIGHT, LEFTMOST DERIVATION TOP-DOWN PARSER FOR A SUBSET OF CONTEXT-FREE LANGUAGES
LL(1); LL parsing; LL(k); LL Parsing table; LL(1) language; LL1; Left factoring; LL(k) parser

I'll      
n. io- (al futuro collegato al verbo)
L L Cool J         
  • LL Cool J performing in [[Wilmington, Delaware]] in August 2008
AMERICAN RAPPER AND ACTOR
L.L. Cool J.; L.L. Cool J; James Todd Smith; LL cool J; Ll cool j; L L Cool J; Ll cool; James Todd Smith III; Ladies Love Cool James; LL Kool J; LL Cool J.; I Need a Beat; LL Cool Jay; I Need A Beat; Boomdizzle; LLCJ; Cool J
n. L L Cool J (nato nel 1969 col nome di Todd Smith) musicista americano di musica rap e attore di cinema
Elizabeth I         
  • Christoffel van Sichem I, Elizabeth, Queen of Great Britain, published 1601
  • Lord Essex was a favourite of Elizabeth I despite his petulance and irresponsibility.
  • A rare portrait of Elizabeth prior to her accession, attributed to [[William Scrots]]. It was painted for her father in {{Circa}} 1546.
  • putti]] hold the crown above her head.<ref>Strong, 163–164.</ref>
  • Portrait commemorating the defeat of the [[Spanish Armada]], depicted in the background. Elizabeth's hand rests on the globe, symbolising her international power. One of three known versions of the "[[Armada Portrait]]".
  • ermine]]
  • Elizabeth as shown on her tomb at Westminster Abbey
  • Portrait attributed to [[Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger]] or his studio, c. 1595
  • 1575}}, by [[Nicholas Hilliard]]. Their friendship lasted for over thirty years, until his death.
  • Elizabeth receiving Dutch ambassadors, 1560s, attributed to [[Levina Teerlinc]]
  • France]], and Ireland"
  • Elizabeth was engaged for a time to [[Francis, Duke of Anjou]]. The queen called him her "frog", finding him "not so deformed" as she had been led to expect.<ref>Frieda, 397.</ref>
  • Elizabeth's funeral cortège, 1603, with banners of her royal ancestors
  • Elizabeth's parents, [[Henry VIII]] and [[Anne Boleyn]]. Anne was executed within three years of Elizabeth's birth.
  • Philip]], during whose reign Elizabeth was heir presumptive
  • [[Abd el-Ouahed ben Messaoud]] was the Moorish ambassador to Elizabeth in 1600.
  • archive-date=16 April 2014}}</ref>
  • Portrait from 1586 to 1587, by Nicholas Hilliard, around the time of the voyages of Sir [[Francis Drake]]
  • ''The Procession Picture'', c. 1600, showing Elizabeth I borne along by her courtiers
  • Sir [[Francis Walsingham]], Elizabeth's [[spymaster]], uncovered several plots against her life.
  • kerns]] kneel to [[Sir Henry Sidney]] in submission.
  • sexually abused]] her.
QUEEN OF ENGLAND AND IRELAND FROM 1558 TO 1603
Queen Elizabeth I; Elizabeth I of Great Britain; Queen Elizabeth the First; Elizabeth I, Queen of England; Good Queen Bess; Elisabeth 1st; Queen Elizabeth 1; Queen Elisabeth I; Elizabeth the First; Queen of England Elizabeth; Elizabeth of England; Elisabeth I of England; Elisabeth of England; Queen Elizabeth of England; Queen Elizabeth I of England; Elizabeth 1; Elizabeth I (England); Queen of England Elizabeth I; Elizabeth i of england; Elizabeth I Tudor; Elizabeth I of the United Kingdom; Elizabeth the first; Elizabeth the 1st; Elisabeth I; The Gloriana; Bess of England; QEI; Queen Elizabeth the first; Queen Elisabeth of england; Elizabeth Tudor; Queene Elisabeth of England; Queen Elizabeth l; Liz 1; Elizabeth I of Ireland; Eliz. 1; Tudor, Elizabeth; Queen Eilzabeth I; Elizabeth I, Queen of England, 1533-1603; Elizabeth I of England; Video et taceo; Queen Elizabeth the 1st; Liz I; Elizabeth i; Queen Elizabeth I of Ireland; Elizabeth I, Queen of Ireland; Elizabeth, Queen of England; Death of Elizabeth I
Elisabetta I (regina inglese del sedicesimo secolo)

Definition

ll.
¦ abbreviation (in textual references) lines.

Wikipedia

LL parser

In computer science, an LL parser (Left-to-right, leftmost derivation) is a top-down parser for a restricted context-free language. It parses the input from Left to right, performing Leftmost derivation of the sentence.

An LL parser is called an LL(k) parser if it uses k tokens of lookahead when parsing a sentence. A grammar is called an LL(k) grammar if an LL(k) parser can be constructed from it. A formal language is called an LL(k) language if it has an LL(k) grammar. The set of LL(k) languages is properly contained in that of LL(k+1) languages, for each k ≥ 0. A corollary of this is that not all context-free languages can be recognized by an LL(k) parser.

An LL parser is called LL-regular (LLR) if it parses an LL-regular language. The class of LLR grammars contains every LL(k) grammar for every k. For every LLR grammar there exists an LLR parser that parses the grammar in linear time.

Two nomenclative outlier parser types are LL(*) and LL(finite). A parser is called LL(*)/LL(finite) if it uses the LL(*)/LL(finite) parsing strategy. LL(*) and LL(finite) parsers are functionally more closely resemblant to PEG parsers. An LL(finite) parser can parse an arbitrary LL(k) grammar optimally in the amount of lookahead and lookahead comparisons. The class of grammars parsable by the LL(*) strategy encompasses some context-sensitive languages due to the use of syntactic and semantic predicates and has not been identified. It has been suggested that LL(*) parsers are better thought of as TDPL parsers. Against the popular misconception, LL(*) parsers are not LLR in general, and are guaranteed by construction to perform worse on average (super-linear against linear time) and far worse in the worst-case (exponential against linear time).

LL grammars, particularly LL(1) grammars, are of great practical interest, as parsers for these grammars are easy to construct, and many computer languages are designed to be LL(1) for this reason. LL parsers may be table-based, i.e. similar to LR parsers, but LL grammars can also be parsed by recursive descent parsers. According to Waite and Goos (1984), LL(k) grammars were introduced by Stearns and Lewis (1969).