This survey and tutorial presents the main developments in controlling partial deduction over the past 10 years and analyses their respective merits and shortcomings.
I consider this book to be written in a “tutorial” style.
[external_link_head]The general point here is that the entries in the methodological tutorials section tend to shortchange the language side of the brain – language connection.
This article is a tutorial on two key aspects of the fold operator for lists.
Individually many of these articles are, or have been, used by academics for structuring undergraduate reading assignments, tutorials or essay/dissertation work.
[external_link offset=1]The basis of this tutorial paper were operational interpretations of some variants of default logic.
It includes a case study of two graduate students who use very different strategies with regard to feedback in a tutorial.
It may be less appropriate for tutorials, surveys, theoretical work, or large implementations.
These remarks appear to show a remarkable degree of equality in the tutorial relationship.
Many of the models presented have already been implemented in this software and serve as a series of practical tutorials.
As a result, we feel the time is ripe to provide a tutorial overview of the current state of the art in the second track.
[external_link offset=2]The paper is long, but is strongly tutorial in style.
To maintain such control, instruction was carried out through the medium of computerized tutorials.
First, a series of graded tutorials enable the user to test her mastery of the course material.
It will provide an excellent tutorial text for computer science, and a reference resource which will be valuable for practitioners writing programs in this field.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. [external_footer]