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Re: Authoritative Definition of "Descriptive Language"
From: |
Mark . Burgess |
Subject: |
Re: Authoritative Definition of "Descriptive Language" |
Date: |
Mon, 29 Jul 2002 09:30:57 +0200 (MET DST) |
Hi Steve, I don't know of any authoratative definitions, no. I tend
to use them interchangeably about cfengine, because it certainly fits
both descriptions. If we take the literal English meaning, then a descriptove
language is one that offers descriptions of something (e.g. a configuration)
whereas a declarative language is one that does whatever it does by
declaration alone (no imperative constructions, all parameters to standard
methods).
There is an obvious overlap. I think the main thing for your paper is
to define clearly what *you* mean by the terms,
Mark
On 28 Jul, Steve Traugott wrote:
> Hi All!
>
> I have a silly (slightly embarrassing) question, for an upcoming LISA
> paper -- does anyone know of any authoritative (computer science)
> definition of the term "Descriptive Language"?
>
> Mark, you usually seem to equate "descriptive" with "declarative".
> For example:
>
> http://www.iu.hio.no/~mark/research/immune/AIdrift/AIdrift.html
> http://www.cfengine.org/docs/cfengine-1.6.3.Reference.html
> http://www.geocrawler.com/archives/3/374/2001/3/0/5358475/
>
> I've found others who do the same. For example:
>
> http://crl.nmsu.edu/expedition/publications/boas-acl99.pdf
>
> These terms seem to be freely interchangeable in CS usage, but I
> haven't yet found any explicit text saying so -- is the current usage
> still that fuzzy? Does anyone see any problem with me explicitly
> equating them in a refereed paper? Feel free to forward this to your
> favorite linguistics list... ;-)
>
> Thanks,
>
> Steve
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