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Branch predication - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Branch predication is a strategy in computer architecture design for mitigating the costs usually associated with conditional branches, particularly branches to short sections of code. It does this b...
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Predicate - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Predicate or predication may refer to: •Branch predication (computer programming), a choice to execute or not to execute a given instruction based on the content of a machine register •Predicate (g...
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A predicate is the portion of a clause , excluding the subject , that expresses something about the subject. ... Also known as: ... Context for this page:
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Every complete sentence contains two parts: a subject and a predicate. The subject is what (or whom) the sentence is about, while the predicate tells something about the subject. In the following sentences, ... Judy {runs}. Judy and her dog {run on the beach every morning}. ... To determine the subject of a sentence,
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Predication; 2; Abstract; In Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA) the meaning of a word is represented as a vector in a high-dimensional semantic space. Different meanings of a word or different senses of a word are not distinguished.
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C# 2.0 Language Features for Late Comers ... September 14, 2007 ... C# 3.x is exciting and deserving of the spotlight, but thousands of coders are in jobs still maintaining 1.x projects and just now getting up to speed on 2.0. Some haven’t had a chance to get hip to generics and anonymous delegates.
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Predication is the conditional execution of instructions. Conditional execution is implemented through branches in traditional architectures. Predication removes branches used for conditional execution.
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