4,408 research outputs found

    Grace in Spoofax

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    Grace is a programming language that aims to be an example of a contemporary object-oriented language, to be used for teaching university level students. The language specification of Grace is informal, and its various implementations are difficult to comprehend and change. Spoofax Grace is an implementation of the Grace programming language, meant to serve both as a reference implementation, but also a specification, that can be easily read, understood and changed. Spoofax Grace is implemented using the Spoofax language workbench, providing a declarative grammar, program transformations and dynamic semantics. From these specifications a language interpreter is generated that can execute Grace programs. The system covers the core aspects of Grace, yet a number of language features remain unimplemented. The implementation can be correlated to the informal Grace specification, and can be changed or extended at will.Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer ScienceSoftware TechnologyProgramming Language

    Overview of GRACE (Ireland) Research Project and Summary of Findings and Recommendations Global Researchers Advancing Catholic Education (GRACE)

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    Global Researchers Advancing Catholic Education (GRACE) is an international research-based partnership between academics in universities and Catholic education bodies across three different continents (Mary Immaculate College, Limerick; Notre Dame University, Fremantle, Australia; Roche Center for Catholic Education, Boston College; St Mary’s University, London; University of Glasgow; and the International Office for Catholic Education). GRACE provides an opportunity for scholars and practitioners of Catholic education and theology in their respective countries to affirm, study, collaborate, and respond meaningfully to challenges in Catholic education. Among its aims is to strengthen the argument for the importance of faith-based schools in a plural society

    Overview of GRACE (Ireland) Research Project and Summary of Findings and Recommendations

    No full text
    Global Researchers Advancing Catholic Education (GRACE) is an international research-based partnership between academics in universities and Catholic education bodies across three different continents (Mary Immaculate College, Limerick; Notre Dame University, Fremantle, Australia; Roche Center for Catholic Education, Boston College; St Mary’s University, London; University of Glasgow; and the International Office for Catholic Education). GRACE provides an opportunity for scholars and practitioners of Catholic education and theology in their respective countries to affirm, study, collaborate, and respond meaningfully to challenges in Catholic education. Among its aims is to strengthen the argument for the importance of faith-based schools in a plural society

    Pseudospongosorites McCormack & Kelly 2002, n. g.

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    Genus <i>Pseudospongosorites</i> n. g. <p> <i>Diagnosis</i></p> <p>Massive amorphous, globular, irregularly spherical Suberitidae; surface mammillate, anged dorsally, smooth, waxy, corky to the touch, with papillate or raised membranous oscules; texture barely compressible; colour in life greyish green, tan to bright orange; megascleres oxeas in two size classes, slightly curved, occasionally centrotylote; skeleton consists of broad irregular swaths of oxeas, irregularly anastomosing, diverging towards ectosome which is compressed. The ectosomal spiculation is erect to slightly fanned tufts of oxeas. One species occurs in association with a hermit crab and its gastropod shell home. Reproduction by gemmulation.</p> <p> <i>Holotype</i></p> <p> <i>Spongosorites suberitoides</i> Diaz, Pomponi and van Soest, 1993: 299, gures 28, 34. USNM 32441, North Carolina.</p> <p> <i>Etymology</i></p> <p>The genus name re ects the taxonomic history of the sponge, and the di culty we have had in the assessment of the phylogenetic a nity of the sponge.</p> <p> <i>Remarks</i></p> <p> We consider that <i>Pseudospongosorite s</i> <i>suberitoides</i> (Diaz <i>et al</i>.) has a greater a nity to suberitid sponges in the Hadromerida than to representatives of the Halichondrida, but that it should remain <i>incertae sedis</i> in the Suberitidae until the phylogeny of Halichondrida with respect to the Hadromerida is fully resolved. Finally, we urge caution in proposing changes to the taxonomic classi cation of the Halichondrida with respect to the Hadromerida (see Chombard and Boury-Esnault, 1999). Considerably more sequence data from 28S rRNA and possibly 18S rRNA genes is required, from a greater range of representative taxa, before a nal picture of the groups as a whole emerge.</p>Published as part of <i>McCormack, Grace P. & Kelly, Michelle, 2002, New indications of the phylogenetic a nity of Spongosorites suberitoides Diaz et al., 1993 (Porifera, Demospongiae) as revealed by 28 S ribosomal DNA, pp. 1009-1021 in Journal of Natural History 36 (9)</i> on page 1019, DOI: 10.1080/00222930110040394, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5301224">http://zenodo.org/record/5301224</a&gt

    A new species of Hymeraphia Bowerbank, 1864 (Axinellida: Raspailiidae) from a deep-water canyon southwest off Ireland

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    Morrow, Christine, Allcock, Louise A., Mccormack, Grace (2018): A new species of Hymeraphia Bowerbank, 1864 (Axinellida: Raspailiidae) from a deep-water canyon southwest off Ireland. Zootaxa 4466 (1): 61-68, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4466.1.

    New indications of the phylogenetic anity of Spongosorites suberitoides Diaz et al., 1993 (Porifera, Demospongiae) as revealed by 28S ribosomal DNA

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    McCormack, Grace P., Kelly, Michelle (2002): New indications of the phylogenetic anity of Spongosorites suberitoides Diaz et al., 1993 (Porifera, Demospongiae) as revealed by 28S ribosomal DNA. Journal of Natural History 36 (9): 1009-1021, DOI: 10.1080/00222930110040394, URL: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/0022293011004039

    Rights issues for digital video

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    An examination of the legal, technical and policy issues surrounding digital video resources in higher education

    Grace Halsell

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    letter from author John Howard Griffin to Halsell1752px x 1084px7/25/72 [postcard] Dear Grace, Buried in work and know you are too. Had a good talk with your mother the other evening. Hope to see you soon. Love from all the Griffins. Howar
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