assignmentəˈsaɪn mənt
assignment (n)
- plural
- assignments
assignment
English Definitions:
assignment, duty assignment (noun)
a duty that you are assigned to perform (especially in the armed forces)
"hazardous duty"
assignment (noun)
the instrument by which a claim or right or interest or property is transferred from one person to another
assignment, assigning (noun)
the act of distributing something to designated places or persons
"the first task is the assignment of an address to each datum"
grant, assignment (noun)
(law) a transfer of property by deed of conveyance
assignment (noun)
an undertaking that you have been assigned to do (as by an instructor)
appointment, assignment, designation, naming (noun)
the act of putting a person into a non-elective position
"the appointment had to be approved by the whole committee"
assignment (Noun)
the act of assigning, or an assigned task
assignment (Noun)
a position to which someone is assigned
assignment (Noun)
a task given to students, homework or coursework
assignment (Noun)
a transfer of something from one person to another, especially property, or a claim or right; the document that effects this transfer
assignment (Noun)
an operation that assigns a value to a variable
Assignment
In computer programming, an assignment statement sets and/or re-sets the value stored in the storage location denoted by a variable name, in other words, it copies the value into the variable. In most imperative programming languages, the assignment statement is a fundamental construct. Today, the most commonly used notation for this basic operation has come to be x = expr followed by x := expr, although there are many other notations in use. In some languages the symbol used is regarded as an operator while others define the assignment as a statement. Assignments typically allow a variable to hold different values at different times during its life-span and scope. However, some languages does not allow that kind of "destructive" re-assignment, as it might imply changes of non-local state. The purpose is to enforce referential transparency, i.e. functions that do not depend on the state of some variable, but produce the same results for a given set of parametric inputs at any point in time. Modern programs in other languages also often use similar strategies, although less strict, and only in certain parts, in order to reduce complexity, normally in conjunction with complementing methodologies such as data structuring, structured programming and object orientation.
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