Dictionary Definition
pliant adj
1 capable of being influenced or formed; "the
plastic minds of children"; "a pliant nature" [syn: plastic]
2 able to adjust readily to different conditions;
"an adaptable person"; "a flexible personality"; "an elastic clause
in a contract" [syn: elastic, flexible, pliable]
3 capable of being bent or flexed or twisted
without breaking; "a flexible wire"; "a pliant young tree" [syn:
bendable, pliable]
4 capable of being shaped or bent or drawn out;
"ductile copper"; "malleable metals such as gold"; "they soaked the
leather to made it pliable"; "pliant molten glass"; "made of highly
tensile steel alloy" [syn: ductile, malleable, pliable, tensile, tractile]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -aɪənt
Etymology
From pliant.Adjective
Related terms
French
Verb
pliantAdjective
pliant- pliant
- Sa mère a acheté un vélo pliant. - His mother bought a folding bicycle.
Extensive Definition
The Pliant programming
language is based on a dynamic
compiler, which makes it act like it is interpreted.
The default syntax is
almost trivial, and based on indentation, so it is an off-side
rule language. It is
reflective: Pliant programs can modify the parser, compiler,
code generator,
and code
optimizer.
FullPliant is an operating
system based on, and written in, Pliant, by Pliant's author.
The language and OS form an elegant integrated and highly flexible
whole.
Pliant's core advantage is its ability to allow
several
levels of programming, from
low-level instruction lists, to
high-level expression
manipulation, in one unified environment, and syntax as needed.
Thus, it stresses the "compiling rules" definitions using "meta"
functions
(functions run at compile time to compile an expression) and
"active types" (types
having their own compiling scheme).
Motives
Hubert Tonneau initiated the Pliant project in 1984. His long work as a programmer on many development projects led him to perceive certain deficiencies, limits, in extant programming frameworks:- Lack of coherence between applications, libraries, etc., needing large amounts of glue code between related parts of programs.
- Implicit acceptance of the impossible conciliation of high level constructs allowing improved expressiveness and conciseness in certain contexts, with low level adaptability allowing efficiency and optimized handling of exceptional cases.
Results
From these considerations, Tonneau thought it necessary to introduce a new efficient multilevel language having a pliant, flexible syntax and structure, which could be adapted to particular program contexts. The Pliant language is thus oriented toward efficiency, defined as computing resources, and programming adaptability. Key aspects of the language are: modularity, dynamic compiling, and full reflectivity allowing redefining the rules for syntax, compiling, and code optimizing.New application services were then integrated at
language level (examples: scheduling primitives, database
management), thus bridging usual gaps between applications. From
this viewpoint, a program is seen as a set of libraries, or even as
a language extension, possibly introducing its own syntax
changes.
FullPliant
Such applications can also be grouped into a coherent execution context, leading to an actual operating system, which is called FullPliant. This framework can be executed in two different ways: as a program executing various servers (on Linux or Windows platforms), or as an operating system running alone atop a Linux kernel.Available servers
include DNS,
FTP,
POP3,
SMTP,
LPD, remote execution, secured channel, and
HTTP. The HTTP multisite web server provides the standard
application interface. A powerful server-side dynamic page
mechanism was introduced, on which rely existing applications
(Forum,
Photography correction and high fidelity printing, Webmail,
etc.) and further HTTP-related servers (like WebDAV). The limits
of the HTML/JavaScript
system should soon lead to introducing an enhanced extended Pliant
browser valuable as a state of the art user interface for possibly
distributed applications.
FullPliant has been used in an industrial context
since 2000.
The transparent integration in the dynamic page extension of
signature and right verification mechanisms clearly demonstrates
that security can be achieved without unneeded additional
programming complexity.
External links
- Pliant Home Has been without content for some time.
- Old Pliant Home Appears to be a backup site but it has been referred to by Hubert Tonneau as recently as October 1, 2007. Includes Pliant v.96.
- Pliant at Sourceforge Old site from May 8, 2005. Includes Pliant v.93.
- Open Directory: Pliant
- Brave GNU World Issue #13
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
accessible, acquiescent, adaptable, adaptive, adjustable, agreeable, alacritous, amenable, ardent, bendable, bending, biddable, complaisant, compliant, conformable, consenting, content, convenient, cooperative, disposed, docile, ductile, eager, elastic, enthusiastic, extensible, extensile, fabricable, facile, fain, favorable, favorably disposed,
favorably inclined, feasible, fictile, flexible, flexile, flexuous, foolproof, formable, formative, forward, game, giving, handy, impressible, impressionable, in the
mind, in the mood, inclined, influenceable, like putty,
limber, lissome, lithe, lithesome, malleable, manageable, maneuverable, minded, moldable, movable, obedient, open, open-minded, other-directed,
persuadable,
persuasible,
pervious, plastic, pliable, practical, predisposed, prompt, prone, quick, ready, ready and willing, receptive, responsive, sensitive, sequacious, shapable, spongy, springy, suasible, submissive, suggestible, supple, susceptible, swayable, tractable, tractile, unaustere, undemanding, unexacting, unharsh, unsevere, unstrict, untroublesome, weak, well-disposed, well-inclined,
whippy, wieldable, wieldy, willed, willing, willinghearted, willowy, yielding, zealous