
Define the word polymorphism"Polymorphism" gcide "The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48"
Polymorphism \Pol`y*mor"phism\, n.
1. (Crystallog.) Same as Pleomorphism.
[1913 Webster]
2. (Biol.)
(a) The capability of assuming different forms; the
capability of widely varying in form.
(b) Existence in many forms; the coexistence, in the same
locality, of two or more distinct forms independent of
sex, not connected by intermediate gradations, but
produced from common parents.
[1913 Webster]
"polymorphism" wn "WordNet (r) 2.0"
polymorphism
n 1: (chemistry) the existence of different kinds of crystal of
the same chemical compound [syn: pleomorphism]
2: (biology) the existence of two or more forms of individuals
within the same animal species (independent of sex
differences)
"polymorphism" foldoc "The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (27 SEP 03)"
polymorphism
A concept first identified by
Christopher Strachey (1967) and developed by Hindley and
Milner, allowing types such as list of anything. E.g. in
Haskell:
length :: [a] -> Int
is a function which operates on a list of objects of any type,
a (a is a type variable). This is known as parametric
polymorphism. Polymorphic typing allows strong type checking
as well as generic functions. ML in 1976 was the first
language with polymorphic typing.
Ad-hoc polymorphism (better described as overloading) is the
ability to use the same syntax for objects of different types,
e.g. "+" for addition of reals and integers or "-" for unary
negation or diadic subtraction. Parametric polymorphism
allows the same object code for a function to handle arguments
of many types but overloading only reuses syntax and requires
different code to handle different types.
See also generic type variable.
In object-oriented programming, the term is used to describe
a variable that may refer to objects whose class is not
known at compile time and which respond at run time
according to the actual class of the object to which they
refer.
(2002-08-08)
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