04875 am 2201093 n 450 991054829680332120211025979-1-03-510708-610.4000/books.psorbonne.93215(CKB)4100000012657853(FrMaCLE)OB-psorbonne-93215(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/85857(PPN)267971516(EXLCZ)99410000001265785320220301j|||||||| ||| 0freuu||||||m||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierLa constitution, l’Europe et le droit Mélanges en l’honneur de Jean-Claude Masclet /Chahira BoutayebParis Éditions de la Sorbonne20211 online resource (1088 p.) De Republica2-85944-737-7 Riche et lumineuse, la carrière du professeur Jean-Claude Masclet s’est spontanément mise au service de l’Université. Jamais rétif à l’exercice de la fonction universitaire ou de la charge administrative, il s’est utilement dévoué à la diffusion du savoir et de l’enseignement du droit. Le professeur Jean-Claude Masclet a oeuvré, avec belle intuition, à l’éclosion et l’essor de plusieurs champs du droit constitutionnel, alors naissants, méconnus ou peu explorés. À l’idée européenne, celui-ci a consacré nombre de ses écrits dont certains ont été traduits en plusieurs langues. Inlassablement, Jean-Claude Masclet a été animé par la volonté d’expliquer la vertu de l’Europe politique comme celle de l’Europe du droit. Avec conviction et habilité, il a su porter par les nombreux travaux que décline sa bibliographie la beauté de l’idéal européen. Les études ici réunies ne pouvaient alors que s’attarder sur ses thèmes de prédilection : la Constitution et l’Europe. L’ouvrage, résolument inscrit dans l’inégalable tradition universitaire des Mélanges, convie l’esprit avide de compréhension à arpenter les champs infinis que déploient les droits constitutionnel et européen.Lawdroitdroit européendroit constitutionneldroitdroit européendroit constitutionnelLawdroitdroit européendroit constitutionnelBerramdane Abdelkhaleq251438Binczak Pascal1295036Blumann Claude321970Bontems Claude211653Boutayeb Chahira510166Bouvier Michel153783Camby Jean-Pierre1306299Chaltiel Florence1306300Chantebout Bernard234164Colliard Jean-Claude267656Daugeron Bruno1306301Deguergue Maryse238277Dolez Bernard1301663Dollat Patrick319509Dubout Édouard1085518Esclassan Marie-Christine499956Flaesch-Mougin Catherine247381Fromont Michel233526Gadbin Daniel1306302Gicquel Jean235571Guiselin Emmanuel-Pie1306303Hamon Francis235942Iliopoulou-Penot Anastasia1306304Jacqué Jean-Paul431582Jan Pascal1290349Lazerges Christine232973Leclerc Stéphane567493Maligner Bernard1306305Manin Philippe229542Martucci Francesco1306306Mathieu Bertrand324142Monjal Pierre-Yves766664Neframi Eleftheria615993Oberdorff Henri234200Pauvret-Finck Josiane1306307Petit Franck904350Petit Yves416148Philip Christian248454Picheral Caroline553995Platon Sébastien1300636Rigaux Anne1306308Rodrigues Stéphane730366Rossetto Jean1306309Simon Denys234258Soldatos Panayotis7679Szymczak David1291511Tavernier Paul281487Tercinet Josiane599380Valette Jean-Paul501897Verpeaux Michel248938Ziller Jacques107359Boutayeb Chahira510166FR-FrMaCLEBOOK9910548296803321La constitution, l’Europe et le droit3028372UNINA05203nam 2200637 a 450 991078180260332120230120005307.01-281-76379-997866117637940-08-055053-3(CKB)1000000000489280(EBL)403775(OCoLC)476215780(SSID)ssj0000116619(PQKBManifestationID)11131917(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000116619(PQKBWorkID)10036207(PQKB)11389442(Au-PeEL)EBL403775(CaPaEBR)ebr10371831(CaONFJC)MIL176379(CaSebORM)9780123725110(MiAaPQ)EBC403775(EXLCZ)99100000000048928020070619d2007 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrAnnotated C# standard[electronic resource] /Jon Jagger, Nigel Perry, Peter SestoftAmsterdam ;Boston Elsevier/Morgan Kaufmann Publishersc20071 online resource (858 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-12-372511-9 Includes bibliographical references (p. 804) and index.Front Cover; C# Annotated Standard; Copyright Page; Dedications; Contents; Foreword to the Annotated Standard; Preface to the Annotated Standard; Acknowledgments; About The Authors; Errata To The International Standard; The C# International Standard and Foreword; Introduction; CLI not required; Chapter 1: Scope; Chapter 2: Conformance; Interpreters; Chapter 3: Normative references; Chapter 4: Definitions; Application vs. program; Assembly vs. class files; Accessing class libraries; Programs, assemblies, applications and class libraries; Chapter 5: Notational conventionsChapter 6: Acronyms and abbreviationsASCII Rules!; The C# name; Chapter 7: General description; Where to look for requirements on unsafe constructs; Chapter 8: Language overview; Annotation free zone; 8.1 Getting started; 8.2 Types; 8.2.1 Predefined types; 8.2.2 Conversions; 8.2.3 Array types; 8.2.4 Type system unification; 8.3 Variables and parameters; 8.4 Automatic memory management; 8.5 Expressions; 8.6 Statements; 8.7 Classes; 8.7.1 Constants; 8.7.2 Fields; 8.7.3 Methods; 8.7.4 Properties; 8.7.5 Events; 8.7.6 Operators; 8.7.7 Indexers; 8.7.8 Instance constructors; 8.7.9 Finalizers8.7.10 Static constructors8.7.11 Inheritance; 8.7.12 Static classes; 8.7.13 Partial type declarations; 8.8 Structs; 8.9 Interfaces; 8.10 Delegates; 8.11 Enums; 8.12 Namespaces and assemblies; 8.13 Versioning; 8.14 Extern aliases; 8.15 Attributes; 8.16 Generics; 8.16.1 Why generics?; 8.16.2 Creating and consuming generics; 8.16.3 Multiple type parameters; 8.16.4 Constraints; 8.16.5 Generic methods; 8.17 Anonymous methods; 8.18 Iterators; 8.19 Nullable types; Chapter 9: Lexical structure; 9.1 Programs; Much ado about nothing; 9.2 Grammars; 9.2.1 Lexical grammar; 9.2.2 Syntactic grammar9.2.3 Grammar ambiguitiesRationale: the "following token" set; Similar cast expression ambiguity; F(G>7); 9.3 Lexical analysis; 9.3.1 Line terminators; 9.3.2 Comments; 9.3.3 White space; 9.4 Tokens; 9.4.1 Unicode escape sequences; No escapes in verbatim strings; No escapes in comments; 9.4.2 Identifiers; Identifier normalization; The humble underscore; Keyword escape mechanism; Code generation; 9.4.3 Keywords; Language evolution; 9.4.4 Literals; 9.4.4.1 Boolean literals; Boolean arguments considered harmful?; 9.4.4.2 Integer literals; Historical note; Boundary differences9.4.4.3 Real literalsWhat is 1.D?; Money or deciMal?; 9.4.4.4 Character literals; No octal character escapes; 9.4.4.5 String literals; Platform independent newlines; Historical note; Happy birthday, Joel; Overspecification...; Hexadecimal escape character pitfalls; 9.4.4.6 The null literal; 9.4.5 Operators and punctuators; >>== tokenization oddity; Tokenization anecdote; 9.5 Pre-processing directives; To pre-process, or not pre-process?; Why no delimited comments in #directives?; Why no macros?; 9.5.1 Conditional compilation symbols; Conditional symbol oddityNo program-wide pre-processing symbolsStandards, while being definitive, do not usually serve as the best reference to the use of a programming language. Books on languages usually are able to explain usage better, but lack the definitive precision of a standard. This book combines the two; it is the standard with added explanatory material.* Written by members of the standards committee* Annotates the standard with practical implementation advice* The definitive reference to the C# International StandardC (Computer program language)C (Computer program language)005.13/3Jagger Jon1966-64021Perry Nigel1579509Sestoft Peter740270MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910781802603321Annotated C# standard3859671UNINA