Assignment in a sentence as a noun

Principled pursuit of the right assignments is thus a bit of a stag hunt.

We went in, you looked up my assignment, and then you said theres no problem with your assignment; youre fine.

If this is the case, then I suggest doing the contract thing, where you give them an assignment on contract.

I, who collaborated with a friend on one small part of the assignment, got worried and came in to see you during office hours.

We think this is an improvement over the manual number assignment that happens in Protocol Buffers.

A suitable first step would be to disable mass assignment, which should always be turned off in a public-facing Rails app.

Ditto for someone who wishes to change assignment within their organization, however they arrived there.

Each Congressperson can only have 2 committee assignments.

Unless you have a health crisis or death in the family, you don't have an excuse for a late assignment and the typical 10%/day policy is more than generous.

The most common version runs something > like, "imperative languages use assignment, functional > languages don't".. a concept I'll jump up and down > upon later.

If this is Github's fault, then it is also every other developer's fault who doesn't by default disable mass-assignment of attributes.

Any addition, assignment, pointer dereference, etc could actually be an overloaded operator.

> Myth #4 - Functional programming doesn't support variable assignment > [...] > According to Church's thesis, all programming languages > are computationally equivalent.

It contrasts this with i2z Technology, LLC, - a Marshall, Texas shell entity run by a Silicon Valley lawyer - that invented nothing through its own efforts, that took an assignment of a soon-to-expire 1992 patent in July, 2011, that sued a score of mostly-large companies in the fall of 2011 for allegedly infringing that patent, and that made a letter demand on Hipmunk to take a license from it or be immediately sued.

Assignment definitions

noun

a duty that you are assigned to perform (especially in the armed forces); "hazardous duty"

noun

the instrument by which a claim or right or interest or property is transferred from one person to another

noun

the act of distributing something to designated places or persons; "the first task is the assignment of an address to each datum"

See also: assigning

noun

(law) a transfer of property by deed of conveyance

See also: grant

noun

an undertaking that you have been assigned to do (as by an instructor)

noun

the act of putting a person into a non-elective position; "the appointment had to be approved by the whole committee"

See also: appointment designation naming