The backtrack is a footpath in Whitley Bay, from Monkseaton towards Beaumont Park and later Holywell and New Hartley. It is along the former trackbed of the Blyth & Tyne Railway. Whitley Bay is a town in North Tyneside, Tyne and Wear, England. ... Monkseaton is an area near Whitley Bay, North Tyneside, in the northeast of England. ... Beaumont Park is a 1970s Executive housing development in Whitley Bay, bordered by Monkseaton Drive to the south, and the old Blyth to Whitley waggonway to the east. ... Holywell (Welsh: ) is the fifth largest town in Flintshire, north Wales, lying to the west of the estuary of the River Dee. ... New Hartley is a village in South East Northumberland, England, adjacent to Hartley, Seaton Delaval and Seaton Sluice. ... The Blyth & Tyne Railway was a railway in Northumberland. ...
Backtrack is also the term used for a recording that, of the up to three possible layers:
soloist,
choir, and
accompaniment,
omits the top layer (with lower ones present). (For example a recording with accompaniment and choir but no soloist, or accompaniment but no choir.) This is then useable either with an arbitrary top portion (e.g., any soloist or choir) or as a general background to which a choir can sing (along).
BTYACC -- backtracking yacc =========================== BTYACC was created by Chris Dodd using ideas from many places and lots of code from the Berkeley Yacc distribution, which is a public domain yacc clone put together by the good folks at Berkeley.
Version 1.0 changes: BackTracking ================================= by Chris Dodd BTYACC is a modified version of yacc that supports automatic backtracking and semantic disambiguation to parse ambiguous grammars, as well as syntactic sugar for inherited attributes (which tend to introduce conflicts).
Backtracking is only triggered when the parse hits a shift/reduce or reduce/reduce conflict in the table.