Procrustean assignment

English edit

Etymology edit

After the legendary highwayman Procrustes, who stretched or cut his victims to make them fit a bed.

Noun edit

Procrustean assignment (uncountable)

  1. (computing, dated, rare) A form of assignment to fixed-length string variables in which a shorter value is padded to the necessary length while a longer one is truncated.
    • 1982, Steven Vickers, Robin Bradbeer, Sinclair ZX Spectrum: BASIC Programming:
      [] the string that is being assigned to it is cut off on the right if it is too long, or filled out with spaces if it is too short - this is called Procrustean assignment []
    • 1983, Ian Stewart, Robin Jones, Machine code and better BASIC, page 51:
      [] that Procrustean assignment that the Manual goes on about: string arrays always have a fixed length of word.
    • 1985, Sharon Zardetto Aker, T/S 2068 basics and beyond, page 38:
      Because the T/S uses procrustean assignment for string arrays, there are some uses for single-element arrays.

Related terms edit