The AI-powered English dictionary
countable and uncountable, plural backtrackings
(countable, uncountable) The act of one who, or that which, backtracks; a retracing of one's steps. examples
(aviation) The usage of a runway as a taxiway, especially at private strips and smaller airports. examples
(computer science) The act of building all possible solutions to a problem incrementally, abandoning any candidate solution if it cannot lead to a valid solution. quotations examples
Backtracking is used to solve problems in which a sequence of objects is chosen from a specific set so that the sequence satisfies some criterion. The classic example of the use of backtracking is the n-Queens problem.
2004, Richard E. Neapolitan, Kumarss Naimipour, Foundations of Algorithms Using C++ Pseudocode, 3rd edition, Jones & Bartlett Learning, page 188
This grammar only uses tokens and rules, so there is no backtracking involved, and the grammar is a predictive parser. This is fairly typical. Many grammars work fine without backtracking, or with backtracking in just a few places.
2017, Moritz Lenz, Parsing with Perl 6 Regexes and Grammars, Apress, page 112
present participle and gerund of backtrack examples