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The C# programming language provides many classes and methods to perform file and stream input and output. The most common stream classes used for file and stream I/O within the .NET Framework are listed below:
Stream editing processes a file or files, in-place, without having to load the file(s) into a user interface. One example of such use is to do a search and replace on all the files in a directory, from the command line. On Unix and related systems based on the C language, a stream is a source or sink of data, usually individual bytes or characters.
Object REXX is a high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, object-oriented (class-based) programming language.Today it is generally referred to as ooRexx (short for "Open Object Rexx"), which is the maintained and direct open-source successor to Object REXX.
The Java Native Interface (JNI) is a foreign function interface programming framework that enables Java code running in a Java virtual machine (JVM) to call and be called by [1] native applications (programs specific to a hardware and operating system platform) and libraries written in other languages such as C, C++ and assembly.
Commercial implementations are either general purpose or tied to specific hardware by a vendor. Examples of general purpose languages include: AccelerEyes' Jacket, a commercialization of a GPU engine for MATLAB; Ateji PX Java extension that enables a simple expression of stream programming, the Actor model, and the MapReduce algorithm
For example, the dir and ls programs (which display file names contained in a directory) may take command-line arguments, but perform their operations without any stream data input. Unless redirected , standard input is inherited from the parent process.
In computer science, a jagged array, also known as a ragged array [1] or irregular array [2] is an array of arrays of which the member arrays can be of different lengths, [3] producing rows of jagged edges when visualized as output.
Standard examples of data-driven languages are the text-processing languages sed and AWK, [1] and the document transformation language XSLT, where the data is a sequence of lines in an input stream – these are thus also known as line-oriented languages – and pattern matching is primarily done via regular expressions or line numbers.