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An IEEE 1284 36-pin male micro ribbon printer cable connection. The computer side normally uses a DB-25 port instead of this connector. IEEE 1284, also known as the Centronics port, is a standard that defines bi-directional parallel communications between computers and other devices.
Bidirectional model transformations are an important special case in which a model is input to such a program. Some bidirectional languages are bijective. The bijectivity of a language is a severe restriction of its power, [1] because a bijective language is merely relating two different ways to present the very same information.
The original IBM parallel printer adapter for the IBM PC of 1981 was designed to support limited bidirectionality, with 8 lines of data output and 4 lines of data input. [ citation needed ] This allowed the port to be used for other purposes, not just output to a printer.
Many existing variations complicate support; No built-in protocol support for some conveniences: No hardware flow control by the sub (but the main can delay the next clock edge to slow the transfer rate) No hardware sub acknowledgment (the main could be transmitting to nowhere and not know it) No error-checking protocol
BFD—Bidirectional Forwarding Detection; BFD—Binary File Descriptor; BFS—Breadth-First Search; BFT—Byzantine Fault Tolerant; BGP—Border Gateway Protocol; BI—Business Intelligence; BiDi—Bi-Directional; bin—binary; BINAC—Binary Automatic Computer; BIND—Berkeley Internet Name Domain; BIOS—Basic Input Output System; BJT ...
In 1984 announced IPDS – Intelligent Printer Data Stream for online printing of AFP — Advanced Function Presentation documents, using bidirectional communications between the application and the printer. IPDS support among others printing of text, fonts, images, graphics, and barcodes. The IBM 4224 is one of the IPDS capable dot matrix ...
Bidirectional script support is the capability of a computer system to correctly display bidirectional text. The term is often shortened to "BiDi" or "bidi".Early computer installations were designed only to support a single writing system, typically for left-to-right scripts based on the Latin alphabet only.
In computer science, bidirectionalization refers to the process of given a source-to-view transformation (automatically) finding a mapping from the original source and an updated view to an updated source.