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  2. Wikipedia : Tools/Navigation popups

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Tools/Navigation...

    In this screenshot, the user is hovering the mouse over a link to the encyclopedia article. An example of Page Previews , which is NOT the same as this tool called Navigation popups. Navigation popups is an opt-in Wikipedia gadget (feature) that offers article previews and several functions through popup windows when hovering over wikilinks .

  3. Free look - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_look

    Free look (also known as mouselook) describes the ability to move a mouse, joystick, analogue stick, or D-pad to rotate the player character's view in video games.It is almost always used for 3D game engines, and has been included on role-playing video games, real-time strategy games, third-person shooters, first-person shooters, racing games, and flight simulators.

  4. Wikipedia:User scripts/Guide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:User_scripts/Guide

    Using the preview button: You can edit your script directly on your /common.js page, then click [Show preview] and the new code is executed right away on the preview page. Saving it: If required elements are missing on the preview page (for example, your script does something on history pages), you will have to save the script in order to test it.

  5. Greasemonkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greasemonkey

    The changes made to the web pages are executed every time the page is viewed, making them effectively permanent for the user running the script. Greasemonkey can be used for customizing page appearance, adding new functions to web pages (for example, embedding price comparisons within shopping sites), fixing rendering bugs, combining data from ...

  6. Extensible programming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extensible_programming

    Standish attributed the failure of the extensibility movement to the difficulty of programming successive extensions. A programmer might build a first shell of macros around a base language. Then, if a second shell of macros is built around that, any subsequent programmer must be intimately familiar with both the base language, and the first shell.

  7. Expander code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expander_code

    In coding theory, an expander code is a [,] linear block code whose parity check matrix is the adjacency matrix of a bipartite expander graph.These codes have good relative distance (), where and are properties of the expander graph as defined later, rate (), and decodability (algorithms of running time () exist).

  8. Length extension attack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Length_extension_attack

    In cryptography and computer security, a length extension attack is a type of attack where an attacker can use Hash(message 1) and the length of message 1 to calculate Hash(message 1 ‖ message 2) for an attacker-controlled message 2, without needing to know the content of message 1.

  9. Mouse (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouse_(programming_language)

    The Mouse (sometimes written as MOUSE) programming language is a small computer programming language developed by Dr. Peter Grogono in the late 1970s and early 1980s. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It was developed as an extension of an earlier language called MUSYS, which was used to control digital and analog devices in an electronic music studio.