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Wikisource has original text related to this article: End Poem (full text) The end credits of the video game Minecraft include a written work by the Irish writer Julian Gough, conventionally called the End Poem, which is the only narrative text in the mostly unstructured sandbox game. Minecraft's creator Markus "Notch" Persson did not have an ending to the game up until a month before launch ...
The sentence "The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents", in Zalgo textZalgo text is generated by excessively adding various diacritical marks in the form of Unicode combining characters to the letters in a string of digital text. [4]
Free C, C++, Java: macOS, Windows, Linux Java Pathfinder: Plain and timed Java unknown No Yes No No Open Source Agreement Java: macOS, Windows, Linux Murφ (Murphi) Plain Murφ Invariants, assertions Yes No No No Free C++: Linux NuSMV: Plain SMV input language CTL, LTL, PSL: Yes No No No Free C: Unix, Windows, macOS PAT: Plain, real-time ...
SMS language displayed on a mobile phone screen. Short Message Service language, textism, or textese [a] is the abbreviated language and slang commonly used in the late 1990s and early 2000s with mobile phone text messaging, and occasionally through Internet-based communication such as email and instant messaging.
Expect is an extension to the Tcl scripting language written by Don Libes. [2] The program automates interactions with programs that expose a text terminal interface. Expect, originally written in 1990 for the Unix platform, has since become available for Microsoft Windows and other systems.
Text C/C++, C#, D, IDL, Fortran, Java, PHP, Python Any 1997/10/26 1.9.1 GPL Epydoc: Edward Loper Text Python Any 2002/01/— 3.0 (2008) MIT: fpdoc (Free Pascal Documentation Generator) Sebastian Guenther and Free Pascal Core Text (Object)Pascal/Delphi FPC tier 1 targets 2005 3.2.2 GPL reusable parts are GPL with static linking exception Haddock ...
John Henry Michael "JT" Thompson (born June 15, 1959) [1] is the inventor of the Lingo programming language used in Adobe Director and a former Chief Scientist at Macromedia.
Lingo was invented by John H. Thompson at MacroMind in 1989, and first released with Director 2.2. Jeff Tanner developed and tested Lingo for Director 2.2 and 3.0, created custom XObjects for various media device producers, language extension examples using XFactory including the XFactory application programming interface (API), and wrote the initial tutorials on how to use Lingo.