Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Character Generator Protocol (CHARGEN) service is an Internet protocol intended for testing, debugging, and measurement purposes. The user receives a stream of bytes . Although the specific format of the output is not prescribed by RFC 864 , the recommended pattern (and a de facto standard ) is shifted lines of 72 ASCII characters repeating.
Text Any with comments Unix, Linux, Windows 1989 2015 EUPL GPL MkDocs: Tom Christie Text Python Any 2014/10/29 1.5.3 BSD Natural Docs: Greg Valure Text Any with comments Any 2003/05/26 2.0.2 GPL NDoc: Jason Diamond, Jean-Claude Manoli, Kral Ferch Binary C# Windows only 2003/07/27 1.3.1 GPL pdoc: Andrew Gallant Text Python Any 2013 1.0.1 (2021)
T4 Template/Text File: Any text format such as XML, XAML, C# files or just plain text files. Umple: Umple, Java, Javascript, PHP Active Tier Umple code embedding one or more of Java, Python, C++, PHP or Ruby Pure Umple code describing associations, patterns, state machines, etc.
A character generator, often abbreviated as CG, is a device or software that produces static or animated text (such as news crawls and credits rolls) for keying into a video stream. Modern character generators are computer-based, and they can generate graphics as well as text.
Unicode inherits its first and second blocks (comprising U+0000 through U+00FF) from ASCII and ISO/IEC 8859-1, thus incorporating the C0 and C1 control code ranges (U+0000–U+001F, U+007F–U+009F) as general category "Cc". It does not assign normative names to these control codes, though it does assign them normative aliases.
The code words are also designed to be delta-decodable, so some code words are redundant. Each PDF data code word represents about 10 bits of information (log 2 (900) ≈ 9.8), but the printed code word (character) is 17 modules wide. Including a height of 3 modules, a PDF417 code word takes 51 square modules to represent 10 bits.
A generator is often used to generate API documentation which is generally for programmers or operational documents (such as a manual) for end users. A generator often pulls content from source, binary or log files. [1] Some generators, such as Javadoc and Doxygen, use special source code comments to drive content and formatting.
To avoid generating code that includes unistd.h, %option nounistd should be used. Another issue is the call to isatty (a Unix library function), which can be found in the generated code. The %option never-interactive forces flex to generate code that does not use isatty. [14]