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Unity Version Control (previously known as Plastic SCM) [1] is a cross-platform commercial distributed version control tool developed by Códice Software for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, and other operating systems. It includes a command-line tool, native GUIs, diff and merge tool and integration with a number of IDEs.
The text editor in DR DOS 3.31 through DR DOS 6.0, and the predecessor of EDIT. Proprietary: EDLIN: A command-line based line editor introduced with 86-DOS, and the default on MS-DOS prior to version 5 and is also available on MS-DOS 5.0 and Windows NT. Proprietary: ee Stands for Easy Editor, is part of the base system of FreeBSD, along with vi ...
ex was eventually given a full-screen visual interface (adding to its command line oriented operation), thereby becoming the vi text editor. In recent times, ex is implemented as a personality of the vi program; most variants of vi still have an "ex mode ", which is invoked using the command ex , or from within vi for one command by typing the ...
Unity 2D showing the ability to run alongside different window managers and desktop environments. Initially Canonical maintained two discrete versions of Unity, which were visually almost indistinguishable but technically different. Unity is written as a plugin for Compiz [38] and uses an uncommon OpenGL toolkit called Nux. [3]
In computing, a line editor is a text editor in which each editing command applies to one or more complete lines of text designated by the user. Line editors predate screen-based text editors and originated in an era when a computer operator typically interacted with a teleprinter (essentially a printer with a keyboard), with no video display, and no ability to move a cursor interactively ...
Grunt's command-line interface (CLI) can be installed globally through npm. Executing the grunt command will load and run the version of Grunt locally installed in the current directory. Hence, we can maintain different versions of Grunt in different folders and execute each one as we wish.
A command prompt (or just prompt) is a sequence of (one or more) characters used in a command-line interface to indicate readiness to accept commands. It literally prompts the user to take action. A prompt usually ends with one of the characters $ , % , # , [ 15 ] [ 16 ] : , > or - [ 17 ] and often includes other information, such as the path ...
exit; saves the file and quits the editor [11] Ctrl-Z: exit; saves the file and quits the editor Ctrl-Y: abort; terminates the editor without saving the file Command line -(num.) recall; recall the EVE command line (empty); enter Help to get the list of EVE commands Ctrl-B: recall; recall the EVE command line (with previous command); use Ctrl-U ...