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In computer programming, a one-liner program originally was textual input to the command line of an operating system shell that performed some function in just one line of input. In the present day, a one-liner can be an expression written in the language of the shell;
Mimikatz is both an exploit on Microsoft Windows that extracts passwords stored in memory and software that performs that exploit. [1] It was created by French programmer Benjamin Delpy and is French slang for "cute cats".
A source code editor with web development features. GPL-2.0-or-later: Brackets: A modular, web-oriented editor built using HTML, CSS and JavaScript on top of the Chromium Embedded Framework. MIT: CodeWright: An editing system or source code editor which can be configured to work with other integrated development environment (IDE) systems ...
One-liner may refer to: One-line joke; One-liner program, textual input to the command-line of an operating system shell that performs some function in just one line of input; Tagline, a variant of a branding slogan typically used in marketing materials and advertising; one-line haiku
There are two basic types of outliners: one-pane or intrinsic, and two-pane or extrinsic, each with its strengths and weaknesses.. A one-pane outliner is known as an intrinsic outliner because the text itself is organized into an outline format—individual sections (such as paragraphs) of text can be collapsed or expanded, while keeping others in view.
Notepad++ is a source code editor. It features syntax highlighting, code folding and limited autocompletion for programming, scripting, and markup languages, but not intelligent code completion or syntax checking. As such, it may properly highlight code written in a supported schema, but whether the syntax is internally sound or compilable ...
One of the first such editors for code was Wilfred Hansen's 1969 code editor, Emily. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] It provided advanced language-independent code completion facilities, and unlike modern editors with syntax highlighting, actually made it impossible to create syntactically incorrect programs.
EVE (introduced as the Extensible VAX Editor, [1] [2] [3] later [4] as the Extensible Versatile Editor [5]) is a flexible text editor that is part of the VMS operating system. [6] EVE is implemented by using the Text Processing Utility (TPU). [7] The Emacs editor features an EVE emulation (as an add-on). [8]