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Pages in category "Lua (programming language)-scripted video games" The following 180 pages are in this category, out of 180 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
This essay explains various issues about the execution speed and performance of Lua script in Wikipedia. The speed of using Lua modules can vary greatly, compared to similar markup-based templates, often ranging from 4x-8x times faster, or 180,000x faster when scanning text strings, which can exceed the 500-character parser-function markup limit as 64,000 characters or more.
Lua scripts may load extension modules using require, [20] just like modules written in Lua itself, or with package.loadlib. [22] When a C library is loaded via require ( 'foo' ) Lua will look for the function luaopen_foo and call it, which acts as any C function callable from Lua and generally returns a table filled with methods.
The Lua language has allowed misspelled, or uninitialized, variables to be used in a script which can eventually cause "script error" while giving no other indication of the misspelled name or invalid data.
The Aurora Protocol is a link layer communications protocol for use on point-to-point serial links. Developed by Xilinx, it is intended for use in high-speed (gigabits/second and more) connections internally in a computer or in an embedded system. It uses either 8b/10b encoding or 64b/66b encoding.
Hume area of 1856 map of Allegany County, New York, a couple decades before Lua was born there. Lua was the sixth of 10 children born to Ellen McBride and her husband Reuben D. Moore in Hume, New York, a rural small town located in western New York State's Allegany County, about 90 kilometers south of Lake Ontario.
Aurora received positive reviews. [3] Writing in The Guardian, Adam Roberts described it as "the best generation starship novel I have ever read." [4] NPR's Alan Cheuse praised the novel's narrative voice: "Almost the entire narrative, with all its science and all its strong characters and weak, its heroes and whiners, explorers and those fearful of settling anywhere, and all of its ...
SpeedScript is a word processor originally printed as a type-in MLX machine language listing in 1984-85 issues of Compute! and Compute!'s Gazette magazines. Approximately 5 KB in length, it provided many of the same features as commercial word processing packages of the 8-bit era, such as PaperClip and Bank Street Writer.