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This shows the typical layout of a simple computer's program memory with the text, various data, and stack and heap sections. Historically, BSS (from Block Started by Symbol) is a pseudo-operation in UA-SAP (United Aircraft Symbolic Assembly Program), the assembler developed in the mid-1950s for the IBM 704 by Roy Nutt, Walter Ramshaw, and others at United Aircraft Corporation.
A type of macro virus that cuts and pastes the text of a document in the macro. The macro could be invoked with the Auto-open macro so that the text would be re-created when the document (empty) is opened. The user will not notice that the document is empty. The macro could also convert only some parts of the text in order to be less noticeable.
The GML Starter Set (GMLSS) [25] [26] is a set of macro definitions and profiles that implements [27] a set of tags that has more of a semantic orientation than the raw Script/VS control words. Tags begin with a colon and end with a period, and may contain attributes between the name and the closing period; a line may contain multiple tags.
iMacros for Firefox and Chrome offers a feature known as social scripting, [16] which allows users to share macros and scripts in a manner similar to social bookmarking. Technically, these functions are distributed on web sites by embedding the imacro and the controlling JavaScript inside a plain text link. [17]
A BSS machine M is given by a list of + instructions (to be described below), indexed ,, …,. A configuration of M is a tuple ( k , r , w , x ) {\displaystyle (k,r,w,x)} , where k {\displaystyle k} is the index of the instruction to be executed next, r {\displaystyle r} and w {\displaystyle w} are registers holding non-negative integers, and x ...
An anaphoric macro is a type of programming macro that deliberately captures some form supplied to the macro which may be referred to by an anaphor (an expression referring to another). Anaphoric macros first appeared in Paul Graham's On Lisp and their name is a reference to linguistic anaphora—the use of words as a substitute for preceding ...
Microsoft Macro Assembler (MASM) is an x86 assembler that uses the Intel syntax for MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows. Beginning with MASM 8.0, there are two versions of the assembler: One for 16-bit & 32-bit assembly sources, and another ( ML64 ) for 64-bit sources only.
VBS—Visual Basic Script; VDI—Virtual Desktop Infrastructure; VDU—Visual Display Unit; VDM—Virtual DOS machine; VDSL—Very High Bitrate Digital Subscriber Line; VESA—Video Electronics Standards Association; VFAT—Virtual FAT; VHD—Virtual Hard Disk; VFS—Virtual File System; VG—Volume Group; VGA—Video Graphics Array; VHF—Very ...