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When Writing A Text, It Will Always Be N+1 Words Long, Where N Is The Line Break.
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When writing a text, it will always be N+1 words long, where N is
the line break.
-- Yoshi's 81 Characters Per Line Law
Related:
Some clues about signatures: (1) Sigs are preceded by the "sigdashes" line, ie "\n-- \n".
(2) Sigs contain at least the name and address of the sender....
line noise: n. 1. [techspeak] Spurious characters due to electrical noise in a communications link, especially an RS-232 serial connection.
Line noise may be induced by poor connections, interference or crosstalk from other circuits, electrical storms, {cosmic rays}, or (notionally) birds crapping on the phone wires....
line noise n. 1. [techspeak] Spurious characters due to electrical noise in a communications link, especially an RS-232 serial connection.
Line noise may be induced by poor connections, interference or crosstalk from other circuits, electrical storms, cosmic rays, or (notionally) birds crapping on the phone wires....
miswart /mis-wort/ n. [from wart by analogy with misbug] A feature that superficially appears to be a wart but has been determined to be the Right Thing.
For example, in some versions of the EMACS text editor, the `transpose characters' command exchanges the character under the cursor with the one before it on the screen, except when the cursor is at the end of a line, in which case the two characters before the cursor are exchanged....
You know you've been hacking too long when... ...you send E-mail and end each line with \n.
miswart: /mis-wort/ [from {wart} by analogy with {misbug}] n.
A {feature} that superficially appears to be a {wart} but has been determined to be the {Right Thing}....
overrun n. 1. [techspeak] Term for a frequent consequence of data arriving faster than it can be consumed, esp.
in serial line communications. For example, at 9600 baud there is almost exactly one character per millisecond, so if a silo can hold only two characters and the machine takes longer than 2 msec to get to service the interrupt, at least one character will be lost....
overrun: n. 1. [techspeak] Term for a frequent consequence of data arriving faster than it can be consumed, esp.
in serial line communications. For example, at 9600 baud there is almost exactly one character per millisecond, so if a {silo} can hold only two characters and the machine takes longer than 2 msec to get to service the interrupt, at least one character will be lost....
line eater, the n. obs. [Usenet] 1. A bug in some now-obsolete versions of the netnews software that used to eat up to BUFSIZ bytes of the article text.
The bug was triggered by having the text of the article start with a space or tab....