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MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Thursday May 23, 2024
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  • ...to use (closer to [[natural language]]) than machine language. High-level languages are [[compiler|compiled]] or [[Interpreter (computing)|interpreted]] into m ...to use (closer to [[natural language]]) than machine language. High-level languages are [[compiler|compiled]] or [[Interpreter (computing)|interpreted]] into m
    14 KB (2,076 words) - 13:33, 31 October 2012
  • ...solation is possibly why so much sex worker funding is channelled into bad programming. This is how most proposals are determined, in offices far removed from th ...well as to accept documentation (both proposals and feedback) in different languages.{{sfn|Hart|2014|p=21}}{{sfn|Hart|2014|p=34-35}}
    9 KB (1,260 words) - 02:58, 26 February 2015
  • ["computer programming"] = {"programming"}, ["dravidian languages"] = {"dravidian", "dravidia", "dravidian peoples", "dravi
    19 KB (1,658 words) - 05:18, 16 July 2021
  • ["computer programming"] = "Octicons-terminal.svg|alt=icon", ["constructed languages"] = "Design conlang.png|alt=icon",
    16 KB (2,220 words) - 05:19, 16 July 2021
  • In this Subsection, I describe the syntax of a family of formal languages that I intend to use as a sentential calculus, and thus to interpret for th ...language'' <math>\mathfrak{C}</math> is actually a parameterized family of languages, consisting of one language <math>\mathfrak{C}(\mathfrak{P})</math> for eac
    211 KB (31,551 words) - 20:44, 2 August 2017
  • [15:12] <Logan_> Windows is mostly in C-based languages. [15:17] <ToAruShiroiNeko> c based languages?
    85 KB (11,098 words) - 03:15, 24 January 2015
  • ...> MooCow93: because I speak English pretty fluently, and some of the other languages I mentioned [20:48] <BarkingFish> I don't believe in using English with speakers of other languages when they have their own.
    112 KB (15,229 words) - 03:09, 24 January 2015
  • [20:34] <tommorris> kim_bruning: design patterns to me generally equals shit programming language. ...ike, most of the design patterns I see are inapplicable to more expressive languages. There's a reason for that. ;-)
    106 KB (14,158 words) - 03:12, 24 January 2015
  • | 1.3. Languages, Models, and Satisfaction | We begin here the development of first-order languages in a way parallel
    567 KB (86,909 words) - 21:00, 6 December 2016
  • ...retant sign domain will for the present be taken to be any one of the same languages, and so we may refer to any of them indifferently as the ''semiotic domain' ...Indeed, language reformers from time to time have proposed the design of languages that have just this property, but I think this is one of those places where
    168 KB (21,027 words) - 12:41, 6 August 2017
  • 11:12 < YuviPanda> really, I probably know more history of programming languages than my own town ...l, I feel like I wasted all of my life so far not learning any programming languages, so in the past 3 months I've tried to learn everything I can about Python
    126 KB (18,486 words) - 23:46, 20 January 2015
  • ...egrating the methods of differential geometry with the techniques of logic programming. I will attempt to embody this project in the form of computer-implemented ...and symbol systems that I favor. I find that this conception of signs and languages equips the discussion of intelligent systems with an indispensable handle o
    226 KB (34,541 words) - 14:20, 20 August 2016
  • 04:53 < wctaiwan> It's.. not quite like that, I think, at least with programming. There's this respect for learning things properly and doing your own resea ...I'm not saying it's the way programming culture works. I'm saying the way programming culture works, if your statement is representative, is potentially limiting
    271 KB (39,658 words) - 21:21, 23 January 2015
  • ...ruth is the empty word, usually denoted by &epsilon; or &lambda; in formal languages, where it forms the identity element for concatenation. To make it visible ...hat apply to terms. First, the domains of differential geometry and logic programming are connected by analogies between real and boolean types of the same patte
    394 KB (54,134 words) - 14:30, 3 March 2023
  • [20:20] <SigmaWP> WilliamH_UK: Hm... do you have programming powers too? [21:41] <kylu> Ironholds: sorry, I just happen to like languages, not that I'm good at them really. *shrug*
    96 KB (13,024 words) - 03:19, 24 January 2015
  • ...backprime\backprime} \boldsymbol\lambda {}^{\prime\prime}</math> in formal languages, where it forms the identity element for concatenation. To make it visible ...hat apply to terms. First, the domains of differential geometry and logic programming are connected by analogies between real and boolean types of the same patte
    528 KB (75,728 words) - 21:56, 14 January 2021
  • ...ckprime\backprime} \boldsymbol\lambda {}^{\prime\prime}\!</math> in formal languages, where it forms the identity element for concatenation. To make it visible ...hat apply to terms. First, the domains of differential geometry and logic programming are connected by analogies between real and boolean types of the same patte
    529 KB (75,750 words) - 14:32, 3 March 2023
  • ...all the ''sign convention'', observing it to be the treatment of choice in programming and formal language studies. In the formal language context it is necessar ...tive, and interpretive powers, employing a consensual body of conventional languages, encompassing a commonwealth of comprehensible meanings, diversely but flex
    290 KB (38,052 words) - 18:21, 28 August 2014
  • Jul 05 19:35:56 <FastLizard4> Well, I am programming :P Jul 05 23:28:11 <ToAruShiroiNeko> Swob they added irish to their languages
    157 KB (20,118 words) - 03:08, 16 August 2015
  • May 07 06:16:47 <KFP> Teles: Languages are different. Not only in terms of vocabulary and grammar but also in some May 07 20:10:21 <Qcoder00> There are programming channel on freenode
    224 KB (30,451 words) - 02:17, 25 January 2015

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