N
\n in C and related languages, the symbol, within a character string, that
indicates starting a new line.
Thus, “hello\nworld” is a string which
prints out as:
hello
world
nagware shareware that always opens with a message begging for remuneration.
Some...
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N
\n in C and related languages, the symbol, within a character string, that
indicates starting a new line.
Thus, “hello\nworld” is a string which
prints out as:
hello
world
nagware shareware that always opens with a message begging for remuneration.
Some nagware is exceptionally persistent and interrupts your
work sessions with messages reminding you to register (and pay!).
See
FREE SOFTWARE; SHAREWARE.
.
name a suffix indicating that a web or e-mail domain address belongs to an
individual person (in any country).
Contrast .
COM.
See also ICANN; TLD.
nameserver a computer whose job is to translate names into IP ADDRESSES
for other computers.
Most computers on the Internet do not contain their own directories
of the whole network.
Instead, they rely on nameservers to interpret
names for them.
Nameservers, in turn, obtain information from other
nameservers.
See DNS.
namespace
1.
the set of names available for naming things such as files, variables
in a program, or computers
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