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c
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C
n.
high-level programming language (Computers)
c
n.
third letter of the English alphabet; musical note
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C
C (named cee ) the third letter in the ISO basic Latin alphabet. It is used to represent one hundred in Roman numerals.
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The grapheme C (minuscule: ), formed from C with the addition of an acute accent, is used in various languages. It usually denotes , the voiceless alveolo-palatal affricate, including in phonetic transcription. Its Unicode codepoints are U+0106 for C and U+0107 for c.
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C (minuscule: c) is a letter of the Latin alphabet, formed from C with the addition of a dot. It is used in Maltese to represent a voiceless postalveolar affricate, equivalent to English ch . It is occasionally used in Old English for the same reason, to distinguish it from c pronounced as , which otherwise is spelled the same. Its voiced equivalent is G.
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Ç
(c-cedilla) is a Latin script letter, used in the Albanian, Azerbaijani, Ligurian, Tatar, Turkish, Turkmen, Kurdish and Zazaki alphabets. This letter also appears in Catalan, French, Friulian, Occitan and Portuguese as a variant of the letter "c". It is also occasionally used in Crimean Tatar, and Manx.
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C (programming language)
C (pronounced , like the letter C) is a general-purpose computer programming language developed between 1969 and 1973 by Dennis Ritchie at the Bell Telephone Laboratories for use with the Unix operating system.
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C Sharp (programming language)
C# (pronounced see sharp) is a multi-paradigm programming language encompassing strong typing, imperative, declarative, functional, generic, object-oriented (class-based), and component-oriented programming disciplines. It was developed by Microsoft within its .NET initiative and later approved as a standard by Ecma (ECMA-334) and ISO (ISO/IEC 23270:2006). C# is one of the programming languages designed for the Common Language Infrastructure.
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C*
C* is an object-oriented, data-parallel superset of ANSI C with synchronous semantics.
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C+
C+ refers to:
- C++, a programming language
- ABCL/c+, a programming language
- C+ (grade), an academic grade
- Faster-than-light travel, referring to the speed of light as c.
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C++
C++ (pronounced "cee plus plus") is a statically typed, free-form, multi-paradigm, compiled, general-purpose, powerful programming language. It is regarded as an intermediate-level language, as it comprises a combination of both high-level and low-level language features. Developed by Bjarne Stroustrup starting in 1979 at Bell Labs, it adds object oriented features, such as classes, and other enhancements to the C programming language. Originally named C with Classes, the language was renamed C++ in 1983, as a pun involving the increment operator.
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C--
C-- (pronounced "see minus minus") is a C-like programming language. Its creators, functional programming researchers Simon Peyton Jones and Norman Ramsey, designed it to be generated mainly by compilers for very high-level languages rather than written by human programmers. Unlike many other intermediate languages, its representation is plain ASCII text, not bytecode or another binary format.
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C.
c. may refer to:
- Circa: in genealogy and historical writing, c. means circa, and is used when the dates of events are approximately known
- Chapter in legal citation, c. means chapter, and is used to refer to the specific chapter number which a statute has been assigned in a volume
- Caius or Gaius in Roman name abbreviations
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Cardinality of the continuum
In set theory, the cardinality of the continuum is the cardinality or “size” of the set of real numbers
, sometimes called the continuum. It is an infinite cardinal number and is denoted by
or
(a lowercase fraktur script c).
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Commodore International
Commodore is the commonly used collective name for Commodore International Limited and the various national companies that operated underneath it, including Commodore Business Machines (CBM), the U.S.-based home computer and electronics manufacturer with headquarters in West Chester, Pennsylvania that it shared with its parent. Commodore played a vital role in the development of the home–personal computer industry in the 1970s and 1980s. Commodore developed and marketed the world's best-selling desktop computer, the Commodore 64 (1982). Commodore later released the Amiga range of computers in 1985.
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Complex number
A complex number is a number which can be put in the form , where and are real numbers and is called the imaginary unit, where . In this expression, is called the real part and the imaginary part of the complex number. Complex numbers extend the idea of the one-dimensional number line to the two-dimensional complex plane by using the horizontal axis for the real part and the vertical axis for the imaginary part. The complex number
can be identified with the point . A complex number whose real part is zero is said to be purely imaginary, whereas a complex number whose imaginary part is zero is a real number. In this way the complex numbers contain the ordinary real numbers while extending them in order to solve problems that cannot be solved with only real numbers.
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Copyright symbol
The copyright symbol, or copyright sign, designated by © (a circled "C"), is the symbol used in copyright notices for works other than sound recordings (which are indicated with the ). The use of the symbol is described in United States copyright law, and, internationally, by the Universal Copyright Convention. The C stands for copyright.
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Cunt
Cunt is a word that primarily describes the female genitalia, and is widely regarded as vulgar. The earliest citation of this usage in the 1972 Oxford English Dictionary, c 1230, refers to the London street known as Gropecunt Lane. Scholar Germaine Greer has said that "it is one of the few remaining words in the English language with a genuine power to shock."
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Drive letter assignment
Drive letter assignment is the process of assigning alphabetical identifiers to physical or logical disk drives or partitions (drive volumes) in the root filesystem namespace; this usage is now mostly found in Microsoft operating systems. Unlike the concept of UNIX mount points, where volumes are named and located arbitrarily in a single hierarchical namespace, drive letter assignment allows multiple highest-level namespaces. Drive letter assignment is thus a process of using letters to name the roots of the "forest" representing the file system; each volume holds an independent "tree" (or, for non-hierarchical file systems, an independent list of files).
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Grade (education)
Grades in the realm of education are standardized measurements of varying levels of comprehension within fish a subject area. Grades can be assigned in letters (for example, A, B, C, D, or E, or F), as a range (for example 4.0–1.0), as a number out of a possible total (for example out of 20 or 100), as descriptors (excellent, great, satisfactory, needs improvement), in percentages, or, as is common in some post-secondary institutions in some countries, as a Grade Point Average (GPA). GPA is calculated by taking the number of grade points a student earned in a given period of time divided by the total number of credits taken. The GPA can be used by potential employers or further post-secondary institutions to assess and compare applicants. A Cumulative Grade Point Average is a calculation of the average of all of a student's grades for all semesters and courses completed up to a given academic term, whereas the GPA may only refer to one term.
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Riemann sphere
In mathematics, the Riemann sphere (or extended complex plane), named after the 19th century mathematician Bernhard Riemann, is the sphere obtained from the complex plane by adding a point at infinity. The sphere is the geometric representation of the extended complex numbers C ∪ {∞}, which consist of the complex numbers together with a symbol ∞ to represent infinity.
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SIGINT (POSIX)
On POSIX-compliant platforms, SIGINT is the signal sent to a process by its controlling terminal when a user wishes to interrupt the process. In source code, SIGINT is a symbolic constant defined in the header file
signal.h. Symbolic signal names are used because a signal's numeric value can vary across platforms; on the vast majority of systems, it is signal #2| See more at Wikipedia.org... |
© This article uses material from Wikipedia® and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License and under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
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C
Noun
1. a degree on the Centigrade scale of temperature
(synonym) degree Centigrade, degree Celsius
(hypernym) degree
(hyponym) standard temperature
2. one of the four nucleotides used in building DNA; all four nucleotides have a common phosphate group and a sugar (ribose)
(synonym) deoxycytidine monophosphate
(hypernym) nucleotide
3. a base found in DNA and RNA and derived from pyrimidine; pairs with guanine
(synonym) cytosine
(hypernym) pyrimidine
(substance-holonym) deoxyribonucleic acid, desoxyribonucleic acid, DNA
4. an abundant nonmetallic tetravalent element occurring in three allotropic forms: amorphous carbon and graphite and diamond; occurs in all organic compounds
(synonym) carbon, atomic number 6
(hypernym) chemical element, element
(hyponym) fullerene
(substance-holonym) coal
5. ten 10s
(synonym) hundred, 100, century, one C, centred
(hypernym) large integer
6. a unit of electrical charge equal to the amount of charge transferred by a current of 1 ampere in 1 second
(synonym) coulomb, ampere-second
(hypernym) charge unit, quantity unit
(part-holonym) abcoulomb
7. a general-purpose programing language closely associated with the UNIX operating system
(hypernym) programming language, programing language
8. the 3rd letter of the Roman alphabet
(hypernym) letter, letter of the alphabet, alphabetic character
(member-holonym) Roman alphabet, Latin alphabet
9. street names for cocaine
(synonym) coke, blow, nose candy, snow
(hypernym) cocaine, cocain
c
Noun
1. the speed at which light travels in a vacuum; the constancy and universality of the speed of light is recognized by defining it to be exactly 299,792,458 meters per second
(synonym) speed of light, light speed
(hypernym) speed, velocity
Adjective
1. being ten more than ninety
(synonym) hundred, a hundred, one hundred, 100
(similar) cardinal
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C (Celsius)
Celsius, of or pertaining to the temperature scale in which there are 100 degrees between the freezing and boiling points, centigrade
C (das)
n.
c, third letter of the English alphabet; ut, musical note; (Computers) programming language C
C++ (Programmiersprache)
C++, type of object-oriented high-level programming language
| Babylon French English dictionary | Download this dictionary |
C
n.
C, high-level programming language (Computers)
c
nm.
c, third letter of the English alphabet; high-level programming language (Computers)
C++
n.
C++, type of object-oriented high-level programming language
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