ISO 639-3 is an international standard for language codes. In defining some of its language codes, some are defined as macrolanguages covering either significantly different dialects or a net of very closely related languages. There are 56 languages in
ISO 639-2 which are considered to be “macrolanguages” in 639-3
[1].
See more at Wikipedia.org...
For other uses, see
Macro (disambiguation) A macro in
computer science is a rule or
pattern that specifies how a certain input sequence (often a sequence of
characters) should be mapped to an output sequence (also often a sequence of characters) according to a defined procedure.The term originated with macro-
assemblers, where the idea is to make available to the
programmer a sequence of computing instructions as a single program statement, making the programming task less tedious and less error-prone. Many different macro-instructions have been made available for various purposes, eliminating some of the repetitiveness of the programming, as well as simplifying the writing and the reading and understanding of the
program, much of its complexity being hidden (more at #Text substitution macros below).
See more at Wikipedia.org...