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MEANING code, which when compiled will produce a document that will look very similar to the document on the left. Compiling formatting code is not a WYSIWYG process.]]
Modern software does a fairly good job of optimizing the screen display for a particular type of output. For example, a Word Processor is optimized for output to a typical printer. The software often emulates the resolution of the printer in order to get as close as possible to WYSIWYG. However, that is not the main attraction of WYSIWYG, which is the ability of the user to be able to visualize what he or she is doing. In many situations, the subtle differences between what you see and what you get are unimportant. In fact, applications may offer multiple WYSIWYG modes with different levels of "realism," including:
Applications may deliberately deviate or offer alternative composing layouts from a WYSIWYG because of overhead or the user's preference to enter commands or code directly. HISTORICAL NOTES
PROBLEMS OF IMPLEMENTATION Because designers of WYSIWYG applications typically have to account for a variety of different output devices, each of which has different capabilities, there are a number of problems that must be solved in each implementation. These can be seen as trade-offs between multiple design goals, and hence applications that use different solutions may be suitable for different purposes. Typically, the design goals of a WYSIWYG application may include:
It is not usually possible to achieve all of these goals at once. The major problem to be overcome is that of varying output resolution. As of 2007, monitors typically have a resolution of between 92 and 125 pixels per inch. Printers generally have resolutions between 240 and 1440 pixels per inch; in some printers the horizontal resolution is different to the vertical. This becomes a problem when trying to lay out text; because most output technologies require the spacing between characters to be a whole number of pixels, rounding errors will cause the same text to require different amounts of space in different resolutions. Solutions to this include:
Other problems that have been faced in the past include printers that have a selection of fonts that are not identical to those used for on-screen display (largely solved by the use of downloadable font technologies like TrueType ) and matching color profiles between different devices (mostly solved now thanks to printer drivers with good color model conversion software). RELATED ACRONYMS As with variations on the Smiley , creating variations on the Acronym WYSIWYG is something of a game. Many variations are used only to illustrate a point or make a joke, and have very limited real use. Some that have been proposed include, in order of increasing obscurity: ; WYSIWIS :What You See Is What I See (used in context of distant multi-users applications, e.g. CSCW ) ;WYSIWYAF :What You See Is What You Asked For (in reference to programs such as those used for manual typesetting such as TeX or Troff , that what is retrieved from the system is what the user specified - in essence, a statement of GIGO ; sometimes also YAFIYGI: You Asked For It, You Got It) ; WYSIAYG :What You See Is All You Get (used to point out that a style of "heading" that ''refers'' to a specification of " Helvetica 15 bold" provides more useful information than a style of "Helvetica 15 bold" every time a heading is used) ; WYSIWYM :What You See Is What You Mean (You see what best conveys the message) ; WYCIWYG :What You Cache is What You Get ("wyciwyg://" turns up occasionally in the address bar of Gecko -based Web Browser s like Mozilla Firefox when the browser is retrieving Cache d information) -or - What You Create Is What You Get -or- What You Click Is What You Get) ;WYGIWYG :What You Get Is What You Get (an alternative approach to document formatting using Markup Language s, e.g. HTML , to define content and trusting the layout software to make it pretty enough) ;WYSYHYG :What You See You Hope You Get (//) (a term ridiculing Text Mode Word Processing software; used in the Microsoft Windows Video Collection, a video distributed around 1991 on two VHS cassettes at promotional events). ;WYSIWYN :What You See Is What You Need (used in context of a code centric user interface as an opposite to the WYSIWYG user interface, e.g. in reference to the HTML editor HomeSite ) ;WYSIWYP :What You See Is What You Print (wizzy-whip) (refers to the ability of a computer system to print colors exactly as they appear on a monitor. WYSIWYP printing requires a special program, called a color management system (CMS) to calibrate the monitor and printer). ;WYSINWYG :What You See Is Not What You Get (a joke about how WYSIWYG editors don't always work) ; WYFIWYG : What You Feel Is What You Get (refers to Haptic real-time 3D modelling combining software and hardware) ; WYSIWYS : What You See Is What You Sign is an important requirement for electronic signature software. It means that the software has to be able to show you the content without any hidden content before you sign it. REFERENCES SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS
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