Note: "broken bar" and the glyph "¦" redirect here.
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"http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/Pipeline_(Unix)" class="copylinks">Unix Pipeline construct
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"http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/divisibility" class="copylinks">Divisibility : <math>a b</math>, read ''"a '''divides''' b"''
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"http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/Sheffer_stroke" class="copylinks">Sheffer Stroke in Logic : <math>ab</math>, read ''"a '''nand''' b"''
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"http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/evaluate" class="copylinks">Evaluate : <math>a+3a=4</math>, read ''"a plus 3 '''evaluated for when''' a equals 4"'', or <math>4+3=7</math>
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"http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/Backus-Naur_form" class="copylinks">Backus-Naur Form the expression consists of sequences of symbols and/or sequences separated by '', indicating a '''choice''', the whole being a possible substitution for the symbol on the left
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<name> <initial>
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"http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/C_(programming_language)" class="copylinks">C and other languages following C syntax conventions, such as C++ , Perl , Java and C# , ''(a b)'' denotes a Bitwise Or whilst a double vertical bar ''(a b)'' denotes a ( Short-circuited ) Logical Or
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"http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/PL/I" class="copylinks">PL/I and SQL , the operator "" denotes String Concatenation
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"http://boardsusplaystationcom/i/smilies/16x16_smiley-indifferentgif" class="copylinks" target="_blank">indifferent smiley in the actual post
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"http://wwwinformationdelightinfo/information/entry/1963" class="copylinks">1963 , American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII-1963), one of the first widely used character maps only had 69 display ("printable") characters and A&ndashZ, and 0&ndash9 accounts for 36 of those characters Vertical bar ("") is the ASCII-1963 character at position 124 (decimal) Broken bar ("¦") is not part of the ASCII character set (any version), but a separate character that appeared (along with vertical bar) first in the EBCDIC family of character sets, and was copied from there into ISO 8859-1 and Unicode The typical computer keyboard used in the United Kingdom features separate keys for "vertical bar" and "broken bar", however most UK keyboard drivers today map both keys onto the ASCII character "vertical bar", as "broken bar" has hardly any practical application
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