When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bell character - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_character

    Modern terminal emulators often integrate the warnings to the desktop environment (e.g., the macOS Terminal will play the system warning sound) and also often offer a silent visual bell feature that flashes the terminal window briefly.

  3. GNOME Terminator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNOME_Terminator

    GNOME Terminator is a free and open-source terminal emulator for Linux programmed in Python, licensed under GPL-2.0-only. The goal of the project is to produce a useful tool for arranging terminals. The goal of the project is to produce a useful tool for arranging terminals.

  4. Snack Sound Toolkit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snack_Sound_Toolkit

    The Snack Sound Toolkit is a cross-platform library written by Kåre Sjölander of the Swedish Royal Technical University (KTH) with bindings for the scripting languages Tcl, Python, and Ruby. It provides audio I/O, audio analysis and processing functions, such as spectral analysis , pitch tracking , and filtering , and related graphics ...

  5. "Hello, World!" program - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/"Hello,_World!"_program

    The previous example in the tutorial printed hi! on the terminal, and the phrase hello, world! was introduced as a slightly longer greeting that required several character constants for its expression. The Jargon File reports that "hello, world" instead originated in 1967 with the language BCPL. [5]

  6. Secure voice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secure_voice

    A digital secure voice usually includes two components, a digitizer to convert between speech and digital signals and an encryption system to provide confidentiality. It is difficult in practice to send the encrypted signal over the same voiceband communication circuits used to transmit unencrypted voice, e.g. analog telephone lines or mobile radios, due to bandwidth expansion.

  7. Pygame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pygame

    Pygame was originally written by Pete Shinners to replace PySDL after its development stalled. [2] [8] It has been a community project since 2000 [9] and is released under the free software GNU Lesser General Public License [5] (which "provides for Pygame to be distributed with open source and commercial software" [10]).

  8. kitty (terminal emulator) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitty_(terminal_emulator)

    kitty is a free and open-source GPU-accelerated [2] [3] terminal emulator for Linux, macOS, [4] and some BSD distributions. [5] Focused on performance and features, kitty is written in a mix of C and Python programming languages.

  9. Python syntax and semantics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Python_syntax_and_semantics

    Python sets are very much like mathematical sets, and support operations like set intersection and union. Python also features a frozenset class for immutable sets, see Collection types. Dictionaries (class dict) are mutable mappings tying keys and corresponding values. Python has special syntax to create dictionaries ({key: value})