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- @TEXT@
- Mr. See owned a saw, and Mr. Soar owned a seesaw. Now, See's saw
- sawed Soar's seesaw before Soar saw See that made
- Soar sore. Had Soar seen See's saw before See sawed Soar's seesaw, See's
- saw would not have sawed Soars' seesaw. So See's saw sawed Soar's seesaw.
- But it was a shame to see Soar so sore because See's saw sawed Soar's seesaw.
- @TEXT@
- ASCII, which means American Standard Code for Information Interchange, is a
- 7-bit coding format for character data.
- An OXFORD Dictionary definition --
- TYP-IST [ti-pist] n. a person who types -especially one employed to do so.
- @TEXT@
- Cuddly cows graze in groves on grass which grows in grooves in groves.
- Six selfish shellfish saved scallops.
- The skunk sat on a stump and thunk that the stump stunk.
- But the stump thunk the skunk stunk so the skunk skittered.
- @TEXT@
- Pete's pa, Pete, poked to the pea patch to pick a
- peck of pea for the poor pink
- pig in the pine hole pig pen.
- @TEXT@
- In point of fact, and in the absence of references - which
- the orator delivers with thrasonical bombast and psittaceous
- vacuity - he might have said simply, "I assure you, history
- will go on one way or another." Advanced thinking inescapably
- leads some to promulgate esoteric cogitations with platitudinous
- ponderosity. A few learn to avoid such flatulent garrulity. Still,
- the authors work was interesting and immeasurably entertaining.
- @TEXT@
- Your specification is dated April 12th [4/12]. But Section 47-{3}, para. 5
- will be replaced; Section 56-{1} is OK.
- @TEXT@
- For fine fresh fish phone Phil. But at Phil's Fish Facility,
- I never smelled a smelt that smelled as
- bad as that smelt smelled.
- @TEXT@
- Can you imagine an imaginary menagerie
- manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie?
- @TEXT@
- BASIC's RND instruction (for RaNDom),
- produces a decimal fraction somewhere between 0 and 1; for example - .173514.
- @TEXT@
- If I had some ham, I could have some ham and eggs, if I had some eggs.
- Barbara burned the brown bread badly.
- Buy only a little brown cape, for he
- who buys only a little brown cape pays only for a little brown cape.
- @TEXT@
- A Communications 'protocol' is a procedure that sending and
- receiving computers follow to accurately transmit data over the
- communications link. The PC's protocol is Asynchronous Communication.
- @TEXT@
- Brisk brave brigadiers brandished broad
- bright blades, blunderbusses, and bludgeons - balancing them badly.
- Seventy shuddering sailors standing silent as short, sharp, shattering
- shocks shake their splendid ship.
- @TEXT@
- BASIC is one of the standard programming languages for the PC.
- Other programming languages available include FORTRAN, COBOL, and the
- acclaimed 'C'-Language, which this program, PC-FASTYPE, is written in.
- @TEXT@
- Ed Nott was shot and Sam Shott was not. So it is better to be Shott
- than Nott. Some say Nott was not shot. But Shott says he shot Nott.
- Either the shot Shott shot at Nott was not shot, or Nott was shot.
- If the shot Shott shot shot Nott, Nott was shot. But if the shot Shott shot
- shot Shott, then Shott was shot, not Nott. However, the shot Shott shot
- shot not Shott - but Nott. So, Ed Nott was shot and that's hot! is it not?
- @TEXT@
- You must have an account on the system (or equivalent) into
- which you wish to log in. The preferred interface is xcomm.
- The cu interface is included for those user's attached to
- the "call UNIX" command of SYSTEM V. This manual page
- describes only xcomm's interface to T-I-P.
- @TEXT@
- SCCS is a computer language source code management
- system which maintains records
- of changes made in files within that system. Records stating
- what the changes were, why and when they were made, and
- who made them are kept for each version. Previous versions
- can be recovered, and different versions can be maintained
- simultaneously. SCCS also insures that two people are not
- editing the same file at the same time.
- @TEXT@
- The traditional SCCS commands are also included for reference
- in the "SEE ALSO" section. If the sccs(1) preprocessor is used,
- small discrepancies may exist due to conflicts between the
- command parameters and the sccs(1) preprocessor parameters.
- @TEXT@
- The VI text editor is the standard UNIX text editor. If the file
- argument is given, VI simulates an 'ED' command (see below) on
- the named file; that is to say, the file is read into VI's
- buffer so that it can be edited. The optional dash (-) suppresses
- the printing of character counts by the E, R, and W commands, of
- diagnostics from E and Q commands, and of the ! prompt after
- a "!SHELL" command.
- @TEXT@
- The '-p' option of the "ED" line editor command allows the user to specify
- a prompt string. The ED line editor operates on a copy of
- the file it is editing; changes made to the copy have no
- effect on the file until a W (write) command is given. The
- copy of the text being edited resides in a temporary file
- called the buffer. There is only one buffer.
- @TEXT@
- The LOGIN command is used when a user initially signs on to
- a remote computer system, or it may be used at any time to
- change from one user to another. The latter case is the one
- summarized above and described here. To sign on initially,
- see the Guide to System Environment Setup.
- @TEXT@
- The mkdir command creates specified directories in mode 777.
- The directories are then modified by umask(2), according to
- how you have set up umask. Standard entries, '.', for the
- directory itself, and '..' for its parent, are made automatically.
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