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  1. TXT.WA - Text S.A.

    Yahoo Finance

    88.60-0.60 (-0.67%)

    at Mon, May 27, 2024, 11:00AM EDT - U.S. markets open in 6 hours 32 minutes

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    • Open 88.20
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    • Low 85.50
    • Prev. Close 89.20
    • 52 Wk. High 154.60
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    • P/E 11.96
    • Mkt. Cap 2.3B
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  3. Text box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text_box

    A text box [a] is a control element of a graphical user interface, that should enable the user to input text information to be used by a program. [1] [2] Human Interface Guidelines recommend a single-line text box when only one line of input is required, and a multi-line text box only if more than one line of input may be required. Non-editable ...

  4. Rich Text Format - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rich_Text_Format

    A delimiter is one of three things: A space. A digit or hyphen (e.g. -23, 23, 275) A character other than a digit or letter (e.g. \, /, }) [30] As an example, the following RTF code. {\rtf 1 \ansi{\fonttbl\f 0 \fswiss Helvetica; }\f 0 \pard. This is some {\b bold } text. \par } would be rendered as follows:

  5. Morphology (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morphology_(linguistics)

    Word-based morphology is (usually) a word-and-paradigm approach. The theory takes paradigms as a central notion. Instead of stating rules to combine morphemes into word forms or to generate word forms from stems, word-based morphology states generalizations that hold between the forms of inflectional paradigms.

  6. Standard manuscript format - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Manuscript_format

    Standard manuscript format is a formatting style for manuscripts of short stories, novels, poems and other literary works submitted by authors to publishers. Even with the advent of desktop publishing, making it possible for anyone to prepare text that appears professionally typeset, many publishers still require authors to submit manuscripts ...

  7. Plain text - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plain_text

    According to The Unicode Standard: [1] "Plain text is a pure sequence of character codes; plain Un-encoded text is therefore a sequence of Unicode character codes. In contrast, styled text, also known as rich text, is any text representation containing plain text plus added information such as a language identifier, font size, color, hypertext ...

  8. MIME - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIME

    MIME. Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions ( MIME) is a standard that extends the format of email messages to support text in character sets other than ASCII, as well as attachments of audio, video, images, and application programs. Message bodies may consist of multiple parts, and header information may be specified in non-ASCII character sets.

  9. Optical character recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_character_recognition

    Optical word recognition – targets typewritten text, one word at a time (for languages that use a space as a word divider ). Usually just called "OCR". Intelligent character recognition (ICR) – also targets handwritten printscript or cursive text one glyph or character at a time, usually involving machine learning.

  10. Microsoft Word - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Word

    Microsoft Word is a word processor developed by Microsoft.It was first released on October 25, 1983, under the name Multi-Tool Word for Xenix systems. Subsequent versions were later written for several other platforms including: IBM PCs running DOS (1983), Apple Macintosh running the Classic Mac OS (1985), AT&T UNIX PC (1985), Atari ST (1988), OS/2 (1989), Microsoft Windows (1989), SCO Unix ...

  11. Stemming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stemming

    In linguistic morphology and information retrieval, stemming is the process of reducing inflected (or sometimes derived) words to their word stem, base or root form—generally a written word form.

  12. Lexical field theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexical_field_theory

    Lexical field theory, or word-field theory, was introduced on March 12, 1931 by the German linguist Jost Trier. He argued that words acquired their meaning through their relationships to other words within the same word-field. An extension of the sense of one word narrows the meaning of neighboring words, with the words in a field fitting ...