Glossary
From Coder Merlin
Within these castle walls be forged Mavens of Computer Science ...
— Merlin, The Coder
A[edit]
- API
- an Application Programming Interface (API) connects computers or software to each other; a common example is logging-in to a third-party site via Google.
- ASCII
- American Standard Code for Information Interchange; ASCII codes represent characters and text in computers and other electronic communication devices
B[edit]
- Base
- aka Number Base is the number of unique digits, including zero, used to represent numbers in a positional number system
C[edit]
- CSS
- Cascading Style Sheets is a programming language that is commonly used with HTML and provides styling for a web page
D[edit]
- Directory
- a logical grouping of related files (and potentially other directories)
E[edit]
- emacs
- a powerful text editor and environment available on various operating systems, including Linux, Windows, and macOS
F[edit]
- File
- either a destination or source for a stream of data, most often persisted on a storage device
G[edit]
H[edit]
- Hexadecimal System
- {{{3}}}
- HTML
- HyperText Markup Language, is one of the essential building blocks for web pages. It defines the general structure of a web page, as well as its content. Every single website on the internet uses HTML in one form or another.
I[edit]
J[edit]
- JavaScript
- a high-level programming language, which can be used to fetch data via an API, modify HTML and CSS, and is the core of modern web pages
K[edit]
L[edit]
M[edit]
N[edit]
O[edit]
P[edit]
- PHP
- the most commonly used server-side language
- Process
- a program that is being executed by the operating system
- Positional Notation
- a method of encoding numbers that uses the same symbol for different orders of magnitude depending on its position; the value of a position is dependent on the location within the number
- Python
- a free, high-level open source programming language that can be used in both front-end and back-end development
Q[edit]
R[edit]
S[edit]
- Shell
- a user interface that provides access to an operating system's services
- Syntactic Sugar
- syntax within a language which isn't strictly required but, in some manner, generally through increased clarity or readability, makes the syntax easier to understand for humans