Subscript in a sentence as a noun

With characters like all the subscript/superscript digits and letters.

[] --> true convert [] to undefined by subscripting it: [][[]] --> undefined convert [] [[]] and true to numbers by prefixing them with + and adding them with +: +[] --> 0 +[[]] --> NaN +!!

Unanimously, they urged us not to—they already knew how frequently subscript errors occur on production runs where failure to detect them could be disastrous.

The two major forms are vitamin D2 or ergocalciferol, and vitamin D3 or cholecalciferol, vitamin D without a subscript refers to either D2 or D3 or both.

Given you are a text mining company, you of all guys should know you loose valuable information - particularly about numbers, super- and subscript characters - with this normalization strategy.

Subscript in a sentence as an adjective

"Inconsistency remains though, since the Unicode standard defines characters for full superscript Latin lowercase alphabet except q, a limited uppercase Latin alphabet, a few subscripted lowercase letters, and some Greek letters.

Let us hope such assemblers will die out, and we will see several levels of language instead: At the highest levels we will be able to write abstract programs, while at the lowest levels we will be able to control storage and register allocation, and to suppress subscript range checking, etc.

If the pointer operand points to an element of an array object, and the array is large enough, the result points to an element offset from the original element such that the difference of the subscripts of the resulting and original array elements equals the integer expression.

[1] Not the first version of Algol though, as according to Hoare Turing Award speech, customers didn't want unsafe features:\nA consequence of this principle is that every occurrence of every subscript of every subscripted variable was on every occasion checked at run time against both the upper and the lower declared bounds of the array.

Subscript definitions

noun

a character or symbol set or printed or written beneath or slightly below and to the side of another character

See also: inferior

adjective

written or printed below and to one side of another character

See also: inferior