Separator in a sentence as a noun

This includes the use\n of "\\" instead of "/" as the path separator, and "/" instead of "-"\n as the switch character.

Uh, is it just me or is this chart having a hard time with comma versus period for "thousands separator"?

There is an expression separator in there, so there must be two expressions which are separated by it.

As far as i understand the semicolon is just an expression separator like in Erlang and Pascal.

About the inconsistent order of 'haystack' and 'needle', or the lack of a common policy on whether or not to use a underscore as separator?

Slashes typically mean a directory separator but they're really a character like any other.

Likewise, shading and gradients to give an impression of depth and lighting are often used to distinguish items that are clickable or as a separator.

Is often a problem, because my bank will issue tables with , used as decimal separator, but copying that into some tool everything breaks because it expects .

Next you'll be telling us we don't need namespaces, we can just use an underscore as a separator!> and say "the results are undefined if you call methods that start with an underscore".

It also illustrates the complexities behind making software portable - in this case, using the nation-neutral place separator.

JavaScript has a comma operator, which is basically just a statement separator, but it has the interesting property that it joins two statements as a single expression.

This byte is\n generally 0.\n 3 Set the device availability byte to the value in\n DL.\n\nIt looks like we have IBM to blame for '\\' and '/' as a path separator/switch character in DOS/Windows, Microsoft originally was using the Xenix '/' and '-' respectively.

"* Checked keywords on top landing pages for searches like "slang", "slang dictionary", "slang thesaurus"* Remove unnecessary extra spaces in the middle of sentences* Use complete sentences even where completely unnecessary* Restructure entire /definition+of/word+goes+here directory structure to be /meaning-of/word-goes-here, since people search for "meaning of" more frequently than "definition of", and since Google seems to have stopped treating + as a word separator in some cases.

Separator definitions

noun

an apparatus that uses centrifugal force to separate particles from a suspension

See also: centrifuge extractor