/macosx-10.9.5/vim-53/runtime/syntax/ |
H A D | plaintex.vim | 53 \ '\\\%(endgraf\|\%(non\)\=frenchspacing\|hang\|item\%(item\)\=\|narrower\|normalbaselines\|obey\%(lines\|spaces\)\|openup\|proclaim\|\%(tt\)\=raggedright\|textindent\)\>' 82 \ '\\\%([!*,;>{}|_^]\|\%([aA]rrowvert\|[bB]ig\%(g[lmr]\=\|r\)\=\|\%(border\|p\)\=matrix\|displaylines\|\%(down\|up\)bracefill\|eqalign\%(no\)\|leqalignno\|[lr]moustache\|mathpalette\|root\|s[bp]\|skew\|sqrt\)\>\)' 98 \ '\\\%(amalg\|ast\|big\%(c[au]p\|circ\|o\%(dot\|plus\|times\|sqcup\)\|triangle\%(down\|up\)\|uplus\|vee\|wedge\|bmod\|bullet\)\|c[au]p\|cdot[ps]\=\|circ\|coprod\|d\=dagger\|diamond\%(suit\)\=\|div\|land\|lor\|mp\|o\%(dot\|int\|minus\|plus\|slash\|times\)pm\|prod\|setminus\|sqc[au]p\|sqsu[bp]seteq\|star\|su[bp]set\%(eq\)\=\|sum\|times\|uplus\|vee\|wedge\|wr\)\>' 102 \ '\\\%(approx\|asymp\|bowtie\|buildrel\|cong\|dashv\|doteq\|[dD]ownarrow\|equiv\|frown\|geq\=\|gets\|gg\|hook\%(left\|right\)arrow\|iff\|in\|leq\=\|[lL]eftarrow\|\%(left\|right\)harpoon\%(down\|up\)\|[lL]eftrightarrow\|ll\|[lL]ongleftrightarrow\|longmapsto\|[lL]ongrightarrow\|mapsto\|mid\|models\|[ns][ew]arrow\|neq\=\|ni\|not\%(in\)\=\|owns\|parallel\|perp\|prec\%(eq\)\=\|propto\|[rR]ightarrow\|rightleftharpoons\|sim\%(eq\)\=\|smile\|succ\%(eq\)\=\|to\|[uU]parrow\|[uU]pdownarrow\|[vV]ert\)\>'
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H A D | vim.vim | 20 syn keyword vimCommand contained abo[veleft] arge[dit] as[cii] bf[irst] bo[tright] breakl[ist] buffers cad[dexpr] cc cf[ile] c[hange] cla[st] cn[ext] colo[rscheme] cope[n] cr[ewind] d[elete] diffpatch dig[raphs] ds[earch] echon emenu* endw[hile] f[ile] fin[d] fo[ld] foldo[pen] gr[ep] his[tory] il[ist] iuna[bbrev] keepalt lad[dexpr] later lcl[ose] lf[ile] lg[etfile] ll lmapc[lear] lnf[ile] lockv[ar] lp[revious] lua lvimgrepa[dd] marks mks[ession] mod[e] nbc[lose] n[ext] nu[mber] o[pen] pe[rl] popu[p] p[rint] promptf[ind] ptf[irst] ptN[ext] pu[t] qa[ll] rec[over] redraws[tatus] retu[rn] rub[y] ru[ntime] sa[rgument] sbl[ast] sbp[revious] scrip[tnames] setl[ocal] sign sl[eep] smenu sno[magic] so[urce] spellr[epall] spr[evious] star[tinsert] stopi[nsert] sunmenu t tabe[dit] tabm[ove] tabo[nly] ta[g] tclf[ile] tj[ump] tn[ext] tr[ewind] tu[nmenu] undol[ist] up[date] vie[w] vmapc[lear] wh[ile] win[size] wq wundo x[it] XMLent xunme 22 syn keyword vimCommand contained arga[dd] argl[ocal] ba[ll] bm[odified] brea[k] bro[wse] bw[ipeout] cal[l] cd cgetb[uffer] chd[ir] clo[se] cnf[ile] comp[iler] cpf[ile] cw[indow] delm[arks] diffsplit dj[ump] earlier el[se] endf[unction] ex filetype fir[st] folddoc[losed] fu[nction] ha[rdcopy] if is[earch] ju[mps] kee[pmarks] lan[guage] lc[d] lefta[bove] lgetb[uffer] lgrepa[dd] lli[st] lne[xt] lo[adview] lop[en] ls luafile mak[e] menut[ranslate] mkvie[w] mzf[ile] nbs[tart] nmapc[lear] omapc[lear] pc[lose] po[p] pre[serve] profd[el] ps[earch] ptl[ast] ptr[ewind] pyf[ile] quita[ll] red[o] res[ize] ri[ght] rubyf[ile] sal[l] sba[ll] sbn[ext] sb[uffer] setf[iletype] sfir[st] sim[alt] sm[ap] sN[ext] snoremenu spe[llgood] spellw[rong] sta[g] stj[ump] sun[hide] sv[iew] tabc[lose] tabfir[st] tabn[ext] tabr[ewind] tc[l] tf[irst] tm to[pleft] ts[elect] u[ndo] unlo[ckvar] ve[rsion] vimgrepa[dd] vs[plit] windo wN[ext] w[rite] X xme xnoreme y[ank] 33 syn keyword vimOption contained altkeymap arabic autowrite backupcopy bdir bin bomb bt ccv charconvert cinoptions cms comments conceallevel cpo cscopequickfix cst cursorline dex digraph ead ei equalalways eventignore fde fdt fileencoding fkmap foldenable foldminlines formatprg gdefault gp guifontset helpfile hidden hl ignorecase imdisable includeexpr inf isident key langmap lines lmap ma matchtime mco ml modeline mousefocus mousetime nrformats ofu para pdev pi previewwindow printmbfont qe report rlc ruler scb scs sessionoptions shellquote shiftwidth showmatch siso smc spc spl ss statusline suffixesadd sws 80 " commands not picked up by the generator (due to non-standard format) 347 syn match vimNotation "\(\\\|<lt>\)\=<\([scamd]-\)\{0,4}x\=\(f\d\{1,2}\|[^ \t:]\|cr\|lf\|linefeed\|return\|k\=del\%[ete]\|bs\|backspace\|tab\|esc\|right\|left\|help\|undo\|insert\|ins\|k\=home\|k\=end\|kplus\|kminus\|kdivide\|kmultiply\|kenter\|space\|k\=\(page\)\=\(\|down\|up\)\)>" contains=vimBracket 459 syn match vimSyncLines contained "\(min\|max\)\=lines=" nextgroup=vimNumber
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/macosx-10.9.5/emacs-92/emacs/etc/ |
H A D | gnus-refcard.tex | 15 % dvips -t letter -f gnus-refcard.dvi > gnus-refcard.ps 19 % dvips -t letter -f gnus-booklet.dvi > gnus-booklet.ps 60 \def\logoscale{0.5}% FIXME: too large for 2up printing? --rsteib 238 C & (M C; M C-c; M H; c, Z c; Z n; Z C) Killed by {\bf catch-up}.\\ 254 A & {\bf Answered} (followed-up or replied). [2]\\ 287 c & Mark all unticked articles in this group as read ({\bf catch-up}). 306 C & Mark all articles in this group as read ({\bf Catch-up}). [p/p]\\ 505 C-t & Toggle {\bf truncation} of summary lines.\\ 572 C-c C-s C-l & Sort the summary-buffer by amount of {\bf lines}.\\ 596 B q & {\bf Query} where the article will end up afte [all...] |
H A D | termcap.src | 87 # roughly by type frequency with ANSI/VT100 and other common types up front. 104 # The file is divided up into major sections (headed by lines beginning with 220 # and vt100 up front in confidence that this will catch 95% of new hardware). 270 # Special "terminals". These are used to label tty lines when you don't 300 # ANSI capabilities are broken up into pieces, so that a terminal 303 :do=\E[B:le=\E[D:nd=\E[C:up=\E[A: 341 :pf=\E[4i:po=\E[5i:ps=\E[0i: 347 # ROM graphics for control characters such as the diamond, up- and down-arrow. 477 :sr=\EM:ta=^I:ue=\E[m:up [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/bash-92/bash-3.2/ |
H A D | variables.c | 372 /* Set up initial value of $_ */ 404 /* set up the prompts. */ 864 sh_set_lines_and_columns (lines, cols) 865 int lines, cols; 875 v = inttostr (lines, val, sizeof (val)); 1519 /* Look up the variable entry named NAME. If SEARCH_TEMPENV is non-zero, 1539 a function or builtin, or if we are looking up a variable in a 1555 /* Look up the variable entry named NAME. Returns the entry or NULL. */ 1563 /* Look up the function entry whose name matches STRING. 1938 /* Bind a variable NAME to VALUE. This conses up th [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/ncurses-42/ncurses/include/ |
H A D | Caps.keys | 41 # terminfo(5) man page; lines beginning with `#%' are passed through to become 102 # as a terminfo object, and breaking this would be bad. It's up the ncurses 112 # format). It's up to you what you have the compiler do with it. 141 # to be older types that don't use up a lot of string space on function keys. 184 #%to line up nicely. 198 #%lines affected 266 lines lines num li - - YBCGE number of lines on screen or page 267 lines_of_memory lm num lm - - YB-G- lines o [all...] |
H A D | Caps.uwin | 39 # terminfo(5) man page; lines beginning with `#%' are passed through to become 100 # as a terminfo object, and breaking this would be bad. It's up the ncurses 110 # format). It's up to you what you have the compiler do with it. 139 # to be older types that don't use up a lot of string space on function keys. 182 #%to line up nicely. 196 #%lines affected 257 lines lines num li - - YBCGE number of lines on screen or page 258 lines_of_memory lm num lm - - YB-G- lines o [all...] |
H A D | Caps | 39 # terminfo(5) man page; lines beginning with `#%' are passed through to become 100 # as a terminfo object, and breaking this would be bad. It's up the ncurses 110 # format). It's up to you what you have the compiler do with it. 139 # to be older types that don't use up a lot of string space on function keys. 182 #%to line up nicely. 196 #%lines affected 264 lines lines num li - - YBCGE number of lines on screen or page 265 lines_of_memory lm num lm - - YB-G- lines o [all...] |
H A D | Caps.aix4 | 39 # terminfo(5) man page; lines beginning with `#%' are passed through to become 100 # as a terminfo object, and breaking this would be bad. It's up the ncurses 110 # format). It's up to you what you have the compiler do with it. 139 # to be older types that don't use up a lot of string space on function keys. 182 #%to line up nicely. 196 #%lines affected 264 lines lines num li - - YBCGE number of lines on screen or page 265 lines_of_memory lm num lm - - YB-G- lines o [all...] |
H A D | Caps.hpux11 | 39 # terminfo(5) man page; lines beginning with `#%' are passed through to become 100 # as a terminfo object, and breaking this would be bad. It's up the ncurses 110 # format). It's up to you what you have the compiler do with it. 139 # to be older types that don't use up a lot of string space on function keys. 182 #%to line up nicely. 196 #%lines affected 265 lines lines num li - - YBCGE number of lines on screen or page 266 lines_of_memory lm num lm - - YB-G- lines o [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/emacs-92/emacs/lisp/gnus/ |
H A D | gnus-sum.el | 54 (autoload 'gnus-article-outlook-unwrap-lines "deuglify" nil t) 140 newsreaders chopping off subject lines, but it might also mean that 162 "*Remove matches for this regexp from subject lines when simplifying fuzzily." 501 "*Mark used for articles that are caught up." 649 It works along the same lines as a normal formatting string, 662 It works along the same lines as a normal formatting string, 898 (defcustom gnus-ps-print-hook nil 899 "*A hook run before ps-printing something from Gnus." 974 "*Controls the highlighting of summary buffer lines. 979 how those summary lines ar [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/bash-92/bash-3.2/doc/ |
H A D | texinfo.tex | 54 % dvips foo.dvi -o # or whatever; this makes foo.ps. 102 % Set up fixed words for English if not already set. 524 % since \penalty is valid in vertical mode, we'd end up putting the 613 % lines in the input in @example-like environments, which normally 634 % message, so this ends up printing `@group can only ...'. 681 % almost-but-not-quite fill up a page, TeX will have a hard time doing 687 % Back up by the size of the box, whether we did a page break or not. 758 % if you have multiple lines of stuff to put here, you'll need to 828 % @sp n outputs n lines of vertical space 1172 % So we set up [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/gnudiff-19/diffutils/config/ |
H A D | texinfo.tex | 56 % dvips foo.dvi -o # or whatever; this makes foo.ps. 99 % Set up fixed words for English if not already set. 443 % Why was this kern here? It messes up equalizing space above and below 505 % since \penalty is valid in vertical mode, we'd end up putting the 572 % lines in the input in @example-like environments, which normally 593 % message, so this ends up printing `@group can only ...'. 640 % almost-but-not-quite fill up a page, TeX will have a hard time doing 646 % Back up by the size of the box, whether we did a page break or not. 717 % if you have multiple lines of stuff to put here, you'll need to 781 % @sp n outputs n lines o [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/uucp-11/uucp/ |
H A D | texinfo.tex | 53 % dvips foo.dvi -o # or whatever, to process the dvi file; this makes foo.ps. 96 % Set up fixed words for English if not already set. 430 % Why was this kern here? It messes up equalizing space above and below 492 % since \penalty is valid in vertical mode, we'd end up putting the 559 % lines in the input in @example-like environments, which normally 580 % message, so this ends up printing `@group can only ...'. 627 % almost-but-not-quite fill up a page, TeX will have a hard time doing 633 % Back up by the size of the box, whether we did a page break or not. 704 % if you have multiple lines of stuff to put here, you'll need to 768 % @sp n outputs n lines o [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/cxxfilt-11/cxxfilt/texinfo/ |
H A D | texinfo.tex | 50 % dvips foo.dvi -o # or whatever; this makes foo.ps. 115 % Set up fixed words for English if not already set. 181 par-a-digms rec-tan-gu-lar ro-bot-ics se-vere-ly set-up spa-ces 199 % change spans more than two lines of output. To handle that, we would 628 % since \penalty is valid in vertical mode, we'd end up putting the 722 % message, so this ends up printing `@group can only ...'. 767 % almost-but-not-quite fill up a page, TeX will have a hard time doing 773 % Back up by the size of the box, whether we did a page break or not. 816 % if you have multiple lines of stuff to put here, you'll need to 915 % @sp n outputs n lines o [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/gnutar-452/gnutar/doc/ |
H A D | texinfo.tex | 50 % dvips foo.dvi -o # or whatever; this makes foo.ps. 116 % Set up fixed words for English if not already set. 183 par-a-digms rath-er rec-tan-gu-lar ro-bot-ics se-vere-ly set-up spa-ces 202 % change spans more than two lines of output. To handle that, we would 631 % since \penalty is valid in vertical mode, we'd end up putting the 725 % message, so this ends up printing `@group can only ...'. 770 % almost-but-not-quite fill up a page, TeX will have a hard time doing 776 % Back up by the size of the box, whether we did a page break or not. 819 % if you have multiple lines of stuff to put here, you'll need to 918 % @sp n outputs n lines o [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/groff-38/groff/doc/ |
H A D | texinfo.tex | 50 % dvips foo.dvi -o # or whatever; this makes foo.ps. 116 % Set up fixed words for English if not already set. 183 par-a-digms rath-er rec-tan-gu-lar ro-bot-ics se-vere-ly set-up spa-ces 202 % change spans more than two lines of output. To handle that, we would 631 % since \penalty is valid in vertical mode, we'd end up putting the 725 % message, so this ends up printing `@group can only ...'. 770 % almost-but-not-quite fill up a page, TeX will have a hard time doing 776 % Back up by the size of the box, whether we did a page break or not. 819 % if you have multiple lines of stuff to put here, you'll need to 918 % @sp n outputs n lines o [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/bc-21/bc/doc/ |
H A D | texinfo.tex | 53 % dvips foo.dvi -o # or whatever, to process the dvi file; this makes foo.ps. 96 % Set up fixed words for English if not already set. 429 % Why was this kern here? It messes up equalizing space above and below 491 % since \penalty is valid in vertical mode, we'd end up putting the 558 % lines in the input in @example-like environments, which normally 579 % message, so this ends up printing `@group can only ...'. 626 % almost-but-not-quite fill up a page, TeX will have a hard time doing 632 % Back up by the size of the box, whether we did a page break or not. 729 % @sp n outputs n lines of vertical space 1027 % So we set up [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/emacs-92/emacs/man/ |
H A D | texinfo.tex | 50 % dvips foo.dvi -o # or whatever; this makes foo.ps. 116 % Set up fixed words for English if not already set. 185 par-a-digms rath-er rec-tan-gu-lar ro-bot-ics se-vere-ly set-up spa-ces 204 % change spans more than two lines of output. To handle that, we would 636 % since \penalty is valid in vertical mode, we'd end up putting the 745 % message, so this ends up printing `@group can only ...'. 790 % almost-but-not-quite fill up a page, TeX will have a hard time doing 796 % Back up by the size of the box, whether we did a page break or not. 839 % if you have multiple lines of stuff to put here, you'll need to 938 % @sp n outputs n lines o [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/gnutar-452/gnutar/build-aux/ |
H A D | texinfo.tex | 50 % dvips foo.dvi -o # or whatever; this makes foo.ps. 116 % Set up fixed words for English if not already set. 185 par-a-digms rath-er rec-tan-gu-lar ro-bot-ics se-vere-ly set-up spa-ces 204 % change spans more than two lines of output. To handle that, we would 636 % since \penalty is valid in vertical mode, we'd end up putting the 745 % message, so this ends up printing `@group can only ...'. 790 % almost-but-not-quite fill up a page, TeX will have a hard time doing 796 % Back up by the size of the box, whether we did a page break or not. 839 % if you have multiple lines of stuff to put here, you'll need to 938 % @sp n outputs n lines o [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/vim-53/runtime/autoload/ |
H A D | netrw.vim | 727 " Construct execution string (four lines) which will be passed through filter 848 " Construct execution string (four lines) which will be passed through filter 1130 " Construct execution string (three or more lines) which will be passed through filter 1215 " Construct execution string (four lines) which will be passed through filter 1436 " User-provided (ie. optional) fix-it-up command 1680 " experience, win95's ftp always dumped four blank lines 1850 if s:didstarstar || !mapcheck("<s-up>","n") 1851 nnoremap <buffer> <silent> <s-up> :Pexplore<cr> 1852 inoremap <buffer> <silent> <s-up> :Pexplore<cr> 2030 " 4: (user: <u>) go up (previou [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/Heimdal-323.92.1/lib/hcrypto/libtommath/ |
H A D | tommath.tex | 106 comprises of literally thousands of users and over 100,000 lines of source code, TeX and other material. People like Mads and Greg 129 great deal of work in which multiple precision mathematics was needed. Understanding the possibilities for speeding up 146 Karatsuba multiplication. I was laid up, alone and immobile, and thought ``Why not?'' I vaguely knew what Karatsuba multiplication was, but not 206 see fit.} can only represent values up to $10^{19}$ as shown in figure \ref{fig:ISOC}. On its own the C language is 215 major companies such as RSA Security, Certicom and Entrust have built entire product lines on the implementation and 220 The basic IEEE \cite{IEEE} standard floating point type is made up of an integer mantissa $q$, an exponent $e$ and a sign bit $s$. 425 is encouraged to answer the follow-up problems and try to draw the relevance of problems. 476 which allows the reader to find a given function very quickly. On average there are $76$ lines of code per source 511 (\textit{GCC}). This means that without changes the library will build without configuration or setting up any 549 \includegraphics{pics/design_process.ps} [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/ncurses-42/ncurses/misc/ |
H A D | terminfo.src | 112 # roughly by type frequency with ANSI/VT100 and other common types up front. 129 # The file is divided up into major sections (headed by lines beginning with 245 # and vt100 up front in confidence that this will catch 95% of new hardware). 295 # Special "terminals". These are used to label tty lines when you don't 308 cols#132, lines#66, 335 # ANSI capabilities are broken up into pieces, so that a terminal 386 # ROM graphics for control characters such as the diamond, up- and down-arrow. 477 cols#80, lines#24, use=vanilla, use=ansi+erase, 484 cols#80, lines#2 [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/libiconv-41/libiconv/ |
H A D | configure | 1269 -psdir | --psdir | --psdi | --psd | --ps) 1271 -psdir=* | --psdir=* | --psdi=* | --psd=* | --ps=*) 1489 # mess up M-x gdb in Emacs. 1559 --psdir=DIR ps documentation [DOCDIR] 1582 --disable-dependency-tracking speeds up one-time build 1753 # Strip out --no-create and --no-recursion so they do not pile up. 3561 # messages which can occur if `w' ends up in MAKEFLAGS. 3615 # We make a subdir and do the tests there. Otherwise we can end up 3617 # instance it was reported that on HP-UX the gcc test will end up 3643 # overwrite some of them when testing with obscure command lines [all...] |
/macosx-10.9.5/gnutar-452/gnutar/ |
H A D | configure | 1190 -psdir | --psdir | --psdi | --psd | --ps) 1192 -psdir=* | --psdir=* | --psdi=* | --psd=* | --ps=*) 1410 # mess up M-x gdb in Emacs. 1480 --psdir=DIR ps documentation [DOCDIR] 1505 --disable-dependency-tracking speeds up one-time build 1690 # Strip out --no-create and --no-recursion so they do not pile up. 3652 # messages which can occur if `w' ends up in MAKEFLAGS. 3703 # We make a subdir and do the tests there. Otherwise we can end up 3705 # instance it was reported that on HP-UX the gcc test will end up 3731 # overwrite some of them when testing with obscure command lines [all...] |