newline

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English[edit]

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Etymology[edit]

From new +‎ line, Coined by Bell Laboratories during development of the C programming language and the UNIX operating system.

Noun[edit]

newline (plural newlines)

  1. (computing) The character or character sequence that indicates the end of a line of text and transition to the next line; or, a control code or escape sequence used in a programming language to denote this character.
    Synonyms: line break, carriage return, end-of-line, \n
    Hyponyms: hard return, soft return
    Microsoft Windows uses CRLF to represent a newline.
    • 1959, Association for Computing Machinery, Communications of the ACM (ACM Digital Library)[1], page 599:
      The ugly part is the quote marks on two adjacent lines that mean a newline character.
    • 1987, T. D. Brown, C for Basic Programmers[2], page 13:
      The calculator program starts off by printing the string "0\n", that is, it prints a zero and then moves to a newline.
    • 2002, Laura Lemay, Rafe Colburn, Sams Teach Yourself Perl in 21 Days[3], page 69:
      Unlike in C, you don't have to loop through the output and watch every character to make sure it's a newline; Perl will keep track of that for you.
    • 2002, Allen B. Downey, Jeffrey Elkner, Chris Meyers, How to Think Like a Computer Scientist: Learning with Python:
      It contains only a single statement, which outputs a newline character. (That's what happens when you use a print command without any arguments.)
    • 2006, Jeffrey E.F. Friedl, Mastering Regular Expressions[4], page 111:
      The original Unix regex tools worked on a line-by-line basis, so the thought of matching a newline wasn't an issue until the advent of sed and lex.

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