Action Script 1.0 to Action Script 3.0 depending on the version of Flash you are using.
Letter, line or scene
Ad lib.
Array is a ranged variable, using it is required by many actions.. like where you going to processing data from a file where there is n lines in a file and you want to get one line of it.. ex: if variable $line is an array of lines in a text file: $line[1] is second line of the file... just keep it in mind arrays starts from zero :) it means line 1 of the file will be accessed with $line[0];
sys.argv is a way to access command line arguments in Python. sys.argv is an array of all the command line parameters, where the first value is the name of the file being run. For example, let's say you have a python script named example.py that looks like this: import sys print(sys.argv) This script will simply print the command line parameters in an array. If, for example, you run the script from a command line as python example.py param1 param2 the output will be ['example.py', 'param1', 'param2']
Action Script 1.0 to Action Script 3.0 depending on the version of Flash you are using.
2133451
3
Script
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_Script
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_Script
ActionScript 3 is the newer, quicker version of Adobe Flash's ActionScript. AS3, as Action Script 3 is normally called, is harder and more complicated for beginners, but much easier and more effective in the long run.
Letter, line or scene
A script regardless of animated of live action is the story that is told in an episode of television or theatrical film.
With the # symbol.
A script in online trading is a line of code that will program an action for you for various trading software. For example, if you wanted to be notified when your trade hits a certain level, you could write a script that makes your trading software do that for you. Scripts are a middle ground for traders who do not want to trade completely manually, but also do not want to use a robot for all of their trades.
The special line at the beginning of the script is only necessary if you want the script to be run by a certain command interpreter that is different from your logon shell or because you don't know what environment the user of the shell might be running in. It is a special comment line that looks like: #!/command-name such as: #!/usr/bin/ksh which causes the ksh interpreter to be used for the rest of the shell script.