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There are many T-Shirt printing companies: Tshirt Warehouse, Spreadshirt, The Tshirt Man, October, Shirtworks and Clothes 2 Order are just some of the many T shirt printing services that can be found online.
It depends what the person does ! They could do something as smple as printing out a few pages of information for use by a competitor - to planting a virus that destroys everything stored on the hard-drive.
BEST ANSWER : A translator which generates code for a virtual stack machine.
High-level language (HLL) is a term that applies to any computer language that applies a level of abstraction such that there is little or no direct relationship between the code being written and the machine code that is compiled from that code. Java is an HLL with one of the highest levels of abstraction. Its code compiles to byte code rather than machine code, which is then interpreted by the Java virtual machine (JVM). This makes it highly portable as there are few systems that don't have a JVM implementation. However, there's very little access to the underlying architecture as code is written to suit the JVM, a virtual non-existent machine with a consistent interface, rather than the physical machine upon which it runs. C++ is also an HLL but because it compiles to machine code and has direct access to the underlying architecture, its level of abstraction is greatly reduced. It's every bit as portable as Java, but programs must be compiled separately for each platform. As a result, C++ programs take a little longer to develop, but execute many times faster than Java programs. By contrast, assembly language is a low-level language that symbolises every machine instruction as a simple, easy-to-remember mnemonic. As a result, there is very little in the way of abstraction. The only thing lower than assembly language is machine code itself ("banging the metal"), however assembly programming is a far more efficient and less error-prone means of producing that machine code. It is not portable, however. Every architecture has its own version of assembly language. Although C++ code can produce very efficient machine code by itself, assembly language produces the most efficient code as the programmer has complete control over the resulting machine code. However, C++ permits inline assembly language to be used wherever it is needed to maximise performance, so it could be classed as an HLL with low-level features. Java simply cannot compete with this level of control.
A compiler translates anything that is a structured syntax, generally a computer language, into machine code or code that an interpreter will execute on a computer. Machine code actually executes on a machine, interpreted code is pure data for the execution engine of the interpreter.Post compilers, sometimes called post processors, take the compiled code as input and make changes to the code to provide functionality beyond that of the original language.Examples are:The original C++ language used a C compiler to process most of the file and a post compiler to add the object-oriented extensionsAspect Oriented Programming (AOP) functionality is generally added by a post compiler
NAICS Code(s) 323113 (Commercial Screen Printing)
NAICS Code(s) 323111 (Commercial Gravure Printing)
NAICS Code(s) 323110 (Commercial Lithographic Printing)
NAICS 333293 applies to Printing Machinery and Equipment Manufacturing.
SIC 3555 applies to PRINTING TRADES MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT.
No there are no schools to learn bar code printing. You could apprentice to the job and learn hat way. There is no listing for a bar code trainign class in the New York area. You can find trainign online for Barcode printing at www.fotel.com .
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NAICS Code(s) 323119 (Other Commercial Printing)
Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press by keeping an extremely low profile that allowed him to live alone and conduct experiments in secret. At first, he had code-named his method of printing 'Kunst und Aventur'.
No. You can print HTML pages and its code, but you cannot initiate printing with HTML itself.
Abraham Nemeth has written: 'The Nemeth braille code for mathematics and science notation' -- subject(s): Blind, Printing and writing systems, Mathematical notation 'The Nemeth code of Braille mathematics' -- subject(s): Blind, Books and reading, Printing and writing systems, Mathematical notation
DNA fingerprinting