There are an estimated 40 million source lines of code in Windows XP.
Standard answer seems to be 50 million.
These lines of instructional code are known as Source Code.
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Source program or source code in any language is the code you write to make the program do what you want. Things like: #include <stdio.h> void main (); and so on are all pieces of source-code or source program
You cannot. Windows Vista is closed-source; they don't make the code available for download.
The source code for Windows XP is not publicly available; thus you cannot edit it.
A line of software code is called a line of source code... Come on now.Source lines of code (SLOC) is a software metric used to measure the size of a software program by counting the number of lines in the text of the program's source code. SLOC is typically used to predict the amount of effort that will be required to develop a program, as well as to estimate programming productivity or effort once the software is produced.see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Source_lines_of_code
How one would get lines of code from a website and build a bot from that will depend on the program one uses to create the bot. To get the code from a website, one can right click and select "view source".
The c compiler in Windows converts the binary code from source files. C is a compiled programming language and it needs to be converted for the program to run.
Yes.
The Windows 98 operating system contains approximately 13 million lines of code.
The Windows 98 operating system contains approximately 13 million lines of code.