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The field name starts in the first character of the line and ends before the separator character ":".
If the input files contain lines beginning with the separator character, the output columns can become ambiguous.
There are no separator characters.
In some variants of the comma-separated values file format, the semicolon is used as the separator character.
In a tripcode system, a secret password is added to the user's name following a separator character (often a number sign).
One of the libraries we were using was using Chr(255) as a separator character in lists.
However, "CSV" formats vary greatly in this choice of separator character.
It is followed by a separator character, the slash ('/') character, and the prefix size expressed as a decimal number.
In order to obtain a listing of the linked directory, the path must include a trailing directory separator character ('/', slash).
The exact format and separator characters(colon, period, comma, etc.) are determined by the subtitle format chosen.
Another track can also contain the primary account number, the country code and the card's expiration date, 40 characters of discretionary data, and separator characters.
Since, by default, an input line is the input record, the default record separator character is a "newline".
The "classic" implementation of IntelliSense works by detecting marker characters such as periods, or other separator characters depending on the language used.
Early e-mail systems also used the exclamation mark as a separator character between hostnames for routing information, usually referred to as "bang path" notation.
The Unicode character set provides a line separator character as well as a paragraph separator to represent the semantics of the soft return and hard return.
Though the root directory is conventionally referred to as , the directory entry itself has no name-its name is the "empty" part before the initial directory separator character ().
It uses backslash as the path separator character, and it uses drive letters instead of UNIX-style single file tree, so its look-and-feel is quite similar to that of DOS.
The directory separator character also appears on Korean versions of Microsoft Windows as ₩, because ₩ occupies the same position (0x5C) on code page 949 that backslash occupies in ASCII.
It is also used wherever a backslash is used, such as the directory separator character and the general escape character, essentially making it a backslash with a yen sign look, a peculiarity that stems from JIS X 0201.