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What is `^M` and how do I get rid of it? - Unix Linux Stack Exchange The ^M is a carriage-return character If you see this, you're probably looking at a file that originated in the DOS Windows world, where an end-of-line is marked by a carriage return newline pair, whereas in the Unix world, end-of-line is marked by a single newline Read this article for more detail, and also the Wikipedia entry for newline This article discusses how to set up vim to
Interviewing - Texas A M University College of Dentistry Class of 2030 . . . Link to last year's thread: Texas A M University College of Dentistry Class of 2029 Interview Acceptance Thread Link to interview prep: Texas A M University College of Dentistry Interview Feedback ----> Be sure to give feedback on your interview to help future applicants! :) Link to school
Question about focusing by moving glasses - Student Doctor Network . . . I'm hoping that somebody here will be kind enough to answer a question that I have about optics If a glasses wearer with a minus prescription for distance vision (and no cylinder) has slightly blurry vision but is able to see clearly by moving the glasses a few inches away from the eyes, does
How does tr [a-z] [n-za-m] work? - Unix Linux Stack Exchange The second is [n-za-m], which turns into [nopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklm] tr reads each character from stdin, and if it appears in the first set, it replaces it with the character in the same position in the second set (this means [ and ] are getting replaced with themselves, so including them was pointless, but a lot of people do it by mistake