One of the six instrument families, including such instruments as the violin, the cello, the guitar, and the harp, among others This family can be divided into two subcategories: bowed and unbowed (that is, usually plucked with the finger)
Metal or artificial fibre that is appropriately tensioned between two points in stringed instruments and set into vibration when plucked, bowed, or struck
– The family of instruments that includes violins, violas, cellos, and basses
A String is a sequence of zero or more Characters enclosed in double quotation marks (``"'', ordinal value 34) If either of the Special Characters ``"'' or ``'' appear in the string, they must be preceded by a ``'' character (ordinal value 92) A ``'' character (unless preceded by another ``'' character) can also introduce a control character, as follows: Note that any Character (recall that the byte with ordinal value 0 is not considered a Character) can appear directly in a String; it is not necessary to use one of the control sequences shown above Furthermore, a ``'' followed by a Whitespace Character is ignored entirely This allows one, for example, to insert line breaks in the OpenMath representation of a string without inserting line breaks in the string itself The maximum length of a String is client and/or server dependent
A String is an array of TYPE char The first char defines string length Characters may be accessed from the array
These are the lengths of steel, nickel, plastic, or gut that run from the bridge, through the nut, and out to the tuning pegs of your instrument These are the pieces that actually MAKE the sounds that you play when you play your instrument
The approximate rule determines whether a string is present in a syntax with a string list
Alphanumeric characters String functions extract text or return numbers based on text
Ok ve yayla silahlanmış. Üstü ve yanları kapalı, dört tekerlekli, altında yayları olan, atla çekilen bir tür binek arabası: "Yaylımız tüketirken yolları aynı hızla / Savrulmaya başladı karlar etrafımızda."- F. N. Çamlıbel