pragma

English

Etymology

From the Ancient Greek root πρᾶγμα (prâgma, a thing done, a fact). May be a back-formation from pragmatic.

Noun

pragma (plural pragmas or pragmata)

  1. (computing, programming) A compiler directive; data embedded in source code by programmers to indicate some intention to a compiler.
    This pragma stops the compiler from generating those warnings we don't care about.
  2. (computing, programming) In HTTP version 1.0 and 1.1, a general-header that specifies some implementation-specific directive, to any recipient, and may specify that the HTTP response should not be cached.

Synonyms

  • pragmat (in the ALGOL programming language)

Anagrams

Spanish

Noun

pragma m (plural pragmas)

  1. pragma
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