The zero-width space (ZWSP) is a non-printing character used in computerized typesetting to indicate word boundaries in scripts without explicit spacing or after certain characters that don't have a visible space but may cause a line break. It is commonly used in languages like Japanese where words lack visible spaces. While normally not visible, it may expand in fully justified passages.
Carnegie Mellon University
Spring 2021
This advanced course reexamines traditional concepts of discrete mathematics (relations, functions, logic, graphs, algebra, automata) in the context of computation and algorithms, necessitating a strong background in discrete math.
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