Language Sensitive Editor - meaning and definition. What is Language Sensitive Editor
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What (who) is Language Sensitive Editor - definition

FORMAL LANGUAGE THAT CAN BE DEFINED BY A CONTEXT-SENSITIVE GRAMMAR (AND EQUIVALENTLY BY A NONCONTRACTING GRAMMAR). CONTEXT-SENSITIVE IS ONE OF THE FOUR TYPES OF GRAMMARS IN THE CHOMSKY HIERARCHY
Context sensitive language; Context-sensitive languages; Bach language; Bach (programming language); Context-dependent

Language Sensitive Editor      
(LSE) A language-sensitive editor from DEC. (1995-02-15)
language-sensitive editor         
TEXT EDITOR USED ON DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION'S VMS OPERATING SYSTEM
An editor that is aware of the syntactic, semantic and in some cases the structural rules of a specific programming language and provides a framework for the user to enter source code. Programs or changes to previously stored programs are incrementally parsed into an abstract syntax tree and automatically checked for correctness. (1995-02-15)
Language-Sensitive Editor         
TEXT EDITOR USED ON DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION'S VMS OPERATING SYSTEM
Language-Sensitive Editor (LSE) is a full-screen visual editor for the VAX/VMS and OpenVMS Operating systems. LSE is implemented by using the Text Processing Utility (TPU) language.

Wikipedia

Context-sensitive language

In formal language theory, a context-sensitive language is a language that can be defined by a context-sensitive grammar (and equivalently by a noncontracting grammar). Context-sensitive is one of the four types of grammars in the Chomsky hierarchy.