Edom - significado y definición. Qué es Edom
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Qué (quién) es Edom - definición

C STANDARD LIBRARY HEADER
ENOBUFS; Errno; Error codes in Linux; EDOM; ERANGE; EILSEQ; EPIPE; Cerrno

Edomite         
  • Map showing kingdom of Edom (in red) at its largest extent, c. 600 BC. Areas in dark red show the approximate boundary of classical-age Idumaea.
  • Edomite goddess figure in the [[Israel Museum]]
ANCIENT KINGDOM IN TRANSJORDAN LOCATED BETWEEN MOAB TO THE NORTHEAST, THE ARABAH TO THE WEST AND THE ARABIAN DESERT TO THE SOUTH AND EAST, TODAY PART OF ISRAEL AND JORDAN
Edomites; Edhom; Edomite; Idumea; Idumaea; Idumeans; Idumaeans; Idumaean; Dukes of Edom; Idumæa; Idumean; אֱדוֹם; ʾĔḏôm; Udumi; ܐܕܘܡ; Ἰδουμαία; Idoumaía; `Edom; Kingdom of Edom; ʾEḏom
·noun One of the descendants of Esau or Edom, the brother of Jacob; an Idumean.
Idumean         
  • Map showing kingdom of Edom (in red) at its largest extent, c. 600 BC. Areas in dark red show the approximate boundary of classical-age Idumaea.
  • Edomite goddess figure in the [[Israel Museum]]
ANCIENT KINGDOM IN TRANSJORDAN LOCATED BETWEEN MOAB TO THE NORTHEAST, THE ARABAH TO THE WEST AND THE ARABIAN DESERT TO THE SOUTH AND EAST, TODAY PART OF ISRAEL AND JORDAN
Edomites; Edhom; Edomite; Idumea; Idumaea; Idumeans; Idumaeans; Idumaean; Dukes of Edom; Idumæa; Idumean; אֱדוֹם; ʾĔḏôm; Udumi; ܐܕܘܡ; Ἰδουμαία; Idoumaía; `Edom; Kingdom of Edom; ʾEḏom
·noun An inhabitant of Idumea, an Edomite.
II. Idumean ·adj Of or pertaining to ancient Idumea, or Edom, in Western Asia.
Edomite         
  • Map showing kingdom of Edom (in red) at its largest extent, c. 600 BC. Areas in dark red show the approximate boundary of classical-age Idumaea.
  • Edomite goddess figure in the [[Israel Museum]]
ANCIENT KINGDOM IN TRANSJORDAN LOCATED BETWEEN MOAB TO THE NORTHEAST, THE ARABAH TO THE WEST AND THE ARABIAN DESERT TO THE SOUTH AND EAST, TODAY PART OF ISRAEL AND JORDAN
Edomites; Edhom; Edomite; Idumea; Idumaea; Idumeans; Idumaeans; Idumaean; Dukes of Edom; Idumæa; Idumean; אֱדוֹם; ʾĔḏôm; Udumi; ܐܕܘܡ; Ἰδουμαία; Idoumaía; `Edom; Kingdom of Edom; ʾEḏom
['i:d?m??t]
¦ noun a member of an ancient people living in Edom, south of the Dead Sea, in biblical times, traditionally believed to be descended from Esau.

Wikipedia

Errno.h

errno.h is a header file in the standard library of the C programming language. It defines macros for reporting and retrieving error conditions using the symbol errno (short for "error number").

errno acts like an integer variable. A value (the error number) is stored in errno by certain library functions when they detect errors. At program startup, the value stored is zero. Library functions store only values greater than zero. Any library function can alter the value stored before return, whether or not they detect errors. Most functions indicate that they detected an error by returning a special value, typically NULL for functions that return pointers, and -1 for functions that return integers. A few functions require the caller to preset errno to zero and test it afterwards to see if an error was detected.

The errno macro expands to an lvalue with type int, sometimes with the extern and/or volatile type specifiers depending upon the platform. Originally this was a static memory location, but macros are almost always used today to allow for multi-threading, so that each thread will see its own thread-local error number.

The header file also defines macros that expand to integer constants that represent the error codes. The C standard library only requires three to be defined:

EDOM

Results from a parameter outside a function's domain, e.g. sqrt(-1)

ERANGE

Results from a result outside a function's range, e.g. strtol("0xfffffffff", NULL, 0) on systems with a 32-bit wide long

EILSEQ (Required since 1994 Amendment 1 to C89 standard)

Results from an illegal byte sequence, e.g. mbstowcs(buf, "\xff", 1) on systems that use UTF-8.

POSIX compliant operating systems like AIX, Linux or Solaris include many other error values, many of which are used much more often than the above ones, such as EACCES for when a file cannot be opened for reading. C++11 additionally defines many of the same values found within the POSIX specification.

Traditionally, the first page of Unix system manuals, named intro(2), lists all errno.h macros, but this is not the case with Linux, where these macros are instead listed in the errno(3).

An errno can be translated to a descriptive string using strerror (defined in string.h) or a BSD extension called sys_errlist. The translation can be printed directly to the standard error stream using perror (defined in stdio.h). As strerror in many Unix-like systems is not thread-safe, a thread-safe version strerror_r is used, but conflicting definitions from POSIX and GNU makes it even less portable than the sys_errlist table.

Ejemplos de uso de Edom
1. On the other side is desert, which extends across the border to Jordan and the mountains of Edom.
2. What about the one that goes: Say, shall we yield him in costly devotion, odours of Edom and offerings divine?
3. We will follow the king‘s highway, turning off neither to the right nor to the left until we have crossed your territory" (Numbers 20:14–17). Edom refused to allow those unfortunates to pass and threatened them with the sword.
4. This Sabbath, in the Torah portion Hukkat, we will read of how Moses sent messengers to the king of Edom saying, "Thus says your brother Israel: You know all the hardships that have befallen us ... Now we are in Kadesh, the town on the border of your territory.
5. Moses explained that this piece of land, which is called the Land of Edom, belongs to the children of Esau, and by God‘s order, "meddle not with them, for I will not give you of their land, no, not so much as a foot‘s breadth; because I have given Mount Se‘ir to Esau for a possession" (Deuteronomy 2÷5). It is clear that the fact that the modern State of Israel holds possession of the Negev up to the Red Sea to Eilat, is not dependent on the word of God; on the contrary, it contradicts it.