0 the act of hitting the ball with your head in football:
A fine header!
1 a piece of text, such as a page number or a title, that appears at the top of every page in a document or book
2 a phrase that is placed at the beginning of what you want to say, before the subject
3 a line of text, such as a title or a page number, that appears at the top of each page in a printed document
Each section may define special clauses called header, footer, and separator.
The problem is that people mistime headers.
While it could be argued that the composition of their content is a word-processing function, e-mail programs automatically generate a series of personalised database fields in their headers.
The headers are included in the routine inspection programme.
Aspects, on the other hand, has a more open and 'practical' feel, and includes some pictures, written music and a more relaxed font for the titles and headers.
They state exactly which headers are added to a typical data message by the sender's stack and how the receiver's stack processes these headers in the respective layers.
At any time, an application can request a protocol change that results in the process group switching to an entirely different set of protocols and headers.
To prepare this corpus for our experiments, it was necessary to remove and record structural indications of article boundaries, which were standard e-mail headers and, frequently, authors' e-mail signatures.