0 a computer program that makes it possible for you to read information on the internet: --
a Web browser
1 someone who browses, for example through books or goods for sale --
2 a special type of computer program that lets you use the Internet --
3 a computer program that makes it possible for you to read or see information on the internet: --
4 a person who is looking at goods for sale in a store or on the internet but who may not intend to buy anything: --
We can show you strategies that will help you turn browsers into buyers.
However, this input is not ultimately handled by the browser.
However, refactoring browsers should be able to guarantee consistency and correctness and furthermore can automatically single out opportunities for refactoring.
It is assumed that wild herbivore grazers compete with cattle, and wild herbivore browsers compete with goats that browse on 'other area'.
When query processing ends, the system formats the result and shows it to the user via the browser.
A number of scholars have depicted seventeenth-century readers as at least occasional browsers.
One useful tool would be a browser with the capability of searching for operations by name and by type.
However, a web browser, instead of exiting, asks the user for missing plugins when needed.
This observation was hypothesised to be due to the fact that goats are browsers and thus more likely to consume the extremities of the herbage.