0 to add something to the beginning of something else, especially a piece of data (= information) to the beginning of a computer instruction: --
The stem of "i" -adjectives can combine (prepend on the left), similar to the stem form ("-masu" stem) of verbs, though this is less common than for verbs.
Note how the callee now appends to the end of the growing list, rather than have the caller prepend to the beginning of the returned list.
In the older generations, it was also common for a married woman to prepend her husband's surname to her own.
Once authorized, a user simply needs to prepend calls the vertical service code of 272 to receive priority consideration on the wireless network.
However, in order to distinguish these, both buttons prepend their code with another 32 bit sequence containing the commands 0x5f/0x5e and 0x5d/0x5c, respectively.
Many modern cellular phones will automatically prepend the phone's own area code if the user enters only seven digits.
To open a persistent connection you must prepend p: to the hostname when connecting.
In the second approach, difference lists are implemented as single-argument functions, which take a list as argument and prepend to that list.