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Answer for the clue "Type of computer program ", 6 letters:
editor

Alternative clues for the word editor

Word definitions for editor in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
An editor is a person who edits or makes changes to documents. Editor may also refer to:

Usage examples of editor.

The name of his partially duped accomplice and abettor in this last marvelous assault, is no other than PHILIP LYNCH, Editor and Proprietor of the Gold Hill News.

Indeed, based on its public agenda, The American Society of Newspaper Editors might think about changing its name to the American Society of Racial Bean Counters.

There was a producer, a director, and an editor whose names sounded real: Joseph Ayers, Morton Kasselbaum, and Chester Ellis.

In the credits, the producer, director, and film editor were all listed by name: Joseph Ayers, Morton Kasselbaum, and Chester Ellis respectively.

In this new edition, the text and the notes have been carefully revised, the latter by the editor.

Even though not all reporters and editors were bigots, at some level they saw blacks as different, as alien, as more dangerous, as out of the mainstream and, of course, as inferior.

He stood beside it, smiling, nodding the editor and little Bling onto the divan and the beefy photographer into the wide loveseat.

To get Bling off the hook, the editor asked if it might be possible to take a drive out to the Beijing campus to look over the sports scene, maybe catch a track practice.

Lord Bute had founded two papers, The Briton and The Auditor, and had set up the novelist Tobias Smollett as editor of the former.

I waited until his patrol car was at the road before I drove to the newspaper and the busy, busy typing of Cece Dee Falcon, society editor.

Before Cece became society editor and long before she became my source for historical Sunflower County facts, Cece was Cecil.

I think it was then I began to see my little object-town Centennial in a rather larger dimension than the editors back in New York saw it.

I am especially grateful to my editors, Betsy Mitchell of Del Rey, and Jane Johnson and Emma Coode of HarperCollins UK, for their insights and excellent advice.

No more crumby editors fresh from Harvard with Phi Beta Kappa keys hanging on their weskits.

Two weeks later, on June 5, 2003, less than a month after the Times mea culpa, the papers two highest-ranking editors, executive editor Howell Raines and managing editor Gerald Boyd, resigned.