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With the above transmission scheme, a bit is transmitted by setting the voltage on the electrical cable to a specific value during some period of time. We have seen that due to electromagnetic interference, the voltage measured by the receiver can differ from the voltage set by the transmitter. This is the main cause of transmission errors. However, this is not the only type of problem that can occur. Besides defining the voltages for bits `0` and `1`, the above transmission scheme also specifies the duration of each bit. If one million bits are sent every second, then each bit lasts 1 microsecond. On each host, the transmission (resp. the reception) of each bit is triggered by a local clock having a 1 MHz frequency. These clocks are the second source of problems when transmitting bits over a wire. Although the two clocks have the same specification, they run on different hosts, possibly at a different temperature and with a different source of energy. In practice, it is possible that the two clocks do not operate at exactly the same frequency. Assume that the clock of the transmitting host operates at exactly 1000000 Hz while the receiving clock operates at 999999 Hz. This is a very small difference between the two clocks. However, when using the clock to transmit bits, this difference is important. With its 1000000 Hz clock, the transmitting host will generate one million bits during a period of one second. During the same period, the receiving host will sense the wire 999999 times and thus will receive one bit less than the bits originally transmitted. This small difference in clock frequencies implies that bits can "disappear" during their transmission on an electrical cable. This is illustrated in the figure below.
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| Shortcut | Action |
|---|---|
| ? | Open available keyboard shortcuts. |
| Alt + Home | Navigate to the first translation in the current search. |
| Alt + End | Navigate to the last translation in the current search. |
|
Alt + PageUp or
Ctrl + ↑ or Alt + ↑ or Cmd + ↑ or |
Navigate to the previous translation in the current search. |
|
Alt + PageDown or
Ctrl + ↓ or Alt + ↓ or Cmd + ↓ or |
Navigate to the next translation in the current search. |
|
Ctrl + Enter or
Cmd + Enter |
Submit current form; this works the same as pressing Save and continue while editing translation. |
|
Ctrl + Shift + Enter or
Cmd + Shift +Enter |
Unmark translation as Needing edit and submit it. |
|
Alt + Enter or
Option + Enter |
Submit the string as a suggestion; this works the same as pressing Suggest while editing translation. |
|
Ctrl + E or
Cmd + E |
Focus on translation editor. |
|
Ctrl + U or
Cmd + U |
Focus on comment editor. |
|
Ctrl + M or
Cmd + M |
Shows Automatic suggestions tab. |
|
Ctrl + 1 to
Ctrl + 9 or
Cmd + 1 to Cmd + 9 |
Copies placeable of a given number from source string. |
|
Ctrl + M followed by
1 to 9 or
Cmd + M followed by 1 to 9 |
Copy the machine translation of a given number to current translation. |
|
Ctrl + I followed by
1 to
9 or
Cmd + I followed by 1 to 9 |
Ignore one item in the list of failing checks. |
|
Ctrl + J or
Cmd + J |
Shows the Nearby strings tab. |
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Ctrl + S or
Cmd + S |
Focus on search field. |
|
Ctrl + O or
Cmd + O |
Copy the source string. |
|
Ctrl + Y or
Cmd + Y |
Toggle the Needs editing checkbox. |
| → | Browse the next translation string. |
| ← | Browse the previous translation string. |
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