Also known as What You See Is What You Get
In computing, WYSIWYG ( ; what you see is what you get) is software that allows content to be edited in a form that resembles its appearance when printed or displayed as a finished product, such as a printed document, web page, or slide presentation. WYSIWYG implies a user interface that allows the user to view something very similar to the result while the document is being created. In general, WYSIWYG implies the ability to directly manipulate the layout of a document without having to type or remember names of layout commands.
WYSIWYG is a type of software that lets you edit documents, web pages, or presentations while seeing them look almost exactly as they will appear when finished. It matters because it lets you arrange and design content directly on screen without needing to memorize or type special formatting commands.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).