Robe (disambiguation)

A robe is a loose-fitting outer garment.

Robe may also refer to:

Places

Australia

Ethiopia

  • Bale Robe, or simply Robe, a town in the Bale Zone of Oromia Region, central Ethiopia
  • Apostolic Prefecture of Robe, a Latin Catholic pre-diocesan jurisdiction with see in the above?below city
  • Robe, Arsi, the capital of the Robe woreda in the Arsi Zone of Oromia Region, Ethiopia
    • Robe (woreda), a woreda (district) in the Arsi Zone of Oromia Region, Ethiopia

Elsewhere

Rivers

  • Robe River (Australia), a river flowing in Western Australia
  • Robe River (Ethiopia), which flows through the Robe woreda in the Arsi Zone of Oromia Region, Ethiopia
  • Robe River (Ireland), in Mayo, Ireland

People

Other uses

gollark: It could probably be stupider if they then decided to convert the XML tag structure to CBOR, but they clearly weren't *that* insane.
gollark: Plus exciting new ones.
gollark: It's a combination of all the disadvantages of XML and JSON together.
gollark: ```xml<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple Computer//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd"><plist version="1.0"><dict> <key>architecture</key> <string>x86_64</string> <key>homepage</key> <string>http://xorg.freedesktop.org</string> <key>installed_size</key> <integer>19425</integer> <key>license</key> <string>MIT</string> <key>maintainer</key> <string>Juan RP &lt;xtraeme@voidlinux.eu&gt;</string> <key>pkgname</key> <string>xkill</string> <key>pkgver</key> <string>xkill-1.0.5_1</string> <key>run_depends</key> <array> <string>libXmu&gt;=1.0.4_1</string> <string>libX11&gt;=1.2_1</string> <string>glibc&gt;=2.26_1</string> </array> <key>shlib-requires</key> <array> <string>libXmuu.so.1</string> <string>libX11.so.6</string> <string>libc.so.6</string> </array> <key>short_desc</key> <string>Kill a client by its X resource</string> <key>source-revisions</key> <string>xkill:0d1bbbdf2f</string> <key>version</key> <string>1.0.5_1</string></dict></plist>```The stupidest way to store data ever designed.
gollark: Each ASCII character is 7 bits, but basically everything represents them as UTF-8 which makes them a byte (well, octet) each.

See also

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