-
Saccharin, also
called saccharine, benzosulfimide, or E954, or used in
saccharin sodium or
saccharin calcium forms, is a non-nutritive
artificial sweetener...
- 1980s and
early 1990s.
Following studies in the
early 1970s that
linked saccharin, Tab's main sweetener, with
bladder cancer in rats, the
United States...
- packets.
Common sugar substitutes include aspartame, monk
fruit extract,
saccharin, sucralose, stevia,
acesulfame pot****ium (ace-K), and cyclamate. These...
-
Saccharin Study and
Labeling Act of 1977 or
Saccharin Study,
Labeling and
Advertising Act was a
United States federal statute endorsing requirements for...
-
practice common in
modern C/C++ compilers.
Other extensions are
syntactic saccharin and
syntactic syrup,
meaning gratuitous syntax that does not make programming...
- with
other artificial sweeteners,
especially saccharin; the
mixture of 10
parts cyclamate to 1 part
saccharin is
common and
masks the off-tastes of both...
- intake.
Though artificial sweeteners had been
known since the
discovery of
saccharin in 1878, the diet
beverage era
began in
earnest with the 1949
launch of...
-
after the
banning of
cyclamates in the
United States and
Britain in 1969,
saccharin, the only
remaining legal artificial sweetener at the time, was found...
- is a
brand of
artificial sweetener now made
primarily from
granulated saccharin (except in Canada,
where it
contains cyclamate instead). When introduced...
-
beverage in 1962. The
original formula was
sweetened with
cyclamate and
saccharin.
After cyclamate was
banned in 1969, it was
removed from the product....