Take care of yourself.
Hello sir, can I apply for ues Indian army in 5th semester but I have 1 live backlog ?
⢠Related Questions
Do you agree that "hello world" is a dumb first program to teach programming?On a totally utilitarian basis, no, it's not at all a dumb first program, because it doesn't teach about programming, it teaches about infrastructure.Consider: To get "hello world" to run, you need to learn at least a few things:How to use your system's text editor and save files.How to invoke the compiler/interpreter. Additionally, if it's not a language that comes pre-installed, it tests that the person doing the install didn't screw the pooch while installing it - I've probably written code in over 2 dozen languages by now, and over the decades I *have* seen installers go very very wrong(*).
How to run a compiled program after compiling it.These are all things that you're going to have to already know once you try for the second program after 'hello world'.(*) My favorite screw-up: A mid-80s Fortran compiler install script on a Unix-based machine that tried to do:nchmod 666 $A/$Bnto set permissions on an install manifest. Unfortunately, A and B weren't set. Brownie points for the first person who figures out what error message users got when they tried to log in - it's not as obvious as it looks
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How do you say/write "Hello lady" in Italian?
It really depends, there's no best translation."hello" would be translated to "ciao" if you're in an informal relation with that lady. You could translate it to "salve" too, but Italians would probably say "buongiorno" (good morning) or "buonasera" (good evening) if the lady is not young or you're in a formal relation to her.
"Lady" is also not always easy to translate. "Signora" refers to an at least middle aged, possibly married woman. A young lady would be a "signorina" if you were to formally refer to her. If you were in an informal relation, well, you wouldn't call her either way, unless you were jokingly addressing her in a formal way - like if your were to say "hello lady" to a young girl. So perhaps it would be "ciao, signorina" in the latter case, and "salve, signora" for a formal greeting to an older lady. "Ciao signora" sounds really awkward.
All in all, we would probably just not say it. Perhaps you should say a bit more about the context in which you want to use this phrase
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How do I create a C program to print a message (Hello World/Hello C) without using any semicolon in the program?
There are many different methods. You can use if statement, switch statement, while loops, for loops, or by macros.Using if statement:/ CPP program to print / Hello World without semicolon / using if statement #include
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Did ancient Romans call each other by their "first names" (e.g. "Hello, Marcus"), or would they have called each other by last names (e.g. "Hello, Cicero")?
Most Romans had three names, their praenomen, nomen, and cognomen, although this changed over the centuries and wasnt necessarily a fixed thing. The praenomen is equivalent to a first name in English, the nomen indicates ones family (more specifically, gens) and the cognomen was a bit more complicated. Typically, it was almost like a nickname, although more formal, attributed to an individual indicating a personal trait, or accomplishment. It was then typically passed down to a mans children, and ended up indicating a kind of sub-family of ones broader family, or gens.For example, Scipio Africanus, the general who beat Hannibal, was born Publius Cornelius Scipio. His first name was Publius and he was born into the Scipio branch of the Cornelius gens (which was vaste and prestigious). After he beat Hannibal at Zama in Africa, he was further given the cognomen Africanus to celebrate his victory, and his descendants would have inherited it.I couldnt help but including an image of this coin, traditionally held to represent Scipio, because I own a very nice example of it.So, to respond to your example, yes, Cicero would have been Marcus to his friends and Cicero to everyone else (the cognomen has something to do with chick peas).
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In season 1 episode 18 , Phoebe told Monica: "Hello kettle! This is Monica! You're black!". What does this mean?
The saying is "that's like the pot calling the kettle 'black'". In the saying, both the pot and the kettle are black. You would use it when someone's being hypocritical by being negative about something someone else does, when they actually do the same themselves. I found this explanation on are the pot calling the kettle black when you point to another person and accuse that person of doing something that you are guilty of doing yourself. "The pot" (for cooking) and "the kettle" (for boiling water) sit on the stove over the fire and become black from the flames. Example: "I'm tired of you always wearing my clothing!" Answer: "Aren't you the pot calling the kettle black? You're wearing my pants right now!"
The pot and the kettle are like old friends who have turned black with time; the pot only sees the blackness which is on the kettle; he doesn't see the black on himself.'
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What do you think of the song, "Hello" by Adele?
I really do like the song "Hello". It has a good balance of emotion, range, and power. As a comeback song, I feel Adele made the right choice going with this one as it definitely plays to her strengths. The message is very simple and poignant and there is an inherent honesty and simplicity in the lyrics. The vocal delivery is overwhelming. Keeping aside the immense hype surrounding this song, from a listener's perspective it is musically, lyrically and emotionally sound. It is also relatable without being overly generic. And the fact that Adele can pull it off live with the same power and feel proves that it is not just a product of studio recording and editing. The problem with most of the people reviewing this song (or any song for that matter) is that they are comparing it to other songs or singers. Are there better songs than Hello? Certainly. And since it's objective, that makes complete sense. To each his own. However, if you look at what this song aims to convey, no one can deny that it thoroughly achieves that in all aspects. It is easy to criticize, but one must not compare apples and oranges
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Can you try to type "Hello my friend" with your eyes closed and see what you get?
Do you want that done on a laptop or a phone?Writing on my laptop with eyes closed. Trained in writing by having fingers stationed on the correct buttons. That makes it easy, although I wouldn't be surprised if there are occasional errors.
Forgot what sentence I was supposed to type. But all I typed in this answer until now is done with eyes closed.Writing on a phone with eyes closed would be a lot more challenge. I'm not trying that onee- - -EDIT: Seems that the only error I find quicly is "onee" instead of "one." in the end. Amazing. But I had to stop several times and think if I had done correctly, and sometimes I knew I had hit the wrong button, so I hit delete with eyes closed and hit the button I believed was the right one.But then - typing with a QUERTY computer keyboard is easy. Typing on a phone would be a lot different. Except if you'd connect a real, full-sized keyboard to the phone. But that would be an overkill for a tiny phone for most purposes.
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Why don't mountain bikers in San Diego say hello?
This is something that's specific to Los Peñasquitos Canyon Preserve. Ride anywhere else in San Diego county, and you'll see mountain bikers who smile, say hello, and even stop to chat sometimes.LPCP is sort of an odd place, though. It gets a lot of traffic from all sorts of trail users after work on weekdays and on weekends, and that includes a wide variety of mountain bikers. You'll see everything from first-time riders out on department store bikes, to cross country race teams out on training rides. Some riders don't know what they're doing, much less how to interact with other riders. And some riders are so set on their training program, and pushing the pace so hard, that they don't have a spare breath to say hello. And, yeah, that's not exactly polite.So, try riding Black Mountain, Sycamore Canyon / Goodan Ranch, Mission Trails, Calaveras, or any of the other trails nearby, and you'll see a different scene.And while you're out at LPCP, keep smiling and saying hello. I'll run into you sometime and stop to chat!
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In how many languages have you written "hello World?" Which was the first programming language did you write it?
QBasic. That was the first one.I have written it in a total of 19.C/CJavaJavascriptLogo (IDK if you will consider it a prog. language)F# (Hello world is the only program I ever wrote in it)PythonMATLABBrainC#AssemblyBash and BatchADAActionScriptGoPHPRSqlIn essence, I try out hello world first unless the Language is meant to do otherwise.(For Eg. Helloworld was not even in the first 20-30 sql commands or Flash Games I made in free time. Even Logo. My programs in LOGO were basically a spam of REPEAT command with arbitrary FD RT movements etc. which magically created some fascinating patterns :p)EDIT : But "Hello World" was not my first program in Qbasic. The first program asked for user's name and printed it.
I came to know about "Hello, World" quite late, when I learnt there was another language called 'C', (I was in 9-10 years old and had absolutely no idea what a Compiler was) and I started reading the tutorials. (I didn't even had a C Compiler then), and came to know about the Hello World Program.I then tried it in Basic.CheersJun