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* – A sweepline Constrained Delaunay Triangulation ( CDT ) library, available in ActionScript 3, C, C ++, C #, Go, Java, Javascript, Python and Ruby
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Some Related Sentences
– and Constrained
* Scott N. Callaham, " An Evaluation of Psalm 119 as Constrained Writing ," Hebrew Studies 50 ( 2009 ): 121 – 135.
An Annotated Bibliography Of Canonical Correspondence Analysis And Related Constrained Ordination Methods 1986 – 1996.
– and Delaunay
Robert Delaunay ( 12 April 1885 – 25 October 1941 ) was a French artist who, with his wife Sonia Delaunay and others, cofounded the Orphism art movement, noted for its use of strong colours and geometric shapes.
Robert Delaunay, Paysage au disque, 1906 – 1907, oil on canvas, 55 x 46 cm, Musée national d ' art moderne ( MNAM ), Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
( In the sky of Couchée de soleil, 1906 – 1907, Collection Rijksmuseum Kröller-Müller, is the solar disk which Delaunay was later to make into a personal emblem.
Simultaneous Contrasts: Sun and Moon, oil on canvas painting by Robert Delaunay, 1912 – 13, Museum of Modern Art, ( New York City )
Delphine de Girardin ( January 24, 1804, Aachen – June 29, 1855, Paris ), pen name Vicomte Delaunay, was a French author.
Charles Delaunay ( 18 January 1911, in Vineuil-Saint-Firmin, Oise – 16 February 1988, Paris ) was a French author, jazz expert, co-founder and long-term leader of the Hot Club de France.
Boris Nikolaevich Delaunay or Delone (; March 15, 1890 – July 17, 1980 ) was one of the first Russian mountain climbers and a Soviet / Russian mathematician, and the father of physicist Nikolai Borisovich Delone.
Sonia Delaunay ( nėe Terk, November 14, 1885 – December 5, 1979 ) was a Jewish-French artist who, with her husband Robert Delaunay and others, cofounded the Orphism art movement, noted for its use of strong colours and geometric shapes.
– and Triangulation
The Principal Triangulation of Britain was a triangulation project carried out between 1783 and about 1853 at the instigation of the Director of the Ordnance Survey General William Roy ( 1726 – 1790 ).
– and CDT
According to a USAF timeline, a series of military planes provided an emergency escort to the stricken Lear, beginning with an F-16 from Eglin Air Force Base, about an hour and twenty minutes ( 9: 33 EDT to 9: 52 CDT – see NTSB report on the crash ) after ground controllers lost contact.
By Monday, 11 April 1994, 6 p. m. CDT, several more real-time images were processed by X-SAR – Sahara Desert, a geology site and the area around the Japanese Archipelago.
:* 7 a. m. CDT ( 1200 UTC ) – Tropical Depression Two strengthens into Tropical Storm Bonnie in the southern Gulf of Mexico.
:* 1: 50 a. m. CDT ( 0650 UTC ) – Hurricane Ivan makes landfall near Gulf Shores, Alabama with winds.
:* 1 p. m. CDT ( 1800 UTC ) – A partial remnant of former Hurricane Ivan regenerates into Tropical Depression Ivan in the Gulf of Mexico.
:* 7 p. m. CDT ( 0000 UTC, September 23 ) – Tropical Depression Ivan strengthens into Tropical Storm Ivan, nearly a week after being classified as extratropical.
:* 9 p. m. CDT ( 0200 UTC, September 24 ) – Tropical Depression Ivan makes its second landfall near Cameron, Louisiana with winds.
:* 7 a. m. CDT ( 1200 UTC ) – Tropical Depression Fourteen forms 210 miles ( 330 km ) southeast of Brownsville, Texas.
:* 6 a. m. CDT ( 1100 UTC ) – Tropical Storm Matthew makes landfall on the Louisiana coast south of Houma with winds.
Around 7: 30PM CDT, a 1 / 4 to 1 / 2-mile ( 400 – 800 m ) wide tornado tracked into the southwest side of town, moving northeast, and passed over Burnett's Mound.
– and library
* 1986 – A fire at the Central library of the City of Los Angeles Public Library damages or destroys 400, 000 books and other items.
* 1914 – World War I: The library of the Catholic University of Leuven is deliberately destroyed by the German Army.
* Ioannis Kapodistrias, the first leader of free modern Greece ( 1776 – 1831 ), had a large building erected ; intended as a barracks, it was subsequently used as a museum, a library and a school.
Sir Thomas Grenville ( 1755 – 1846 ), a Trustee of The British Museum from 1830, assembled a fine library of 20, 240 volumes, which he left to the Museum in his will.
White's translation of a medieval bestiary in the Cambridge University library ; digitized by the University of Wisconsin – Madison libraries.
The Bliss bibliographic classification ( BC ) is a library classification system that was created by Henry E. Bliss ( 1870 – 1955 ), published in four volumes between 1940 and 1953.
Bertrand Russell, the first to discuss the paradox in print, attributed it to G. G. Berry ( 1867 – 1928 ), a junior librarian at Oxford's Bodleian library, who had suggested the more limited paradox arising from the expression " the first undefinable ordinal ".
The first foot-sensor-activated automatic door was made in China during the reign of Emperor Yang of Sui ( r. 604 – 618 ), who had one installed for his royal library.
There he enjoyed the society of such eminent men as Antoine-Léonard de Chézy ( his primary instructor ), Silvestre de Sacy, Louis Mathieu Langlès, and, above all, of Alexander Hamilton ( 1762 – 1824 ), cousin of the U. S. statesman, who had acquired, when in India, an acquaintance with Sanskrit, and had brought out, along with Langlès, a descriptive catalogue of the Sanskrit manuscripts of the Imperial library.
Civic Buildings: Former Arsenal and Archives of the City of Genève, Former Crédit Lyonnais, Former Hôtel Buisson, Former Hôtel du Résident de France et Bibliothèque de la Société de lecture de Genève, Former école des arts industriels, Archives d ' État de Genève ( Annexe ), Bâtiment des forces motrices, Library de Genève, Library juive de Genève « Gérard Nordmann », Cabinet des estampes, Centre d ' Iconographie genevoise, Collège Calvin, Ecole Geisendorf, Hôpitaux universitaires de Genève ( HUG ), Hôtel de Ville et tour Baudet, Immeuble Clarté at Rue Saint-Laurent 2 and 4, Immeubles House Rotonde at Rue Charles-Giron 11 – 19, Immeubles at Rue Beauregard 2, 4, 6, 8, Immeubles at Rue de la Corraterie 10 – 26, Immeubles at Rue des Granges 2 – 6, Immeuble at Rue des Granges 8, Immeubles at Rue des Granges 10 and 12, Immeuble at Rue des Granges 14, Immeuble and Former Armory at Rue des Granges 16, Immeubles at Rue Pierre Fatio 7 and 9, House de Saussure at Rue de la Cité 24, House Des arts du Grütli at Rue du Général-Dufour 16, House Royale et les deux immeubles à côté at Quai Gustave Ador 44 – 50, Tavel House at Rue du Puits-St-Pierre 6, Turrettini House at Rue de l ' Hôtel-de-Ville 8 and 10, Brunswick Monument, Palais de Justice, Palais de l ' Athénée, Palais des Nations with library and archives of the SDN and ONU, Palais Eynard et Archives de la ville de Genève, Palais Wilson, Parc des Bastions avec Mur des Réformateurs, Place Neuve et Monument du Général Dufour, Pont de la Machine, Pont sur l ' Arve, Poste du Mont-Blanc, Quai du Mont-Blanc, Quai et Hôtel des Bergues, Quai Général Guisan and English Gardens, Quai Gustave-Ador and Jet d ' eau, Télévision Suisse Romande, university of Geneva, Victoria Hall
Though his sources on Gnosticism were secondary, since the texts in the Nag Hammadi library were not yet widely available, Eric Voegelin ( 1901 – 1985 ), partially building on the concept of gnosis as used by Plato and the followers of Gnosticism, along with how it was defined by Hans Jonas, defined the gnosis of the followers of Gnosticism as religious philosophical teachings that are the foundations of cults.
In some cases, the contestant's program has to interact with a secret computer library, which allows problems where the input is not fixed, but depends on the program's actions – for example in game problems.
The library was conceived and opened either during the reign of Ptolemy I Soter ( 323 – 283 BC ) or during the reign of his son Ptolemy II ( 283 – 246 BC ).
Plutarch ( AD 46 – 120 ) wrote that during his visit to Alexandria in 48 BC Julius Caesar accidentally burned the library down when he set fire to his own ships to frustrate Achillas ' attempt to limit his ability to communicate by sea.
King Ptolemy II Philadelphus ( 309 – 246 BC ) is said to have set 500, 000 scrolls as an objective for the library.
The library was conceived and opened either during the reign of Ptolemy I Soter ( 323 – 283 BC ) or during the reign of his son Ptolemy II ( 283 – 246 BC ).
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