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Page "Eiffel (programming language)" ¶ 35
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upshot and is
The upshot is that scholars cannot assert with any confidence how much material Shakespeare took from the Ur-Hamlet ( if it even existed ), how much from Belleforest or Saxo, and how much from other contemporary sources ( such as Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy ).
The upshot of this is that free fall is inertial motion ; an object in free fall is falling because that is how objects move when there is no force being exerted on them, instead of this being due to the force of gravity as is the case in classical mechanics.
The upshot is, in the worst case, that the relation between strings that says they are equal in G is not decidable.
Of Fish's attempt to co-opt the critiques leveled against him, Eagleton responds, " The felicitous upshot is that nobody can ever criticise Fish, since if their criticisms are intelligible to him, they belong to his cultural game and are thus not really criticisms at all ; and if they are not intelligible, they belong to some other set of conventions entirely and are therefore irrelevant.
The upshot is that the first fundamental form () is invariant under changes in the coordinate system, and that this follows exclusively from the transformation properties of E, F, and G. Indeed, by the chain rule,
Another upshot of the fact that the graphics were rendered rather than simple images is that while the sun was setting, the entire palette of colors changed convincingly.
One upshot of confirmational holism is the underdetermination of theories: if all theories ( and the propositions derived from them ) of what exists are not sufficiently determined by empirical data ( data, sensory-data, evidence ); each theory with its interpretation of the evidence is equally justifiable or, alternatively, equally indeterminate.
" The upshot, in the critic's opinion, was that " the mixture — of good living, sex and violent action — is as before, but this is a highly polished performance, with an ingenious plot well documented and plenty of excitement.
A conception's actual confirmation ( if it occurs ) is neither its meaning nor its truth per se, but an actual upshot.
The upshot is that the receiver can determine with certainty the exact bearing from the station.
The upshot is that the programmer has a simple access model ; the downside is that three quarters of the video memory is now inaccessible ( we can now only access a total of 64 kB of display memory through the window, rather than 256 kB that is accessible indirectly by manipulating the planes ).
The practical upshot is that a DVD + R writer is able to locate data on the disc to byte accuracy whereas DVD-R is incapable of such precision.

upshot and can
The upshot of this is that the fluid's ability to transmit force can be controlled with an electromagnet, which gives rise to its many possible control-based applications.
The practical upshot of this arrangement is that recording drive can navigate to an exact location on the DVD + R ( W ) disc whereas it cannot do so with the DVD-R ( W ).

upshot and do
The upshot of this discovery results in the highest degree of ethical awareness, " an immediate knowledge of what I am and may not do.
He referred to a quote by Plato in his Postscript to Philosophical Fragments: " But I must ask you Socrates, what do you suppose is the upshot of all this?

upshot and for
The upshot of the evening was that I got the address of Pendleton's studio -- or rather, of the studio in which he gave his classes, for he didn't work there himself -- and joined the life class, which met every Tuesday and Thursday from ten to twelve in the morning.
In the extreme, exemplified by The Feminists, the upshot, according to Ellen Willis, was " unworkable, mechanistic demands for an absolutely random division of labor, taking no account of differences in skill, experience, or even inclination ".
The upshot of all this was the single type of stamp was sold for 2½d, 3d, 5c, 6¼c, and 7½c without ever receiving a surcharge indicating a changed value.
The upshot of this is a higher level of service / application availability for the underlying application
This in turn led to the concept of a " target " or " bogey " time for a section, known only to the organisers-the upshot was that crews basically needed to drive as fast as possible to stay on time.
This creates a ' distribution of time constants ,' the upshot of which is there is no particular time constant, or resonance frequency, for the system.
The upshot was that Allport who had previously worked for the latter company should arrange a deal.
The matter was worked out in due form and, by a committee, negotiations were opened with Phelps, the upshot being that an agreement for repurchase at £ 750 was concluded and the attorney-general was to direct the preparation of such assurances as would settle the property to " His Highness ' " use, that is, to the use of Oliver, Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England.

upshot and which
The upshot was the passage of the Constitution Act, which patriated the constitution from the United Kingdom.
In 1955 Muller was one of eleven prominent intellectuals to sign the Russell-Einstein Manifesto, the upshot of which was the first Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs in 1957, which addressed the control of nuclear weapons.
* The upshot of the matter is that to reduce Islam — with its transcendental moral essence which is based on commitment to ' enjoining the right and forbidding the wrong ’— is universal.
Early followers of the Báb were known as Bábís, however in the 1860s a split occurred after which the vast majority of Bábís followed Mirza Husayn ` Ali, known as Bahá ' u ' lláh, and became known as Bahá ' ís, while the minority who followed Subh-i-Azal came to be called Azalis .< ref >" But the upshot of the whole matter is, that out of every hundred Bábís probably not more than three or four are Ezelís < nowiki ></ nowiki >, all the rest accepting Behá ' u ' lláh < nowiki ></ nowiki > as the final and most perfect manifestation of the Truth.

upshot and .
An " upshot " or " yard on " shot involves delivering the bowl with an extra degree of weight ( often referred to as " controlled " weight or " rambler "), enough to displace the jack or disturb other bowls in the head without killing the end.
The upshot was that Heppenstall ended up with a bloody nose and was locked in a room.
The upshot of this was that Gregory refused to pay the additional taxes, he encouraged the Roman populace to drive the imperial governor of Rome from the city, and Leo was unable to impose his will upon Rome, as Lombard pressure kept the exarch of Ravenna from fielding an army to bring the pope to heel.
The upshot was that by the fall of 1198, Richard had regained almost all that had been lost in 1193.
The upshot has been an explosion of documentation and study of environmental consequences before the fact of development actions.
The upshot of the discussions were recommendations to the President in the form of NSC Actions.
The upshot was the world premiere in 1973 of the 28th Symphony, in a BBC broadcast produced by Robert Simpson in Maida Vale Studio 1, and played by the New Philharmonia Orchestra.
The upshot of these historical contingencies was that until theoretical computer science began taking an interest in combinatory logic in the 1960s and 1970s, nearly all work on the subject was by Haskell Curry and his students, or by Robert Feys in Belgium.
As an upshot from the success of " Dilemma ", Knowles ' debut album, Dangerously in Love, was postponed many times until June 2003.
Although the idea that airs carried sickness was incorrect, the practical upshot of Arbuthnot's advice was efficacious, as crowded, poorly sanitized Augustan era cities had bad air and infectious air.
The upshot of infantry clashes on the Plaine des Jarres was a directive from U. S. President John F. Kennedy in May 1961 that the U. S. Ambassador to Laos would serve as the de facto military commander in Laos.

is and setters
would give the answer ; in the cryptic sense, spoil works as an anagram indicator for vote, while the whole clue is, with a certain amount of licence allowed to crossword setters, a definition.
Thus the level of difficulty is associated with the setter rather than the newspaper, though puzzles by individual setters can actually vary in difficulty considerably.
: The Sunday Times cryptic crossword is compiled in rotation by three setters: Tim Moorey, Jeff Pearce and Dean Mayer.
This is a collaboration of two setters, one of whom has a minor role in supplying some pre-written clues.
The medal may be awarded up to three times a year to record setters in speed, altitude and distance categories in light aircraft, and is still being awarded.
The study done by Lewis and Yarnell in ( 1951 ) is one of the largest epidemiologists studies done which found thirty nine percent of the fire setters in the study to be diagnosed with pyromaniacs.
There is a range of causes, but an understanding of the different motives and actions of fire setters can provide a platform for prevention.
The occiput ( the bone at the back of the skull ) is not to be accentuated ( as it is in setters, for example ) with the head flowing smoothly into a well-arched neck.
' Jeweler ', however, is a term mostly reserved for a person who deals in jewellery ( buys and sells ) and not to be confused with a goldsmith, silversmith, gemologist, diamond cutter and diamond setters.
TCD is widely used by British crossword solvers and setters, and by Scrabble players ( though it is no longer the official Scrabble dictionary ).
An even more popular theory is that Greek traders brought coarse-haired setters to Italy during the height of the Roman empire, where the dogs were then crossed with various others and the modern Spinone eventually emerged.
It is based on generic operations rather than functions, and features anonymous classes, multiple inheritance, a strong error system, setters and locators for operations, and a facility for dynamic binding.
From the 2007 series a team of setters was engaged, as is the practice in most other quiz shows.
In the managed world, PresentationCore () provides a managed wrapper for MIL and implements the core services for WPF, including a property system that is aware of the dependencies between the setters and consumers of the property, a message dispatching system by means of a object to implement a specialized event system and services which can implement a layout system such as measurement for UI elements.
He always had an intense love of sport, he rode well to hounds, kept greyhounds and entered them at coursing meetings, broke his own pointers and setters, and, what is far less common, also trained hawks.
According to Tsebelis, among feasible outcomes ( that is, the shared winset of outcomes which meet each veto player ’ s requirement of being superior to the status quo ), agenda setters pick the outcome that they like most.
Tsebelis predicts that when few outcomes are feasible, agenda setters will have a small role ; where none at all are possible ( that is, there is no ‘ core ’ where all winsets overlap ), agenda setters are irrelevant.
Tamarama is affectionately nicknamed Glamarama ( or Glamourama ) by the locals, as it is a beach where wannabe trend setters come to sunbathe and swim or simply try to be seen.

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