sql
stringlengths 6
1.05M
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DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `users`;
/*!40101 SET @saved_cs_client = @@character_set_client */;
/*!40101 SET character_set_client = utf8 */;
CREATE TABLE `users` (
`id_users` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`email` varchar(254) NOT NULL,
`first_name` varchar(45) NOT NULL,
`last_name` varchar(45) NOT NULL,
`passwd` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id_users`),
UNIQUE KEY `idusers_UNIQUE` (`id_users`),
UNIQUE KEY `email_UNIQUE` (`email`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=1 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
/*!40101 SET character_set_client = @saved_cs_client */;
|
<gh_stars>1-10
BEGIN;
SELECT * FROM no_plan();
-- Setup an observable table:
CREATE TABLE "public"."foobar" (
"id" SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
"name" VARCHAR(100)
);
SELECT * FROM observe_table('public', 'foobar', true);
-- Try to insert a single value and observe the changelog table grow in size:
INSERT INTO "public"."foobar" ("name") VALUES ('Luke');
SELECT results_eq(
'SELECT COUNT(*)::int AS "count" FROM "public"."changelog"',
ARRAY[1]
);
-- Disable the observable table:
SELECT * FROM observe_table('public', 'foobar', false);
INSERT INTO "public"."foobar" ("name") VALUES ('Han');
-- the sie of the table should grow
SELECT results_eq(
'SELECT COUNT(*)::int AS "count" FROM "public"."foobar"',
ARRAY[2]
);
-- but not the size of the changelog
SELECT results_eq(
'SELECT COUNT(*)::int AS "count" FROM "public"."changelog"',
ARRAY[1]
);
SELECT * FROM finish();
ROLLBACK;
|
<filename>SRV/SRV/SRV/srv/Stored Procedures/RunLogBackupDB.sql
-- =============================================
-- Author: <Author,,Name>
-- Create date: <Create Date,,>
-- Description: <Description,,>
-- =============================================
CREATE PROCEDURE [srv].[RunLogBackupDB]
@ClearLog BIT = 1 --усекать ли журнал транзакций
, @IsExtName BIT = 1 --добавлять ли к имени дату и время в формате YYYY_MM_DD_HH_MM_SS в формате UTC
, @IsCHECKDB BIT = 0 --проверять ли базу данных перед резервным копированием
, @IsContinueAfterError BIT = 0 --продолжать ли создание резервной копии при возниакновении ошибок (NULL-по умолчанию)
, @IsCopyOnly BIT = 0 --создать ли резервную копию только для копирования
, @OnlyDBName NVARCHAR(255) = NULL --создать резервную копию для заданной базы данных
AS
BEGIN
/*
Создание резервной копии журнала транзакции БД
*/
SET NOCOUNT ON;
declare @dt datetime=getdate();
declare @year int=YEAR(@dt);
declare @month int=MONTH(@dt);
declare @day int=DAY(@dt);
declare @hour int=DatePart(hour, @dt);
declare @minute int=DatePart(minute, @dt);
declare @second int=DatePart(second, @dt);
declare @pathBackup nvarchar(255);
declare @pathstr nvarchar(255);
declare @DBName nvarchar(255);
declare @backupName nvarchar(255);
declare @sql nvarchar(max);
declare @backupSetId as int;
DECLARE @FileNameLog NVARCHAR(255);
DECLARE @ContinueAfterError NVARCHAR(255);
DECLARE @CopyOnly NVARCHAR(255);
IF (@IsContinueAfterError = 1)
SET @ContinueAfterError = N', CONTINUE_AFTER_ERROR';
ELSE IF(@IsContinueAfterError=0)
SET @ContinueAfterError = N', STOP_ON_ERROR';
ELSE SET @ContinueAfterError=N'';
IF (@IsCopyOnly = 1)
SET @CopyOnly = N'COPY_ONLY, ';
ELSE
SET @CopyOnly = N'';
DECLARE @tbllog TABLE (
[DBName] [NVARCHAR](255) NOT NULL
,[FileNameLog] [NVARCHAR](255) NOT NULL
);
declare @tbl table (
[DBName] [nvarchar](255) NOT NULL,
[LogPathBackup] [nvarchar](255) NOT NULL
);
insert into @tbl (
[DBName]
,[LogPathBackup]
)
select DB_NAME(b.[DBID])
,b.[LogPathBackup]
from [srv].[BackupSettings] as b
inner join sys.databases as d on b.[DBID]=d.[database_id]
where d.recovery_model<3
AND ((DB_NAME([DBID])=@OnlyDBName) OR (@OnlyDBName IS NULL))
and DB_NAME([DBID]) not in (
N'master',
N'tempdb',
N'model',
N'msdb',
N'ReportServer',
N'ReportServerTempDB'
)
and [LogPathBackup] is not null;
INSERT INTO @tbllog ([DBName], [FileNameLog])
SELECT
t.[DBName]
,tt.[FileName] AS [FileNameLog]
FROM @tbl AS t
INNER JOIN [inf].[ServerDBFileInfo] AS tt
ON t.[DBName] = DB_NAME(tt.[database_id])
WHERE tt.[Type_desc] = N'LOG';
DECLARE db_cursor CURSOR LOCAL
FOR SELECT [DBName]
,[LogPathBackup]
FROM @tbl;
OPEN db_cursor;
FETCH NEXT FROM db_cursor
INTO @DBName, @pathBackup;
while(@@FETCH_STATUS = 0)
begin
set @backupSetId=NULL;
IF (@IsExtName = 1)
BEGIN
SET @backupName = @DBName + N'_Log_backup_' + CAST(@year AS NVARCHAR(255)) + N'_' +
CASE WHEN (@month<10) THEN N'0' ELSE N'' END + CAST(@month AS NVARCHAR(255)) + N'_' +
CASE WHEN (@day<10) THEN N'0' ELSE N'' END +CAST(@day AS NVARCHAR(255))+N'_'+
CASE WHEN (@hour<10) THEN N'0' ELSE N'' END + cast(@hour as nvarchar(255))+N'_'+
CASE WHEN (@minute<10) THEN N'0' ELSE N'' END + cast(@minute as nvarchar(255))+N'_'+
CASE WHEN (@second<10) THEN N'0' ELSE N'' END + cast(@second as nvarchar(255));
END
ELSE
BEGIN
SET @backupName = @DBName;
END
SET @pathstr = @pathBackup + @backupName + N'.trn';
IF (@IsCHECKDB = 1)
BEGIN
SET @sql = N'DBCC CHECKDB(N' + N'''' + @DBName + N'''' + N') WITH NO_INFOMSGS';
EXEC (@sql);
END
set @sql=N'BACKUP LOG ['+@DBName+N'] TO DISK = N'+N''''+@pathstr+N''''+
N' WITH ' + @CopyOnly + N'NOFORMAT, NOINIT, NAME = N'+N''''+@backupName+N''''+
N', CHECKSUM, SKIP, REWIND, COMPRESSION, STATS = 10'+@ContinueAfterError+N';';
exec(@sql);
select @backupSetId = position
from msdb..backupset where database_name=@DBName
and backup_set_id=(select max(backup_set_id) from msdb..backupset where database_name=@DBName);
set @sql=N'Ошибка верификации. Сведения о резервном копировании для базы данных "'+@DBName+'" не найдены.';
if @backupSetId is null begin raiserror(@sql, 16, 1) end
else
begin
set @sql=N'RESTORE VERIFYONLY FROM DISK = N'+''''+@pathstr+N''''+N' WITH FILE = '+cast(@backupSetId as nvarchar(255));
exec(@sql);
END
IF (@ClearLog = 1)
BEGIN
DECLARE log_cursor CURSOR LOCAL
FOR SELECT [FileNameLog]
FROM @tbllog
WHERE DBName = @DBName;
OPEN log_cursor;
FETCH NEXT FROM log_cursor
INTO @FileNameLog;
WHILE (@@FETCH_STATUS = 0)
BEGIN
SET @sql = N'USE [' + @DBName + N'];' + N' DBCC SHRINKFILE (N' + N'''' + @FileNameLog + N'''' + N' , 0, TRUNCATEONLY)';
EXEC (@sql);
FETCH NEXT FROM log_cursor
INTO @FileNameLog;
END
CLOSE log_cursor;
DEALLOCATE log_cursor;
END
FETCH NEXT FROM db_cursor
INTO @DBName, @pathBackup;
END
CLOSE db_cursor;
DEALLOCATE db_cursor;
END
GO
EXECUTE sp_addextendedproperty @name = N'MS_Description', @value = N'Создание резервной копии журнала транзакции БД', @level0type = N'SCHEMA', @level0name = N'srv', @level1type = N'PROCEDURE', @level1name = N'RunLogBackupDB';
|
<filename>sql_study_1/page14/exercise6.sql
-- after "FROM purchases" add code to get a maximum of 5 rows
-- in descending order by the "price" column
SELECT *
FROM purchases
ORDER BY price DESC
LIMIT 5;
|
<gh_stars>10-100
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS modules;
|
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS "captcha_captchastore" (
"id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
"challenge" varchar(32) NOT NULL,
"response" varchar(32) NOT NULL,
"hashkey" varchar(40) NOT NULL UNIQUE,
"expiration" datetime NOT NULL
);
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS "notifications_usernotification";
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS "notifications_usernotification" (
"id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
"to_user" varchar(255) NOT NULL,
"msg_type" varchar(30) NOT NULL,
"detail" text NOT NULL,
"timestamp" datetime NOT NULL,
"seen" bool NOT NULL
);
CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS "notifications_usernotification_265e5521" ON "notifications_usernotification" ("msg_type");
CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS "notifications_usernotification_bc172800" ON "notifications_usernotification" ("to_user");
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS "options_useroptions" (
"id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
"email" varchar(255) NOT NULL,
"option_key" varchar(50) NOT NULL,
"option_val" varchar(50) NOT NULL
);
CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS "options_useroptions_830a6ccb" ON "options_useroptions" ("email");
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS "profile_detailedprofile" (
"id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
"user" varchar(255) NOT NULL,
"department" varchar(512) NOT NULL,
"telephone" varchar(100) NOT NULL
);
CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS "profile_detailedprofile_6340c63c" ON "profile_detailedprofile" ("user");
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS "share_uploadlinkshare" (
"id" integer NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
"username" varchar(255) NOT NULL,
"repo_id" varchar(36) NOT NULL,
"path" text NOT NULL,
"token" varchar(10) NOT NULL UNIQUE,
"ctime" datetime NOT NULL,
"view_cnt" integer NOT NULL
);
CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS "share_uploadlinkshare_2059abe4" ON "share_uploadlinkshare" ("repo_id");
CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS "share_uploadlinkshare_ee0cafa2" ON "share_uploadlinkshare" ("username");
|
create procedure ProcWithUsedTableVariable
as
begin
declare @A table (a int) -- @A is unused. This should be flagged as a problem
insert into @A values(1)
end
|
CREATE TABLE [dbo].[BusinessUnits](
[Id] [uniqueidentifier] NOT NULL,
[DisplayName] [nvarchar](100) NOT NULL,
[ExternalId] [nvarchar](20) NOT NULL,
[DateActive] [smalldatetime] NOT NULL,
[DateRetired] [smalldatetime] NULL,
[Currency] [char](3) NOT NULL,
[Description] [nvarchar](500) NOT NULL,
[ParentId] [uniqueidentifier] NULL,
[Attributes] NVARCHAR(2000) NULL,
[UserName] VARCHAR(150) NOT NULL DEFAULT 'System',
[DateLastModified] SMALLDATETIME NOT NULL DEFAULT (getutcdate()),
CONSTRAINT [PK_BusinessUnits] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED
(
[Id] ASC
)WITH (PAD_INDEX = OFF, STATISTICS_NORECOMPUTE = OFF, IGNORE_DUP_KEY = OFF, ALLOW_ROW_LOCKS = ON, ALLOW_PAGE_LOCKS = ON) ON [PRIMARY]
) ON [PRIMARY]
GO
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[BusinessUnits] ADD CONSTRAINT [DF_BusinessUnits_Currency] DEFAULT ('USD') FOR [Currency]
GO
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[BusinessUnits] ADD CONSTRAINT [DF_BusinessUnits_DateActive] DEFAULT (getutcdate()) FOR [DateActive]
GO
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[BusinessUnits] WITH NOCHECK ADD CONSTRAINT [FK_BusinessUnits_BusinessUnits] FOREIGN KEY([ParentId])
REFERENCES [dbo].[BusinessUnits] ([Id])
GO
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[BusinessUnits] CHECK CONSTRAINT [FK_BusinessUnits_BusinessUnits]
GO
ALTER TABLE [dbo].[BusinessUnits] ADD CONSTRAINT [DF_BusinessUnits_Id] DEFAULT (newid()) FOR [Id]
GO
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX [IX_BusinessUnits_Column] ON [dbo].[BusinessUnits] ([ExternalId])
|
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test.using1;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test.using2;
CREATE TABLE test.using1(a UInt8, b UInt8) ENGINE=Memory;
CREATE TABLE test.using2(a UInt8, b UInt8) ENGINE=Memory;
INSERT INTO test.using1 VALUES (1, 1) (2, 2) (3, 3);
INSERT INTO test.using2 VALUES (4, 4) (2, 2) (3, 3);
SELECT * FROM test.using1 ALL LEFT JOIN (SELECT * FROM test.using2) USING (a, a, a, b, b, b, a, a) ORDER BY a;
DROP TABLE test.using1;
DROP TABLE test.using2;
|
<reponame>ghJo-Gaia3D/mago3d<gh_stars>10-100
drop table if exists data_library_converter_job cascade;
drop table if exists data_library_converter_job_file cascade;
drop table if exists data_library_group cascade;
drop table if exists data_library cascade;
drop table if exists data_library_upload cascade;
drop table if exists data_library_upload_file cascade;
-- 데이터 라이브러리 파일 변환 job
create table data_library_converter_job (
data_library_converter_job_id bigint,
data_library_upload_id bigint,
data_library_group_target varchar(5) default 'user',
user_id varchar(32),
title varchar(256) not null,
converter_template varchar(30) default 'basic',
usf numeric(13,5),
y_axis_up char(1) default 'N',
file_count integer default 0,
status varchar(20) default 'ready',
error_code varchar(4000),
year char(4) default to_char(now(), 'yyyy'),
month varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'MM'),
day varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'DD'),
year_week varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'WW'),
week varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'W'),
hour varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'HH24'),
minute varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'MI'),
update_date timestamp with time zone,
insert_date timestamp with time zone default now(),
constraint data_library_converter_job_pk primary key (data_library_converter_job_id)
);
comment on table data_library_converter_job is '데이터 라이브러리 파일 변환 job';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.data_library_converter_job_id is '고유번호';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.data_library_upload_id is '데이터 라이브러리 업로더 고유번호';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.data_library_group_target is '[중복] admin : 관리자용 데이터 라이브러리 그룹, user : 일반 사용자용 데이터 라이브러리 그룹';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.title is '제목';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.user_id is '사용자 아이디';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.converter_template is '변환 유형. basic : 기본, building : 빌딩, extra-big-building : 초대형 빌딩, point-cloud : point cloud 데이터';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.usf is 'unit scale factor. 설계 파일의 1이 의미하는 단위. 기본 1 = 0.01m';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.y_axis_up is '높이방향. y축이 건물의 천장을 향하는 경우 Y. default = N';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.file_count is '대상 file 개수';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.status is '상태. ready : 준비, success : 성공, waiting : 승인대기, fail : 실패';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.error_code is '에러 코드';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.year is '년';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.month is '월';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.day is '일';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.year_week is '일년중 몇주';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.week is '이번달 몇주';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.hour is '시간';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.minute is '분';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.update_date is '수정일';
comment on column data_library_converter_job.insert_date is '등록일';
-- 데이터 라이브러리 변환 이력
create table data_library_converter_job_file(
data_library_converter_job_file_id bigint,
data_library_converter_job_id bigint,
data_library_upload_id bigint,
data_library_upload_file_id bigint,
data_library_group_id int,
user_id varchar(32),
status varchar(20) default 'ready',
error_code varchar(4000),
year char(4) default to_char(now(), 'yyyy'),
month varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'MM'),
day varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'DD'),
year_week varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'WW'),
week varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'W'),
hour varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'HH24'),
minute varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'MI'),
insert_date timestamp with time zone default now(),
constraint data_library_converter_job_file_pk primary key (data_library_converter_job_file_id)
);
comment on table data_library_converter_job_file is '데이터 라이브러리 변환 이력';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.data_library_converter_job_file_id is '고유번호';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.data_library_converter_job_id is '데이터 라이브러리 변환 job 고유번호';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.data_library_upload_id is '데이터 라이브러리 업로드 고유번호';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.data_library_upload_file_id is '데이터 라이브러리 업로드 파일 고유번호';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.data_library_group_id is '데이터 라이브러리 그룹 고유번호(중복)';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.user_id is '사용자 아이디';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.status is '상태. ready : 준비, success : 성공, fail : 실패';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.error_code is '에러 코드';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.year is '년';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.month is '월';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.day is '일';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.year_week is '일년중 몇주';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.week is '이번달 몇주';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.hour is '시간';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.minute is '분';
comment on column data_library_converter_job_file.insert_date is '등록일';
-- data library 그룹
create table data_library_group (
data_library_group_id integer,
data_library_group_key varchar(60) not null,
data_library_group_name varchar(256) not null,
data_library_group_path varchar(256),
data_library_group_target varchar(5) default 'user',
sharing varchar(30) default 'public',
user_id varchar(32),
ancestor integer default 0,
parent integer default 0,
depth integer default 1,
view_order integer default 1,
children integer default 0,
basic boolean default false,
available boolean default true,
data_library_count integer default 0,
description varchar(256),
update_date timestamp with time zone,
insert_date timestamp with time zone default now(),
constraint data_library_group_pk primary key (data_library_group_id)
);
comment on table data_library_group is 'data library 그룹';
comment on column data_library_group.data_library_group_id is 'data library 그룹 고유번호';
comment on column data_library_group.data_library_group_key is '링크 활용 등을 위한 확장 컬럼';
comment on column data_library_group.data_library_group_name is 'data library 그룹 그룹명';
comment on column data_library_group.data_library_group_path is '서비스 경로';
comment on column data_library_group.data_library_group_target is 'admin : 관리자용 data library 그룹, user : 일반 사용자용 data library 그룹';
comment on column data_library_group.sharing is 'common : 공통, public : 공개, private : 비공개, group : 그룹';
comment on column data_library_group.user_id is '사용자 아이디';
comment on column data_library_group.data_library_count is '데이터 라이브러리 총 건수';
comment on column data_library_group.ancestor is '조상';
comment on column data_library_group.parent is '부모';
comment on column data_library_group.depth is '깊이';
comment on column data_library_group.view_order is '나열 순서';
comment on column data_library_group.children is '자식 존재 개수';
comment on column data_library_group.basic is 'true : 기본, false : 선택';
comment on column data_library_group.available is 'true : 사용, false : 사용안함';
comment on column data_library_group.description is '설명';
comment on column data_library_group.update_date is '수정일';
comment on column data_library_group.insert_date is '등록일';
-- data library
create table data_library (
data_library_id bigint,
data_library_group_id integer,
data_library_converter_job_id bigint,
data_library_key varchar(100) not null,
data_library_name varchar(256) not null,
data_library_path varchar(256),
data_library_thumbnail varchar(256),
data_type varchar(30),
rule_id int,
user_id varchar(32),
service_type varchar(30),
view_order integer default 1,
available boolean default true,
assemble boolean default false,
status varchar(20) default 'use',
description varchar(256),
update_date timestamp with time zone,
insert_date timestamp with time zone default now(),
constraint data_library_pk primary key (data_library_id)
);
comment on table data_library is 'data library';
comment on column data_library.data_library_id is 'data library 고유번호';
comment on column data_library.data_library_group_id is 'data library 그룹 고유번호';
comment on column data_library.data_library_converter_job_id is 'data library converter job 고유번호';
comment on column data_library.data_library_key is 'data library 고유키(API용)';
comment on column data_library.data_library_name is 'data library명';
comment on column data_library.data_library_path is 'data library 경로';
comment on column data_library.data_library_thumbnail is 'data library 썸네일';
comment on column data_library.data_type is '데이터 타입(중복). 3ds,obj,dae,collada,ifc,las,citygml,indoorgml,etc';
comment on column data_library.rule_id is '룰 고유번호';
comment on column data_library.user_id is '사용자명';
comment on column data_library.service_type is '서비스 타입 (정적, 동적)';
comment on column data_library.view_order is '나열 순서';
comment on column data_library.available is '사용유무.';
comment on column data_library.assemble is '합체 가능한 데이터 유무. true : 합체, false : 단일';
comment on column data_library.status is '상태. processing : 변환중, use : 사용중, unused : 사용중지(관리자), delete : 삭제(비표시)';
comment on column data_library.description is '설명';
comment on column data_library.update_date is '수정일';
comment on column data_library.insert_date is '등록일';
-- 데이터 라이브러리 업로드 정보
create table data_library_upload (
data_library_upload_id bigint,
data_library_group_id int,
sharing varchar(30) default 'public',
data_type varchar(30),
data_library_name varchar(256),
rule_id int,
user_id varchar(32),
mapping_type varchar(30) default 'origin',
file_count int default 0,
converter_target_count int default 0,
converter_count int default 0,
status varchar(20) default 'upload',
year char(4) default to_char(now(), 'yyyy'),
month varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'MM'),
day varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'DD'),
year_week varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'WW'),
week varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'W'),
hour varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'HH24'),
minute varchar(2) default to_char(now(), 'MI'),
description varchar(256),
update_date timestamp with time zone,
insert_date timestamp with time zone default now(),
constraint data_library_upload_pk primary key (data_library_upload_id)
);
comment on table data_library_upload is '데이터 라이브러리 업로드 정보';
comment on column data_library_upload.data_library_upload_id is '고유번호';
comment on column data_library_upload.data_library_group_id is '데이터 라이브러리 그룹 고유번호';
comment on column data_library_upload.sharing is '공유 유형. 0 : common, 1: public, 2 : private, 3 : sharing';
comment on column data_library_upload.data_type is '데이터 타입. 3ds,obj,dae,collada,ifc,las,citygml,indoorgml,gml,jpg,jpeg,gif,png,bmp,zip,mtl';
comment on column data_library_upload.data_library_name is '데이터 라이브러리명';
comment on column data_library_upload.rule_id is '룰 고유번호';
comment on column data_library_upload.user_id is '사용자 아이디';
comment on column data_library_upload.mapping_type is '기본값 origin : latitude, longitude, height를 origin에 맞춤. boundingboxcenter : latitude, longitude, height를 boundingboxcenter 맞춤';
comment on column data_library_upload.file_count is '파일 개수';
comment on column data_library_upload.converter_target_count is 'converter 변환 대상 파일 수';
comment on column data_library_upload.converter_count is 'converter 횟수';
comment on column data_library_upload.status is '상태. upload : 업로딩 완료, converter : 변환';
comment on column data_library_upload.year is '년';
comment on column data_library_upload.month is '월';
comment on column data_library_upload.day is '일';
comment on column data_library_upload.year_week is '일년중 몇주';
comment on column data_library_upload.week is '이번달 몇주';
comment on column data_library_upload.hour is '시간';
comment on column data_library_upload.minute is '분';
comment on column data_library_upload.description is '설명';
comment on column data_library_upload.update_date is '수정일';
comment on column data_library_upload.insert_date is '등록일';
-- 데이터 라이브러리 업로드 파일 정보
create table data_library_upload_file(
data_library_upload_file_id bigint,
data_library_upload_id bigint,
converter_target boolean default false,
user_id varchar(32),
file_type varchar(9) default 'file',
file_name varchar(100) not null,
file_real_name varchar(100) not null,
file_path varchar(256) not null,
file_sub_path varchar(256),
file_size varchar(12) not null,
file_ext varchar(20),
depth int default 1,
error_message varchar(256),
insert_date timestamp with time zone default now(),
constraint data_library_upload_file_pk primary key (data_library_upload_file_id)
);
comment on table data_library_upload_file is '데이터 라이브러리 업로드 파일 정보';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.data_library_upload_file_id is '고유번호';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.data_library_upload_id is '데이터 라이브러리 업로드 고유번호';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.converter_target is 'converter 대상 파일 유무. Y : 대상, N : 대상아님(기본값)';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.user_id is '사용자 아이디';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.file_type is '디렉토리/파일 구분. D : 디렉토리, F : 파일';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.file_name is '파일 이름';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.file_real_name is '파일 실제 이름';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.file_path is '파일 경로';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.file_sub_path is '프로젝트 경로 또는 공통 디렉토리 이하 부터의 파일 경로';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.file_size is '파일 사이즈';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.file_ext is '파일 확장자';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.depth is '계층구조 깊이. 1부터 시작';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.error_message is '오류 메시지';
comment on column data_library_upload_file.insert_date is '등록일';
|
CREATE TABLE order_lines
(
order_line_id int GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS IDENTITY PRIMARY KEY,
order_id SERIAL REFERENCES orders(order_id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
product_id SERIAL REFERENCES products(product_id) ON DELETE CASCADE,
units SMALLINT NOT NULL
)
|
<reponame>githubsigmod2021/CodecDB
select
plain.value AS plain,
dict.value as dict,
delta.value as delta,
dl.value as dl,
plaingz.value as gz,
plainlz.value as lz,
plainsn.value as sn
from
col_data cd
join
feature plain ON plain.col_id = cd.id
and plain.type = 'EncFileSize'
and plain.name = 'PLAIN_file_size'
join
feature dict ON dict.col_id = cd.id
and dict.type = 'EncFileSize'
and dict.name = 'DICT_file_size'
join
feature delta ON delta.col_id = cd.id
and delta.type = 'EncFileSize'
and delta.name = 'DELTA_file_size'
join
feature dl ON dl.col_id = cd.id
and dl.type = 'EncFileSize'
and dl.name = 'DELTAL_file_size'
join
feature plaingz ON plaingz.col_id = cd.id
and plaingz.type = 'CompressEncFileSize'
and plaingz.name = 'PLAIN_GZIP_file_size'
join
feature plainlz ON plainlz.col_id = cd.id
and plainlz.type = 'CompressEncFileSize'
and plainlz.name = 'PLAIN_LZO_file_size'
join
feature plainsn ON plainsn.col_id = cd.id
and plainsn.type = 'CompressEncFileSize'
and plainsn.name = 'PLAIN_SNAPPY_file_size'
where
cd.data_type = 'STRING'
and cd.parent_id is NULL limit 50000
|
INSERT INTO `sys_menu` (`id`, `code`, `pcode`, `pcodes`, `name`, `icon`, `url`, `num`, `levels`, `ismenu`, `tips`, `status`, `isopen`) VALUES ('1010081297948778498', 'vipUserField', 'member', '[0],[member],', 'VIP用户自定义字段', '', '/vipUserField', '99', '2', '1', NULL, '1', '0');
INSERT INTO `sys_menu` (`id`, `code`, `pcode`, `pcodes`, `name`, `icon`, `url`, `num`, `levels`, `ismenu`, `tips`, `status`, `isopen`) VALUES ('1010081297948778499', 'vipUserField_list', 'vipUserField', '[0],[member],[vipUserField],', 'VIP用户自定义字段列表', '', '/vipUserField/list', '99', '3', '0', NULL, '1', '0');
INSERT INTO `sys_menu` (`id`, `code`, `pcode`, `pcodes`, `name`, `icon`, `url`, `num`, `levels`, `ismenu`, `tips`, `status`, `isopen`) VALUES ('1010081297948778500', 'vipUserField_add', 'vipUserField', '[0],[member],[vipUserField],', 'VIP用户自定义字段添加', '', '/vipUserField/add', '99', '3', '0', NULL, '1', '0');
INSERT INTO `sys_menu` (`id`, `code`, `pcode`, `pcodes`, `name`, `icon`, `url`, `num`, `levels`, `ismenu`, `tips`, `status`, `isopen`) VALUES ('1010081297948778501', 'vipUserField_update', 'vipUserField', '[0],[member],[vipUserField],', 'VIP用户自定义字段更新', '', '/vipUserField/update', '99', '3', '0', NULL, '1', '0');
INSERT INTO `sys_menu` (`id`, `code`, `pcode`, `pcodes`, `name`, `icon`, `url`, `num`, `levels`, `ismenu`, `tips`, `status`, `isopen`) VALUES ('1010081297948778502', 'vipUserField_delete', 'vipUserField', '[0],[member],[vipUserField],', 'VIP用户自定义字段删除', '', '/vipUserField/delete', '99', '3', '0', NULL, '1', '0');
INSERT INTO `sys_menu` (`id`, `code`, `pcode`, `pcodes`, `name`, `icon`, `url`, `num`, `levels`, `ismenu`, `tips`, `status`, `isopen`) VALUES ('1010081297948778503', 'vipUserField_detail', 'vipUserField', '[0],[member],[vipUserField],', 'VIP用户自定义字段详情', '', '/vipUserField/detail', '99', '3', '0', NULL, '1', '0');
|
<filename>tcl/wtk/modules/cor/sql/cor-objects-sequence-create.sql
-- CREATE [ TEMPORARY | TEMP ] SEQUENCE name [ INCREMENT [ BY ] increment ]
-- [ MINVALUE minvalue | NO MINVALUE ] [ MAXVALUE maxvalue | NO MAXVALUE ]
-- [ START [ WITH ] start ] [ CACHE cache ] [ [ NO ] CYCLE ]
-- [ OWNED BY { table.column | NONE } ]
CREATE SEQUENCE cordb.cor_object_id_seq
INCREMENT BY 1
MINVALUE 1 MAXVALUE 2000000000
-- CYCLE
START WITH 10000000 -- 10million
OWNED BY cordb.cor_objects.object_id;
--CREATE SEQUENCE cordb.test_seq
-- INCREMENT BY 1
-- MINVALUE 1 MAXVALUE 5
-- CYCLE
-- START WITH 2;
|
<filename>sql/_27_banana_qa/issue_5765_timezone_support/_00_dev_cases/_02_operator/_23_minute_with_tz/cases/minute_005.sql
--marginal values of timestamptz/datetimetz type
--2. marginal values: timestamptz argument
select minute(timestamptz'00:00:00 01/01 Asia/Seoul');
select minute(timestamptz'03:14:07 1/19/2038 Asia/Seoul');
select minute(timestamptz'0:0:0 PM 1970-01-01 Asia/Seoul');
select minute(timestamptz'1/19/2038 03:14:07 pm Asia/Seoul');
select minute(timestamptz'1970-1-1 0:0 Asia/Seoul');
select minute(timestamptz'2038--01-19 3:14:7 Asia/Seoul');
--3. marginal values: datetimetz argument
select minute(datetimetz'0:0:0.00 1/1 Asia/Seoul');
select minute(datetimetz'23:59:59.999 12/31/9999 Asia/Seoul');
select minute(datetimetz'00:00:00.0000 AM 0001-01-01 Asia/Seoul');
select minute(datetimetz'12/31/9999 23:59:59.999 Asia/Seoul');
|
-- @testpoint: opengauss关键字temporary(非保留),作为同义词对象名,部分测试点合理报错
--前置条件
drop table if exists explain_test;
create table explain_test(id int,name varchar(10));
--关键字不带引号-成功
drop synonym if exists temporary;
create synonym temporary for explain_test;
insert into temporary values (1,'ada'),(2, 'bob');
update temporary set temporary.name='cici' where temporary.id=2;
select * from temporary;
drop synonym if exists temporary;
--关键字带双引号-成功
drop synonym if exists "temporary";
create synonym "temporary" for explain_test;
drop synonym if exists "temporary";
--关键字带单引号-合理报错
drop synonym if exists 'temporary';
create synonym 'temporary' for explain_test;
insert into 'temporary' values (1,'ada'),(2, 'bob');
update 'temporary' set 'temporary'.name='cici' where 'temporary'.id=2;
select * from 'temporary';
--关键字带反引号-合理报错
drop synonym if exists `temporary`;
create synonym `temporary` for explain_test;
insert into `temporary` values (1,'ada'),(2, 'bob');
update `temporary` set `temporary`.name='cici' where `temporary`.id=2;
select * from `temporary`;
--清理环境
drop table if exists explain_test;
|
CREATE TABLE #GuidDemo (ID UNIQUEIDENTIFIER, Value VARCHAR(20))
GO
DECLARE @i INT = 0
WHILE @i < 1000000
BEGIN
INSERT INTO #GuidDemo (ID, Value) VALUES (NEWID(), 'SampleValue')
SET @i = @i+1
END
|
<gh_stars>0
SELECT title, film_id
FROM film
WHERE title = 'Early Home';
SELECT *
FROM inventory
WHERE film_id = 268;
SELECT i.inventory_id, i.film_id, i.store_id
FROM inventory i
JOIN film f
ON (i.film_id = f.film_id)
WHERE f.title = 'Early Home';
SELECT *
FROM inventory
WHERE film_id IN
(
SELECT film_id
FROM film
WHERE title = 'Early Home'
);
|
<gh_stars>0
INSERT INTO `biochemical_condition_test` (id,condition_id,test_name,created_at,updated_at) VALUES
(1,1,'Fasting Sugar','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(2,1,'PP Sugar','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(3,1,'HbA1C','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(4,1,'Urine Routine (Optional)','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(5,2,'THS','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(6,3,'U<NAME>','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(7,4,'FSH:lh ratio; DHEA','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(8,5,'S. Testosterone','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(9,6,'Total Serum Ca phpsphate','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(10,7,'Serum Prolactin','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(11,8,'TMT if not done in last 6 monts','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(12,8,'Lipid Profile','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(13,9,'Insulin Fasting','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(14,9,'Insulin PP','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(15,10,'Alkaline Phosphatase','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58'),
(16,11,'Ultrasound','2017-06-07 00:25:58','2017-06-07 00:25:58');
|
<filename>Solutions/SQL/Easy/JapaneseCitiesAttributes.sql
/*
Query all attributes of every Japanese city in the CITY table. The COUNTRYCODE for Japan is JPN.
The CITY table is described as follows:
*/
SELECT *
FROM
CITY
WHERE
COUNTRYCODE = 'JPN';
|
<filename>StoredProcedures/dbo.uspxUnpivot.sql
IF EXISTS (SELECT * FROM sys.procedures WHERE [name] = 'uspxUnpivot')
BEGIN
DROP PROCEDURE dbo.uspxUnpivot
PRINT 'DROP PROCEDURE dbo.uspxUnpivot'
END
GO
CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.uspxUnpivot
@TempTableName NVARCHAR(255),
@LastFixedColumnIndex INT = 1,
@MaxWidth INT = 255
AS
BEGIN
/*
Convert a series of columns into Key/Value pair rows.
The columns converted are those who's column index is greater than @LastFixedColumnIndex
To handle where the data types are different all columns are converted to NVARCHAR(x)
07062018 dungeym initial scripting.
*/
DECLARE @AllColumnNames NVARCHAR(MAX) -- All the columns in the temp table.
DECLARE @FixedColumnNames NVARCHAR(MAX) -- All the columns with a column index equal to or lower than @LastFixedColumnIndex.
DECLARE @UnpivotColumnNames NVARCHAR(MAX) -- All the columns to be unpivoted.
DECLARE @ObjectName NVARCHAR(255) = N'tempdb..' + @TempTableName
-- Populate comma-separated lists of quoted column names according to requirements.
SELECT
@AllColumnNames = STUFF
(
(
SELECT ',' + QUOTENAME(name) + ' = CONVERT(NVARCHAR(' + CONVERT(NVARCHAR(20), @MaxWidth) + '), ' + QUOTENAME(name) + ')'
FROM tempdb.sys.columns c
WHERE 1=1
AND [object_id] = OBJECT_ID(@ObjectName)
FOR XML PATH('')
), 1, 1, ''
)
,@FixedColumnNames = STUFF
(
(
SELECT ',' + QUOTENAME(name)
FROM tempdb.sys.columns c
WHERE 1=1
AND [object_id] = OBJECT_ID(@ObjectName)
AND column_id <= @LastFixedColumnIndex
FOR XML PATH('')
), 1, 1, ''
)
,@UnpivotColumnNames = STUFF
(
(
SELECT ',' + QUOTENAME(name)
FROM tempdb.sys.columns c
WHERE 1=1
AND [object_id] = OBJECT_ID(@ObjectName)
AND column_id > @LastFixedColumnIndex
FOR XML PATH('')
), 1, 1, ''
)
/*
Reselect the data from #Data into ##Source (global temp table) using the new coverted columns.
This gives us source data with a single common data type.
*/
IF OBJECT_ID('tempdb..##Source') IS NOT NULL BEGIN DROP TABLE ##Source END;
DECLARE @TSQL NVARCHAR(MAX)
SET @TSQL = 'SELECT ' + @AllColumnNames + ' INTO ##Source FROM ' + @ObjectName
EXEC sp_executesql @TSQL
-- Run the UNPIVOT to get the results.
SET @TSQL = 'SELECT ' + @FixedColumnNames + ', u.ColumnName, u.ColumnValue FROM tempdb..##Source UNPIVOT (ColumnValue FOR ColumnName IN (' + @UnpivotColumnNames + ')) u ORDER BY u.ColumnName ASC'
EXEC sp_executesql @TSQL
IF OBJECT_ID('tempdb..##Source') IS NOT NULL BEGIN DROP TABLE ##Source END;
END
GO
|
<filename>tbl_user.sql
-- phpMyAdmin SQL Dump
-- version 5.0.2
-- https://www.phpmyadmin.net/
--
-- Host: 127.0.0.1
-- Generation Time: Nov 10, 2020 at 11:51 AM
-- Server version: 10.4.11-MariaDB
-- PHP Version: 7.4.6
SET SQL_MODE = "NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO";
START TRANSACTION;
SET time_zone = "+00:00";
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@@CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@@CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION=@@COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
/*!40101 SET NAMES utf8mb4 */;
--
-- Database: `magang_app_db`
--
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Table structure for table `tbl_user`
--
CREATE TABLE `tbl_user` (
`id_user` int(11) NOT NULL,
`nama_depan` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`nama_belakang` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`email` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`institusi` varchar(30) NOT NULL,
`no_hp` varchar(20) NOT NULL,
`no_whatsapp` varchar(20) NOT NULL,
`tempat_lahir` varchar(30) NOT NULL,
`tanggal_lahir` varchar(15) NOT NULL,
`provinsi` varchar(50) NOT NULL,
`kab_kota` varchar(50) NOT NULL,
`kecamatan` varchar(50) NOT NULL,
`kelurahan` varchar(50) NOT NULL,
`level` int(1) NOT NULL,
`bantuan` varchar(30) NOT NULL,
`paket` varchar(50) NOT NULL,
`harga` varchar(30) NOT NULL,
`jumlah` varchar(10) NOT NULL,
`total` varchar(30) NOT NULL,
`bukti` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`catatan` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
`alamat` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
`foto_user` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
`password` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
`created_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`updated_at` datetime NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4;
--
-- Dumping data for table `tbl_user`
--
INSERT INTO `tbl_user` (`id_user`, `nama_depan`, `nama_belakang`, `email`, `institusi`, `no_hp`, `no_whatsapp`, `tempat_lahir`, `tanggal_lahir`, `provinsi`, `kab_kota`, `kecamatan`, `kelurahan`, `level`, `bantuan`, `paket`, `harga`, `jumlah`, `total`, `bukti`, `catatan`, `alamat`, `foto_user`, `password`, `created_at`, `updated_at`) VALUES
(10, 'donatur', 'kami', '<EMAIL>', 'Perorangan', '081586043983', '081586043983', 'Jakarta', '14/06/2000', 'DKI Jakarta', 'Sabang', 'melwai', '<NAME>', 1, '121', '0', '', '', '4', 'topper.png', 'Donatur', 'pembangunan 3', '', 'donatur', '0000-00-00 00:00:00', '0000-00-00 00:00:00'),
(11, 'pengadopsi', 'bebek', '<EMAIL>', 'Perorangan', '08127183191', '0817317429', 'jakarta', '29/02/1996', 'jakarta', 'jakarta pusat', 'Gambir', 'badui dalam', 2, '', '500.000', '', '13131', '13141', 'topper.png', 'adasafafsafa', 'pembangunan 3', '', 'pengadopsi', '0000-00-00 00:00:00', '0000-00-00 00:00:00'),
(12, 'mitra', 'dagang', '<EMAIL>', 'Perorangan', '08127183191', '0817317429', 'jakarta', '13/07/2001', 'jakarta', 'jakarta pusat', 'badui', 'badui dalam', 3, '11', '', '', '', '2', 'topper.png', 'adasfsgrhfhfesagdsfagsrd', 'pembangunan', '', 'mitra', '0000-00-00 00:00:00', '0000-00-00 00:00:00'),
(13, 'lorde', 'ella', '<EMAIL>', 'Perorangan', '0812137171', '08173173', 'auckland', '07/11/1996', 'Auckland', 'Takapuna', 'gatau', 'gatau', 3, '1212', '', '', '', '', 'topper.png', 'its lorde with an e', 'gatau', '', '$2y$10$jjwkHceox3Fq2mBPs.3H9e80LqECVrOepenOCf8SZh52nfbx4vPK2', '0000-00-00 00:00:00', '0000-00-00 00:00:00'),
(14, 'rezky', 'adhitya', '<EMAIL>', 'Perorangan', '0812137171', '081586043983', 'ntt', '07/11/1996', 'Aceh', 'Banten', 'gatau', 'gatau', 3, '13141', '', '', '', '', 'topper.png', 'rezky nie', 'melawai utara', '', '$2y$10$TQL1Mt2FJoRNN1A.xfGbkeYERH9MCfHH8pAgRtI/ipu2gcIV7TGWG', '0000-00-00 00:00:00', '0000-00-00 00:00:00');
--
-- Indexes for dumped tables
--
--
-- Indexes for table `tbl_user`
--
ALTER TABLE `tbl_user`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id_user`);
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT for dumped tables
--
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT for table `tbl_user`
--
ALTER TABLE `tbl_user`
MODIFY `id_user` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=15;
COMMIT;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET COLLATION_CONNECTION=@OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
|
-- Procedure BibleReaderAccess_Del
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.BibleReaderAccess_Del
(
@Id int
)
AS
SET NOCOUNT ON
IF(@Id > 0)
DELETE FROM BibleReaderAccess
WHERE Id=@Id
RETURN
GO
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER OFF
GO
|
delete from eg_feature_action where action = (select id from eg_action where name='Create-Validity' and contextroot='tl');
delete from eg_roleaction where actionid = (select id from eg_action where name='Create-Validity' and contextroot='tl');
delete from eg_action where name='Create-Validity' and contextroot='tl';
update eg_action set name = 'Create-Validity', url='/validity/create' where name='New-Validity' and contextroot='tl';
update eg_feature_action set action = (select id from eg_action where name='Search and Edit-Validity' and contextroot='tl') where action=(select id from eg_action where name='Search and View-Validity' and contextroot='tl') and feature=(select id from eg_feature where name='View License Validity');
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delete from eg_action where name='Search and View-Validity' and contextroot='tl';
update eg_action set name = 'Search-Validity', url='/validity/search', displayname='Search License Validity' where name='Search and Edit-Validity' and contextroot='tl';
delete from eg_feature_action where action = (select id from eg_action where name='Edit-Validity' and contextroot='tl');
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delete from eg_feature_action where action = (select id from eg_action where name='Result-Validity' and contextroot='tl');
delete from eg_roleaction where actionid = (select id from eg_action where name='Result-Validity' and contextroot='tl');
delete from eg_action where name='Result-Validity' and contextroot='tl';
delete from eg_feature_action where action = (select id from eg_action where name='Search and View Result-Validity' and contextroot='tl');
delete from eg_roleaction where actionid = (select id from eg_action where name='Search and View Result-Validity' and contextroot='tl');
delete from eg_action where name='Search and View Result-Validity' and contextroot='tl';
delete from eg_feature_action where action = (select id from eg_action where name='Search and Edit Result-Validity' and contextroot='tl');
delete from eg_roleaction where actionid = (select id from eg_action where name='Search and Edit Result-Validity' and contextroot='tl');
delete from eg_action where name='Search and Edit Result-Validity' and contextroot='tl';
insert into eg_feature_action(action,feature) values((select id from eg_action where name='View-Validity' and contextroot='tl') , (select id from eg_feature where name = 'Modify License Validity'));
|
<reponame>pradeepkumarcm-egov/DIGIT-Dev<filename>core-services/egov-user/src/main/resources/db/migration/ddl/V20170423025220__alter_table_eg_user_to_increase_signature_length.sql
ALTER TABLE eg_user ALTER COLUMN signature TYPE CHARACTER VARYING(1000);
ALTER TABLE eg_user ALTER COLUMN photo TYPE CHARACTER VARYING(1000);
|
<filename>res/mysql/files_users.sql
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS files_users (
`file_id` int(11) NOT NULL
, `user_id` int(11) NOT NULL
, `ip` varchar(15) NOT NULL
, `active` tinyint(1) NOT NULL
, `completed` tinyint(1) NOT NULL
, `announced` int(11) NOT NULL
, `uploaded` bigint unsigned NOT NULL
, `downloaded` bigint unsigned NOT NULL
, `left` bigint unsigned NOT NULL
, `time` int(11) NOT NULL
, UNIQUE KEY (`file_id`, `user_id`, `ip`)
, KEY (`file_id`)
, KEY (`file_id`)
, KEY (`ip`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin
|
INSERT INTO math_phds VALUES
(1,'Horton','<NAME>','<NAME>, <NAME>, <NAME>','Ph. D','1916','Functions of limited variation and Lebesgue integrals','',NULL,NULL),
(2,'Wilder','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1923','Concerning continuous curves','',NULL,NULL),
(3,'Lubben','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1925','The double elliptic case of the Lie-Riemann-Helmholtz-Hilbert problem of the foundations of geometry.','',NULL,NULL),
(4,'Whyburn','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1927','Concerning continua in the plane','',NULL,NULL),
(5,'Whyburn','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1927','Linear boundary value problems for ordinary differential equations and their associated difference equations','',NULL,NULL),
(6,'Reid','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1929','Properties of Solutions of an Infinite System of Ordinary Linear Differential Equations of the First Order with Auxiliary Boundary Conditions','',NULL,NULL),
(7,'Roberts','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1929','Concerning non-dense plane continua','',NULL,NULL),
(8,'Cleveland','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1930','On the existence of acyclic curves satisfying certain conditions with respect to a given continuous curve','',NULL,NULL),
(9,'Dorroh','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1930','Some metric properties of descriptive planes','',NULL,NULL),
(10,'Hale','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1931','A study of the mathematical processes used in sixteen gainful occupations in Nashville, Tennessee','',NULL,NULL),
(11,'Klipple','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1932','Spaces in which there exists contiguous points','',NULL,NULL),
(12,'Vickery','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1932','Spaces in which there exist uncountable','',NULL,NULL),
(13,'Basye','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1933','Simply connected sets','',NULL,NULL),
(14,'Jones','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1935','Concerning R. L. Moore\'s Axiom 5_1','',NULL,NULL),
(15,'Hamilton','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1937','Non-unique solutions of first order ordinary differential equations','',NULL,NULL),
(16,'Eaves','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1939','The double-slot, salient field pole problem of the dynamo-electric machine','',NULL,NULL),
(17,'Smith','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1939','The oscillation of solutions of the general self-adjoint differential equation of the fourth order with special boundary conditions','',NULL,NULL),
(18,'Straiton','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1939','Solution of analytic and differential equations by harmonic processes','',NULL,NULL),
(19,'Biesele','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1941','Substitutes for the commutative law in the theory of semi-groups','',NULL,NULL),
(20,'Miller','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1941','On compact unicoherent continua','',NULL,NULL),
(21,'Sorgenfrey','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1941','Concerning triodic continua','',NULL,NULL),
(22,'Swain','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1941','I. Proper and reductive transformations. II. Continua obtained from sequences of simple chains of point sets. III. Distance axioms in Moore spaces. IV. Linear metric space. V. A space in which there may exist uncountable convergent sequences of points','',NULL,NULL),
(23,'Young','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1942','Concerning the outer boundaries of certain connected domains','',NULL,NULL),
(24,'Bing','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1945','Concerning simple plane webbs','',NULL,NULL),
(25,'<NAME>','','<NAME>','Ph. D','1947','An indecomposable Plane Continuum','',NULL,NULL),
(26,'Anderson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1948','Concerning upper semi-continuous collections of continua','',NULL,NULL),
(27,'Estill','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1949','Concerning Abstract Spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(28,'Copp','George','<NAME>','Ph. D','1950','Some convergence regions for a continued fraction','',NULL,NULL),
(29,'Lane','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1950','Sequences of points in the complex plane','',NULL,NULL),
(30,'Sharp','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1950','The investigation of mathematical functions with a harmonic synthesizer','',NULL,NULL),
(31,'al-Bassam','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1951','Holmgren-Riesz transform','',NULL,NULL),
(32,'Barrett','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1951','Ordinary differential equations of non-integral order','',NULL,NULL),
(33,'Burgess','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1951','Concerning continua and their complementary domains in the plane','',NULL,NULL),
(34,'Faircloth','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1951','On the number of solutions of some general types of equations in a finite field','',NULL,NULL),
(35,'<NAME>','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1951','Continued fractions in which the elements are operators in a linear space','',NULL,NULL),
(36,'Ball','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1952','Concerning continuous and equicontinuous collections of arcs','',NULL,NULL),
(37,'Dyer','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1952','Certain conditions under which the sum of the elements of a','',NULL,NULL),
(38,'Hamstrom','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1952','Concerning webs in the plane','',NULL,NULL),
(39,'Porcelli','Pasquale','<NAME>','Ph. D','1952','Uniform completeness of sets of reciprocals of linear functions','',NULL,NULL),
(40,'Bradford','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1953','Sub-Biharmonic Functions','',NULL,NULL),
(41,'Clarkson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1953','A second-order theory for three-dimensional wings in supersonic flow','',NULL,NULL),
(42,'Slye','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1953','Flat spaces for which the Jordan curve theorem holds true','',NULL,NULL),
(43,'Townsend','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1953','Certain metric extensors','',NULL,NULL),
(44,'Abraham','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1954','Partial integro-differential equations and the H-R transform','',NULL,NULL),
(45,'Nicol','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1954','Generating functions for restricted partitions and the Von Sterneck number','',NULL,NULL),
(46,'Osborn','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1954','Integration formulae for the hyperbolic partial differential equation with four independent variables and regions interior to the cone','',NULL,NULL),
(47,'Temple','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr. and <NAME>','Ph. D','1954','Stieltjes integral representation of convex functions','',NULL,NULL),
(48,'Donaldson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1955','Integration formulae and boundary conditions for the elliptic parabolic partial differential equation with three independent variables','',NULL,NULL),
(49,'Higgins','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1955','On the Hankel transform','',NULL,NULL),
(50,'Mohat','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1955','Concerning spirals in the plane','',NULL,NULL),
(51,'Pearson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1955','A connected point set in the plane which spirals down on each of its points','',NULL,NULL),
(52,'Worthington','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1955','Integration formulae and boundary conditions for the hyperbolic equation with three independent variables and regions exterior to the cone','',NULL,NULL),
(53,'Armentrout','Steve','<NAME>','Ph. D','1956','On spirals in the plane','',NULL,NULL),
(54,'McCulley','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1956','Integration formulae and boundary conditions for the hyperbolic differential equation with three independent variables and regions interior to the cone','',NULL,NULL),
(55,'Wall','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1956','Some convergence sets for a continued fraction','',NULL,NULL),
(56,'Weaver','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1956','The application of cosets and correspondence in the theory of semi-groups','',NULL,NULL),
(57,'Culwell','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1957','Interated Holmgren-Riesz transforms in two dimensions','',NULL,NULL),
(58,'Dawson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1957','Continued fractions with absolutely convergent even or odd part','',NULL,NULL),
(59,'Kelisky','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1957','Interrelations between the numbers of Bell, Bernoulli, Euler, Fibonacci, and Lucas','',NULL,NULL),
(60,'Mahavier','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1957','A theorem on spirals in plane','',NULL,NULL),
(61,'Neuberger','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1957','Continuous products and nonlinear integral equations','',NULL,NULL),
(62,'Appling','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1958','Concerning integrals','',NULL,NULL),
(63,'Fitzpatrick','Ben','<NAME>','Ph. D','1958','Operator matrices and systems of linear partial differential equations','',NULL,NULL),
(64,'Heller','Robert','<NAME>','Ph. D','1958','Some convergence theorems for continued fractions','',NULL,NULL),
(65,'Treybig','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1958','Concerning locally peripherally separable spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(66,'Tucker','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1958','Absolutely continuous solutions of Uxy=f(x,y,u,u_x ,u_y )','',NULL,NULL),
(67,'Wells','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1958','Concerning the Hausdorff inclusion problem','',NULL,NULL),
(68,'Younglove','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1958','Concerning dense metric subspaces of certain nonmetric spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(69,'Helton','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1959','Product Integrals','',NULL,NULL),
(70,'Henderson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1959','Proof that every compact continuum which is topologically equivalent to each of its nondegenerate subcontinua is an arc','',NULL,NULL),
(71,'Batson','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1960','On Inversion of the Laplace Transformation by means of a step function','',NULL,NULL),
(72,'Buckholtz','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1960','Concerning polynomial sequences and the distribution of their zeros','',NULL,NULL),
(73,'Deaton','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1960','Solutions of a system of two nonlinear partial differential equations of the first order, with accessory boundary equations','',NULL,NULL),
(74,'Dyer','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1960','On the consequences of momentum conservation laws in a gravitational theory of the Whitehead type','',NULL,NULL),
(75,'Webb','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1960','A Hellinger Integral representation for bounded linear functionals','',NULL,NULL),
(76,'Drobnies','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1961','Concerning the uniform polynomial approximation of a bounded function','',NULL,NULL),
(77,'Ellis','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1961','Solutions of analytic equations and solutions of first order, analytic differential equations','',NULL,NULL),
(78,'Glasgow','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1961','Some Marginal Distributions associated with permutation cycles','',NULL,NULL),
(79,'Hayden','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1961','A convergence problem for continued fractions','',NULL,NULL),
(80,'Sister <NAME>','','<NAME>','Ph. D','1961','Relationships and analogue between the finite calculus and the limit calculus of polynomials','',NULL,NULL),
(81,'Walston','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1961','An Existence and Uniqueness Theorem for Integro-partial differential equations','',NULL,NULL),
(82,'Worrell','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1961','Concerning scattered point sets','',NULL,NULL),
(83,'Brannen','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1962','On Sequence to Sequence Transformations','',NULL,NULL),
(84,'Cook','Howard','<NAME>','Ph. D','1962','On the most general plane closed point set through which it is possible to pass a pseudo-arc','',NULL,NULL),
(85,'Cornette','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1962','Continuumwise Accessibility','',NULL,NULL),
(86,'Dorroh','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1962','Integral Equations in Normed Abelian Groups','',NULL,NULL),
(87,'Haddad','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1962','Convergent Chain Sequences','',NULL,NULL),
(88,'Hansen','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1962','Structure theorems for Boolian Matrices','',NULL,NULL),
(89,'Innis','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1962','On the problem of Type and the Uniformizing Function for Certain Riemann Surfaces','',NULL,NULL),
(90,'Knopp','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1962','A Topological space of analytic functions','',NULL,NULL),
(91,'Reichhardt','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1962','The integral of a function with respect to a function pair','',NULL,NULL),
(92,'White','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1962','A Representation Theorem for the Laplace Transform','',NULL,NULL),
(93,'Atchison','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1963','A class of Riemann surfaces','',NULL,NULL),
(94,'Calder','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1963','Concerning Completely Convex Sets','',NULL,NULL),
(95,'Clinger','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1963','Structure theorems for a class of groups','',NULL,NULL),
(96,'Coleman','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1963','A study of the structure of linear spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(97,'Darwin','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1963','Some Theorems on functional analysis','',NULL,NULL),
(98,'Ehrlich','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1963','The Block Symmetric Successive Overrelaxation Method','',NULL,NULL),
(99,'Falbo','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1963','Some Generalized Green\'s Functions','',NULL,NULL),
(100,'Jolly','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1963','Concerning a Functional Inequality','',NULL,NULL),
(101,'Leininger','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1963','Concerning a mean integral','',NULL,NULL),
(102,'Perryman','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1963','A class of integral transforms for functions which are O(e^bt2 ) as t-> infinity','',NULL,NULL),
(103,'Stokes','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1963','An Integral of a function with respect to a function in a rectangular interval','',NULL,NULL),
(104,'Murray','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1964','On the mean integral','',NULL,NULL),
(105,'Robinson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1964','Orthogonality in normed linear spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(106,'Rodin','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1964','A generalization of the Laplace transform','',NULL,NULL),
(107,'Ryan','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1964','A Banach algebra of analytic functions','',NULL,NULL),
(108,'Schawe','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1964','Cauchy sequences in abstract spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(109,'Stewart','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1964','On the Abel equation in n-dimensions, n equal or more than 2','',NULL,NULL),
(110,'Stocks','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1964','Concerning certain lattice paths and lattice point theorems','',NULL,NULL),
(111,'Vick','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1964','Psuedo-Metric axioms of a Euclidean geometry','',NULL,NULL),
(112,'Wang','Hsuan-Heng','<NAME>','Ph. D','1964','On the tridiagonalizaton of a non-Hermitian matrix using similarity transformations','',NULL,NULL),
(113,'Whitmore','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1964','On the mixed partial derivative operator and its inverse','',NULL,NULL),
(114,'Zund','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1964','Degenerate fields with twisting rays','',NULL,NULL),
(115,'Baker','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1965','Concerning uncountable collections of triods','',NULL,NULL),
(116,'Baker','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1965','Complete amonotonic collections','',NULL,NULL),
(117,'Borm','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1965','On the lattice of continuous functions on a completely regular G(d)-space','',NULL,NULL),
(118,'Elliott','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1965','A model for a fact retrieval system','',NULL,NULL),
(119,'Hudson','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1965','A generalization of the finite Fourier transformations','',NULL,NULL),
(120,'Maher','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1965','A generalization of the real-number axioms','',NULL,NULL),
(121,'Pratt','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1965','Syntax-directed translation for experimental programming languages','',NULL,NULL),
(122,'Reed','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1965','Concerning upper semi-continuous collections of finite point sets','',NULL,NULL),
(123,'Roach','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1965','An integral','',NULL,NULL),
(124,'Tulloch','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1965','Operation solution of partial derivative equations of hyperbolic and parabolic type','',NULL,NULL),
(125,'Young','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1965','Uniform completeness of sets generated by a single function','',NULL,NULL),
(126,'Boullion','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Contributions to the theory of pseudo inverses','',NULL,NULL),
(127,'Bowman','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Contribution to the theory of extensive differentiation and related topics','',NULL,NULL),
(128,'Carlisle','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','A lattice of partitions on a group','',NULL,NULL),
(129,'Cude','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Compact integral domains with finite characteristic','',NULL,NULL),
(130,'Davis','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Concerning the sides from which certain sequences of arcs converge to a compact irreducible continuum','',NULL,NULL),
(131,'Davis','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','(f)-derivations on a ring','',NULL,NULL),
(132,'Falconer','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Contributions to the theory of numerical simulation','',NULL,NULL),
(133,'Frank','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1966','Error bounds on numerical solutions of Dirichlet problems for quasilinear elliptic equations','',NULL,NULL),
(134,'Gray','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1966','The Holmgren-Riesz transform and its applications','',NULL,NULL),
(135,'Hadlock','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr. and <NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Realization of sequential machines with threshold elements','',NULL,NULL),
(136,'Harrell','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Concerning sequence to sequence transformations','',NULL,NULL),
(137,'Ikebe','Yasuhiko','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1966','A study of operators in approximation theory','',NULL,NULL),
(138,'Kowalik','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Concerning the nonlinear differential equations H^1 (x)= f(x;H(x)),
with elements in E^2','',NULL,NULL),
(139,'Lewis','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Application of the theory of generalized matrix inversion to statistics','',NULL,NULL),
(140,'Mayes','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','A structure problem in asymptotic analysis','',NULL,NULL),
(141,'McEwen','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Automorphisms of a class of finite groups','',NULL,NULL),
(142,'Meicler','Marcel','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Weighted generalized inverses with minimal p and q norms','',NULL,NULL),
(143,'Miller','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1966','Numerical inversion of the Laplace transform by the use of Jacobi polynomials','',NULL,NULL),
(144,'Molloy','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','A substitution theorem for a Stieltjes integral','',NULL,NULL),
(145,'Morris','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Spaces of continuous functions on dispersed sets','',NULL,NULL),
(146,'Peek','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Pointwise limits of sequences of continuous functions','',NULL,NULL),
(147,'Reed','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Concerning pointwise limits of sequences of functions','',NULL,NULL),
(148,'Roach','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Concerning the value regions associated with a certain type of continued fraction','',NULL,NULL),
(149,'Rogers','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','A space whose regions are the simple domains of another space','',NULL,NULL),
(150,'Scheiblich','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Congruences on an inverse semigroup','',NULL,NULL),
(151,'Secker','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Reversibly continuous bisensed transformations of an annulus into itself','',NULL,NULL),
(152,'Sheffield','Miller','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1966','Block partitioned matrix theory and solution of systems of certain partial differential equations','',NULL,NULL),
(153,'Steib','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Linear transformations in a function space','',NULL,NULL),
(154,'Tatikonda','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Interval estimation of a stimulus levels of order infinity in sensitivity testing','',NULL,NULL),
(155,'Tucker','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','Pointwise limits of quasi-continuous functions','',NULL,NULL),
(156,'Williams','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1966','An integral equation and the related differential equation boundary problem','',NULL,NULL),
(157,'Wulbert','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1966','Continuity of metric projections\' approximation theory in a normed linear lattice','',NULL,NULL),
(158,'Bethel','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Concerning metric spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(159,'Brown','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Concerning connected simple graphs','',NULL,NULL),
(160,'Businger','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Matrix scaling with respect to the maximum-norm, the sum-norm,','',NULL,NULL),
(161,'Clarkson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','A theorem concerning product integrals','',NULL,NULL),
(162,'Cook','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Concerning compact point sets with noncompact closures','',NULL,NULL),
(163,'Debney','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Killing vectors in empty, algebraically special Einstein manifolds with diverging ray congruences','',NULL,NULL),
(164,'Dahlke','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Certain linear transformations in a space of functions of two variables','',NULL,NULL),
(165,'Farnsworth','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Homogeneous dust filled cosmological models','',NULL,NULL),
(166,'Hebert','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Compact Hausdorff spaces which are supports of regular Borel measures','',NULL,NULL),
(167,'Hinrichsen','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Certain web-like continua','',NULL,NULL),
(168,'Huggins','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Bounded slope variation and the Hellinger integral','',NULL,NULL),
(169,'Kirk','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1967','Representation of uniformizing functions for certain simply and doubly connected Riemann surfaces','',NULL,NULL),
(170,'Meek','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1967','Fatou values of normal subharmonic functions','',NULL,NULL),
(171,'Morey','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Contributions to the theory of higher degree extensors and related topics','',NULL,NULL),
(172,'Newman','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Homomorphic images of compactly generated lattices','',NULL,NULL),
(173,'O\'connor','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Holes in two-dimensional space','',NULL,NULL),
(174,'Scanlon','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','Concerning lengths for continuous and noncontinuous curves','',NULL,NULL),
(175,'Senechalle','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','A characterization of inner product spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(176,'Vance','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1967','A representation theorem for bounded linear functionals','',NULL,NULL),
(177,'Bailey','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','A study of left-prime ideals in topological rings','',NULL,NULL),
(178,'Baker','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1968','Some uncomplemented subspaces of C(X) of the type C(Y)','',NULL,NULL),
(179,'Bednar','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Compact convex sets and continuous affine functions','',NULL,NULL),
(180,'Chatfield','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Existence of product integrals','',NULL,NULL),
(181,'Clark','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1968','Infinite series transformations and their applications','',NULL,NULL),
(182,'Cobb','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Inner product-type transformations','',NULL,NULL),
(183,'Coppin','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Concerning an integral and number sets dense in an interval','',NULL,NULL),
(184,'Crim','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1968','The two-dimensional Z transform with real domain and parameters','',NULL,NULL),
(185,'Evans','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Functors in categories of Banach spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(186,'Farmer','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Pseudo-mixing sequences of random variables','',NULL,NULL),
(187,'Garret','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Concerning pointwise discontinuous functions','',NULL,NULL),
(188,'Green','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Concerning the separation of certain plane-like spaces by compact dendrons','',NULL,NULL),
(189,'Guseman','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Spaces of Affine continuous functions','',NULL,NULL),
(190,'Hardy','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Regular Borel measures on compact spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(191,'Johnson','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1968','An operational calculus on real valued set functions','',NULL,NULL),
(192,'Manougian','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','On the Perron integral and solutions to partial differential equations','',NULL,NULL),
(193,'Muecke','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1968','Some normal families of rational functions','',NULL,NULL),
(194,'Northcutt','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Perron type differential and integral inequalities','',NULL,NULL),
(195,'Proffitt','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','Concerning uncountable collections of mutually exclusive compact continua','',NULL,NULL),
(196,'Sawey','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1968','On a generalization of continuity','',NULL,NULL),
(197,'Souchek','Julianne','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1968','Rings of analytic functions','',NULL,NULL),
(198,'Turlington','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1968','Numerical calculation of the Laplace transform by the use of Legendre polynomials','',NULL,NULL),
(199,'Vargas','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1968','On the (beta)-topology on C(X)','',NULL,NULL),
(200,'Brodie','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1969','On properties of certain testing spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(201,'Brooks','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','Orbit-like relations on binary and N-ary groups','',NULL,NULL),
(202,'Hayes','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','Concerning Stieltjes Integrals','',NULL,NULL),
(203,'Huffman','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1969','Generalized functions of two discrete variables','',NULL,NULL),
(204,'Jackson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','Concerning certain plane-like domains','',NULL,NULL),
(205,'Kim','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','Bounds and location theorems of the Eigenvalues of matrices partitioned into blocks','',NULL,NULL),
(206,'Klingman','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','On some unimodular and boolean mathematical programming problems','',NULL,NULL),
(207,'Lamb','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','The structure of Hjelmslev space: a generalization of projective space','',NULL,NULL),
(208,'Mauldin','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','On Baire systems of functions','',NULL,NULL),
(209,'Phillips','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','Concerning simple graphs dense in the plane','',NULL,NULL),
(210,'Purifoy','<NAME>','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','1969','Some separation theorems','',NULL,NULL),
(211,'Shaw','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','Convergence regions and value regions for continued fractions','',NULL,NULL),
(212,'Slotterbeck','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','Factor coverings of groups','',NULL,NULL),
(213,'Smith','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','Some results in Brouwerian lattices','',NULL,NULL),
(214,'Stevenson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','Concerning indecomposable continua and upper semi-continuous','',NULL,NULL),
(215,'Wilks','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1969','The regularity of a product measure using regular conditional measure','',NULL,NULL),
(216,'Anderson','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1970','Extensions and projections in spaces of continuous functions','',NULL,NULL),
(217,'Anderson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','Some theoretical aspects of automatic theorem proving','',NULL,NULL),
(218,'Barton','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','The rectilinear crossing number for complete simple graphs in E2','',NULL,NULL),
(219,'Green','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','Groups with a characteristic cyclic series','',NULL,NULL),
(220,'Griffith','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','Preliminary investigations using interval arithmetic in the numerical evaluations of polynomials','',NULL,NULL),
(221,'Helton','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','Concerning linear and nonlinear sequence to sequence transformations','',NULL,NULL),
(222,'Hensley','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','Finite sets with special minimal properties','',NULL,NULL),
(223,'Hibbs','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','On length and variation of simple graphs','',NULL,NULL),
(224,'Hummel','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','Restricted semiprimary rings','',NULL,NULL),
(225,'Lane','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','Goal programming and satisficing models in economic analysis','',NULL,NULL),
(226,'McDonald','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1970','A multiplicity-independent, global iteration for meromorphic functions','',NULL,NULL),
(227,'Mezzino','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','p-points in topological spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(228,'Moreland','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','Numerical integration of analytic functions','',NULL,NULL),
(229,'Price','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1970','Projections and approximation in a normed linear space','',NULL,NULL),
(230,'Webb','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1970','Finite-difference methods for a harmonic mixed boundary value problem','',NULL,NULL),
(231,'Wilson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1970','Sequential function spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(232,'Asar','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1971','Conjugacy theorems in locally finite groups','',NULL,NULL),
(233,'Bean','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1971','On certain extensor structures in the calculus of variations','',NULL,NULL),
(234,'Boyer','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1971','Locking: a restriction of resolution','',NULL,NULL),
(235,'Chance','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1971','Group exponential polynominals and enumeration of paths on a lattice','',NULL,NULL),
(236,'Chobot','Michal','<NAME>','Ph. D','1971','Non-cooperative game theory and industrial competition','',NULL,NULL),
(237,'Duplissey','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1971','Contractive projections in abstract Banach function spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(238,'Hickey','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1971','A generalized Mellin transform','',NULL,NULL),
(239,'Hitz','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1971','Concerning continued fractions','',NULL,NULL),
(240,'Kincaid','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1971','An analysis of a class of norms of iterative methods for systems of linear equations','',NULL,NULL),
(241,'McDonald','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1971','Maximal quotient rings and S-rings','',NULL,NULL),
(242,'McPherson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1971','On some classes of Banach spaces whose duals are abstract L-spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(243,'Rhodes','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1971','Modularity and decomposition of semilattices','',NULL,NULL),
(244,'Wilson','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1971','Laplace-Stieltjes transform of Mikusinski operator functions','',NULL,NULL),
(245,'Lankford','IV','<NAME>','Ph. D','1972','Equality atom term locking','',NULL,NULL),
(246,'Pyle','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1972','On maximal rings of quotients of finite Baer*-rings','',NULL,NULL),
(247,'Richert','Arthur','<NAME>','Ph. D','1972','Numerical integration facilitated by polynominals in e(^x)','',NULL,NULL),
(248,'Sharpley','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1972','Interpolation of operators in function spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(249,'Sorenson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1972','A mathematical theory of coalitions and Competition in Resource Development','',NULL,NULL),
(250,'Underhill','<NAME>','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','1972','Some summability theorems concerning a certain class of sequences','',NULL,NULL),
(251,'Camden','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1973','On a Menger graph distance problem','',NULL,NULL),
(252,'Houston','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1973','Chains of primes in a Noetherian domain','',NULL,NULL),
(253,'Most','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1973','On resistance of balanced incomplete block designs','',NULL,NULL),
(254,'Nilsson','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1973','On tensors and extensors having complex components','',NULL,NULL),
(255,'Broussard','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1974','Sums of solid n-spheres','',NULL,NULL),
(256,'Copley','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1974','Structure and characterization of pLq-splines','',NULL,NULL),
(257,'Ewing','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1974','The numerical approximation of certain parabolic equations backward in time via Sobolev equations','',NULL,NULL),
(258,'Farmer','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1974','Representations of wreath products','',NULL,NULL),
(259,'Hamilton','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1974','Harmonic analysis on SO(3)','',NULL,NULL),
(260,'Kilgore','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1974','Optimization of the Lagrange interpolation process','',NULL,NULL),
(261,'Mareth','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1974','Topics in harmonic analysis with applications to abstract Besov and Sobolev spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(262,'Rodi','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1974','Stone-Weierstrass properties in some commutative Banach algebras','',NULL,NULL),
(263,'Lyche','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1975','Discrete polynomial spline approximation methods','',NULL,NULL),
(264,'May','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1975','Automorphism groups of compact Klein surfaces with boundary','',NULL,NULL),
(265,'Preston','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1975','Fundamental domains and projective structures on compact Klein surfaces','',NULL,NULL),
(266,'Zimmerman','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1975','Topics in network scheduling','',NULL,NULL),
(267,'Goth','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1976','Wreath products with supersolvable automorphism groups','',NULL,NULL),
(268,'Dawes','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1977','A degenerate evolution equation for fluid flow in multi-porous media','',NULL,NULL),
(269,'Godfrey','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1977','Goal interval methods for some problems of economic policy and stabilization','',NULL,NULL),
(270,'Lewis','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1977','Stable homeomorphisms on the pseudo-arc','',NULL,NULL),
(271,'<NAME>','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1977','Studies in local unconditional structure in Banach spaces and characterizations of complex predual L1-spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(272,'Olson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1977','Difference relations and algebra: a constructive study','',NULL,NULL),
(273,'Rooney','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1977','Galerkin approximation of some nonlinear partial differential equations modeling long waves in shallow water','',NULL,NULL),
(274,'Seiford','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1977','Entropic solutions and disruption solutions for n-person games','',NULL,NULL),
(275,'Yuan','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1977','Topics in partially balanced designs','',NULL,NULL),
(276,'Berman','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1978','Hilbert functions of vector spaces of forms','',NULL,NULL),
(277,'Richter','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1978','Some properties of patched 2-spheres','',NULL,NULL),
(278,'Shaw','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1978','Sample path properties of continuous local Martingales','',NULL,NULL),
(279,'Wolfe','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1978','Asymptomatic behavior of solutions of the radical Schroedinger equation and applications to long-range potential scattering','',NULL,NULL),
(280,'Bourgeois','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1979','Quantum-mechanical scattering theory for long-range oscillatory potentials','',NULL,NULL),
(281,'<NAME>','Emmanuele','<NAME>','Ph. D','1979','Implicit degenerate evolution equations in Hilbert spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(282,'Hunt','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1979','Unique periodic solutions of a class of differential equations and composite solutions of a system of partial differential equations','',NULL,NULL),
(283,'Krause','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1979','Smooth group actions of prime order and fixed point sets','',NULL,NULL),
(284,'Walker','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1980','Conjugate Hankel transforms and Hp-theory','',NULL,NULL),
(285,'Whittington','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1980','Prime divisors and the altitude formula','',NULL,NULL),
(286,'Denman','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1981','Countable cellular decomposition of S^(s)','',NULL,NULL),
(287,'Jaffe','Leon','<NAME>','Ph. D','1981','Rolle\'s theorem for Birkoff systems','',NULL,NULL),
(288,'Kuttler','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1981','Degenerate evolution equations and inequalities','',NULL,NULL),
(289,'Simmons','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1981','The theory of block complexes with an application to manifold splittings','',NULL,NULL),
(290,'Stark','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1981','Trace optimality in non-orthogonal blocking designs of two-level factorial experiments','',NULL,NULL),
(291,'Vose','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1981','Limit theorems for sequences of divisor distributions','Univ. of Tennesee','',''),
(292,'Duffuaa','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1982','On some economic distribution and network problems','',NULL,NULL),
(293,'Gutierrez','<NAME>','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','1982','On the boundedness of the Banach space-valued Hilbert transform','',NULL,NULL),
(294,'Jea','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1982','Generalized conjugate gradient acceleration of iterative methods','',NULL,NULL),
(295,'Katz','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1982','Asymptotic primes and applications','',NULL,NULL),
(296,'Marivani','Syrous','<NAME>','Ph. D','1982','Inequalities for character sums','Rust College, Misissippi','',''),
(297,'Matovsky','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1982','Decomposition of symmetric two-tensors over a compact Riemannian manifold with boundary','',NULL,NULL),
(298,'Nelson','Abraham','<NAME>','Ph. D','1982','Goal arc methods in EEO planning and control','',NULL,NULL),
(299,'Fonken','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1983','A simple version of the Malliavin calculus with applications to the filtering equation','',NULL,NULL),
(300,'Lovegren','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1983','Informatics, analysis, and solution of a class of constrained integer network problems','',NULL,NULL),
(301,'Czitrom','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1984','D-optimal experimental designs and alternative models for quadratic blending with process variables','',NULL,NULL),
(302,'Kuga','Ken\'ichi','<NAME>','Ph. D','1984','On immersed 2-spheres in some 4-manifolds','',NULL,NULL),
(303,'Neidinger','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1984','Properties of Tauberian operators on Banach spaces','',NULL,NULL),
(304,'Seager','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1984','Adaptive finite element grid generation and extension for elliptic problems posed on unbounded domains','',NULL,NULL),
(305,'Shirley','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1984','Regular and strongly pi-regular rings','',NULL,NULL),
(306,'Skora','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1984','Maps between surfaces','',NULL,NULL),
(307,'Wuu','Julie','<NAME>','Ph. D','1984','Efficient incomplete block designs','',NULL,NULL),
(308,'Bang','Hyunsoo','<NAME>','Ph. D','1985','On the Isomorphic Structure of the Stopping Time Banach Space and on the Problem of Best Compact Approximation for Operators Between Lp Spaces.','',NULL,NULL),
(309,'Moore','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1985','Ordering the Points in Factorial Experiments to Protect against Early Termination','',NULL,NULL),
(310,'Chou','Shang-Ching','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','1986','Proving and Discovering Geometry Theorems Using Wu\'s Method','',NULL,NULL),
(311,'Hill','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1986','Empirical Bayes Statistics: A Comprehensive Theory for Data Analysis','',NULL,NULL),
(312,'Kostal','Hubert','<NAME>','Ph. D','1986','Empirical Bayes Methods for Spatial Data','',NULL,NULL),
(313,'Luecke','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1986','Finite Covers of Haken 3-Manifolds','',NULL,NULL),
(314,'Mai','Tsun-Zee','<NAME>','Ph. D','1986','Adaptive Iterative Algorithms for Large Sparse Linear Systems','',NULL,NULL),
(315,'McKemie','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1986','Quasiconformal groups and Quasisymmetric Embeddings','',NULL,NULL),
(316,'Moriah','Yoav','<NAME>','Ph. D','1986','Heegaard splitting and groups presentations','',NULL,NULL),
(317,'Morrison','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1986','Some Problems in Martingale-Like Operators and Flows of Sigma Algebras Arising in Communication Theory.','',NULL,NULL),
(318,'Rulla','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1986','A Stefan Problem with Prescribed Convection','',NULL,NULL),
(319,'Smith','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1986','On the Laplace-Beltram Operator in Hyperbolic Space','',NULL,NULL),
(320,'Spellman','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1986','Critical Level Embeddings of S^3 in S^4','',NULL,NULL),
(321,'Wessel','Alan','<NAME>','Ph. D','1986','The Radon Nikodym Property for Convex Sets.','',NULL,NULL),
(322,'Beneish','Esther','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','1987','Invertible Modules','',NULL,NULL),
(323,'Bosse','Marie-<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1987','Homogenization of the Layered Medium Equation.','',NULL,NULL),
(324,'Morgan','<NAME>','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','1987','Preconditioning Bigenvalue Problems','',NULL,NULL),
(325,'Sterba-Boatwright','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1987','Incompressible Surfaces in Alternating Zink Complements','',NULL,NULL),
(326,'Koo','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1988','Rational Function Skew Fields and Related Topics in Skew Field Theory','',NULL,NULL),
(327,'Motto','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1988','Surfaces in Three-Manifolds and Three-Manifold Triads','Ball State','',''),
(328,'Oppenheimer','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1988','Dynamics of Gas Absorption','',NULL,NULL),
(329,'Parker','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1988','Multiparameter Estimation in Normal Distributions: The Slightly Unequal Variance Case','',NULL,NULL),
(330,'Rodin','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1988','Function Fields of Generalized Brauer-Severi Varieties','Univ. of Texas, Austin','University of Texas at Austin',''),
(331,'Walkington','Noel','<NAME>','Ph. D','1988','Resolution of a Diffusion Problem Arising in the Flow of Fluids','Carnegie-Mellon','',''),
(332,'Xu','Xiangsheng','<NAME>','Ph. D','1988','The Continuous Dependence of Solutions to a Cauchy Problem.','Mississippi State Univ.','',''),
(333,'Babich','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1989','Vorticist Denizens of R^3 are tame','',NULL,NULL),
(334,'Chun','Jang-Ho','<NAME>','Ph. D','1989','Isomorphic Ore Extensions of Automorphism Type','Yeungnam Univ., Korea','',''),
(335,'Finley','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1989','A New Proof that 1-ULC Implies Tameness','','College of Southern Nevada',''),
(336,'Knaust','Helmut','<NAME>','Ph. D','1989','On Uniform Structures in Infinite Dimensional Banach Spaces','Oklahoma State University','UT El Paso',''),
(337,'Pearson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1989','Sobolev inequalities for ultra spherical polynomials','Florida International','Mississippi State',''),
(338,'Rong','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1989','Degree One Maps between Geometric Three-Manifolds','Michigan State','George Washington University',''),
(339,'Shi','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1989','Accurate and Efficient Double-Bootstrap Methods','',NULL,NULL),
(340,'Struppeck','Thomas','<NAME>','Ph. D','1989','Inequalities for Heights of Algebraic Subspaces with Applications to Construction of Auxiliary Polynomials','Rutgers Univ.','University of Texas at Austin',''),
(341,'Wang','Suojin','<NAME>','Ph. D','1989','Saddlepoint Approximations in Statistics, Including Resampling','Texas A&M Univ.','Texas A&M Univ.',''),
(342,'Blankenbaker','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1990','Fourier Analysis on the Sierpinski Gasket.','Univ. of Minnesota','University of Iowa',''),
(343,'Brahm','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1990','The Repovs Conjecture','Univ. of Minnesota','Wooster College',''),
(344,'Burger','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1990','Diophantine Approximation in S-integers','Univ. of Waterloo','Williams College',''),
(345,'Chang','<NAME>','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','1990','Chance Constrained Programming and Chebychev Systems with Applications','',NULL,NULL),
(346,'Hong','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1990','On Some Questions Concerning Weak Identities, Invariants, and Integrality','',NULL,NULL),
(347,'Joubert','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1990','Generalized Conjugate Gradient and Lanczos Methods for the Solution of Nonsymmetric Systems of Linear Equations','Willilam Carey Univ.','Los Alamos',''),
(348,'Kang','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1990','The condition number and the singularity of a certain interpolation matrix','',NULL,NULL),
(349,'Miyazaki','Katura','<NAME>','Ph. D','1990','Non-simple ribbon fibered knots','Univ. of Calif. at San Diego','Tokyo Denkii University',''),
(350,'O\'Leary','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1990','Small Solutions to Inhomogeneous Systems of Linear Equations Over an Algebraic Number Field','Seattle Pacific Univ.','',''),
(351,'Oppe','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr. and <NAME>','Ph. D','1990','The Iterative Solution of Large Sparse Linear Systems Using Vector Computers','Florida State Univ.','Cray Research, Minnesota',''),
(352,'Saito','Masahico','<NAME>','Ph. D','1990','Invariants of Link Cobordism','Toronto','South Florida University',''),
(353,'Schumacher','Carol','<NAME>','Ph. D','1990','Sequential Domination in Banach Spaces and the Geometry of JH*','Kenyon College','Kenyon College',''),
(354,'Sun','Xingping','<NAME>','Ph. D','1990','Multivariate Interpolation Using Ridge or Related Functions','S.W. Missouri State University','',''),
(355,'Sundheim','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1990','The Reidemeister and Markov Theorems via Diagrams for Links in 3-Manifolds','Univ. of Wisconsin','',''),
(356,'Claus','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','Essential Laminations in Closed Seifert Fibered Spaces','Univ. of Puget Sound','',''),
(357,'Harms','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','Three Level Forms in s^4','','Fidelity National Information Services',''),
(358,'Huang','Pi-Hsiang','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','Balanced Factorial Structure with the Hypercubic Association Scheme','',NULL,NULL),
(359,'Huang','Zhimin','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','Vector Extremal Approaches to Competitive Models in Economics and Business Activities','',NULL,NULL),
(360,'Kohn','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','Linking and Unlinking Properties of Two Component Links','James Madison','',''),
(361,'Liau','Pen-Hwang','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','Fractional Factorial Designs','',NULL,NULL),
(362,'Lu','Wang-Shu','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','Empirical and Hierarchical Bayes Estimation of Several Means in the Natural Exponential Family','',NULL,NULL),
(363,'Nanyes','Ollie','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','Proper Knots are Locally Unknotted and a New Proof of Schubert\'s Bridge Number Theorem','Bradley','',''),
(364,'R�de','Johan','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','On the Yang-Mills Heat Flow in Two and Three Dimensions','Stanford Univ.','Lund Univ., Sweden',''),
(365,'Seelinger','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','Orthogonal Matrix Invariants and Generalized Matrix Concomitants','Northern Illinois Univ.','',''),
(366,'Semple','John','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','On a Class of Dual Methods for Quadratic Programming','',NULL,NULL),
(367,'Serio','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','Uppers to (0) in Intersections of Prime Ideals in Polynomial Rings','Northwest La State','',''),
(368,'Sun','Li','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','On Some Problems of Chance-Constrained Programming','',NULL,NULL),
(369,'Tintera','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1991','On the Stable Rank of Enveloping Algebras','Texas A&I Univ.','Univ. of Texas, Corpus Christi',''),
(370,'Clark','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','Microstructure Modeling of Fluid Flow in a Layered Medium','Kennesaw State College','Mississippi State',''),
(371,'Cook','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','Diffusion Models with Microstructure and Secondary Flux','Vanderbilt Univ.','Singular Value Consulting','http://www.johndcook.com/'),
(372,'Glosup','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','Nonparametric Regression and Its Uses in Checking Model Fit','','Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory',''),
(373,'Gong','Linguo','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','Senstivity and Stability Analysis of Problems in Chance Constrained Programming','',NULL,NULL),
(374,'Liu','Zhuxing','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','On Operators in L(L_1).','Hebei Univ. China','',''),
(375,'Menegatto','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','Interpolation on Spherical Spaces','University of Sao Paolo','University of Sao Paolo',''),
(376,'Packer','Lindsay','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','The Regularized Layered Medium Equation','Charleston College','',''),
(377,'Patton','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','Incompressible punctured tori in the complements of alternating knots','Murray State','',''),
(378,'Pinner','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','On the Number of Irreducible Factors of a Polynomial','Macquarie Univ. Sydney Australia','Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver',''),
(379,'Shah','Chandni','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','Intergral Uppers','UT Austin','University of Calif. at Riverside',''),
(380,'Sullivan','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','The Prime Decomposition of Knotted Periodic Orbits in Dynamical Systems','Cornell','Northwestern University',''),
(381,'Vona','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','Parallel Multilevel Iterative Methods','Univ. of Texas, Austin','Clark Univ., Georgia',''),
(382,'Westmoreland','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','Valuations on Division Algebras','Denison Univ.','',''),
(383,'Zhang','Dagan','<NAME>','Ph. D','1992','Optimization of Pursuit and Reliability on Discrete Graphs','',NULL,NULL),
(384,'Chaatit','Fouad','<NAME>','Ph. D','1993','Some Subclasses of Baire-1 Functions and Uniform Homeomorphisms','UT El Paso','Al Akhawayn University, Morroco',''),
(385,'Chang','Kuei-Fang','<NAME>','Ph. D','1993','Wavelet Analysis in Hilbert Space','Taiwan University','',''),
(386,'Holt','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1993','Radial Analogues of some Extremal Beuring-Selberg Functions','Michigan Tech Univ.','',''),
(387,'Little','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1993','Semilinear Parabolic Equations with Preisach Hysteresis','Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences','Univ. of Texas at Arlington',''),
(388,'McDonald','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1993','A Finite Index Approximation of Floer Homology','Univ. of Texas, Austin','Texas Legislative Budget Board',''),
(389,'Morin','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1993','A Characterization of Handlebodies, Homotopy and Homology Unknotting Numbers of a Knot','Blackburn College','',''),
(390,'Schafer','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1993','Rigidity for Dynamically Defined Cantor Sets and Expanding Circle Maps','UT El Paso','University of Texas at Austin',''),
(391,'Wahl','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1993','Unconditional Averages in the Banach Spaces c(alpha)','Hanover College','',''),
(392,'Yu','Yuan','<NAME>','Ph. D','1993','Automated Proofs of Object Code for a Widely Used Microprocessor','',NULL,NULL),
(393,'Boerkoel','Antonie','<NAME>','Ph. D','1994','Diophantine Approximation in Local Fields by Algebraic Numbers of Bounded Degree','Texas A&M Univ., Kingsville','',''),
(394,'Buehler','Sue','<NAME>','Ph. D','1994','The James Function Space','Univ. of Wisconsin','',''),
(395,'Chang','Chwen-ming','<NAME>','Ph. D','1994','Optimal and Minimal Experimental Designs','Institute of Taiwan Studies','',''),
(396,'Chen','Debao','<NAME>','Ph. D','1994','Cardinal Spline Wavelets','Oklahoma State University','',''),
(397,'Fabel','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1994','Self Homeomorphisms of the 2-sphere which pointwise fix a nonseparating continuum','Mississippi State Univ.','',''),
(398,'Goodman-Strauss','Chaim','<NAME>','Ph. D','1994','On Composite Twisted Unknots','University of Arkansas','',''),
(399,'Hollingsworth','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1994','Semilinear Degenerate Parabolic Systems and Distributed Capacitance Models','Oregon State Univ.','Brentwood Christian School, Austin TX',''),
(400,'Jia','Lei','<NAME>','Ph. D','1994','On Automatic Theorem Proving in Conjugate Geometries','',NULL,NULL),
(401,'Loepp','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1994','Making the Generic Formal Fiber Local','Univ. of Nebraska','Williams College',''),
(402,'Pak','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1994','Minimum disparity estimation in linear regression models: robustness and efficiency','Taejan University, Korea','',''),
(403,'Shaw','Jason (Previous<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr. and <NAME>','Ph. D','1994','Multigrid Methods with Application in Reservoir Simulation','Western Atlas, Houston','',''),
(404,'Tyler','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1994','The Lagrange Spectrum in Projective Space Over a Local Field','Univ. of Tennesee','',''),
(405,'Zhang','Changing','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','1994','Stochastic Programming and Optimal Saleforce Compensation Schemes','',NULL,NULL),
(406,'Broumas','Antonios','<NAME>','Ph. D','1995','Effective p-Descent','Univ. of Arizona','',''),
(407,'Hoffman','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1995','Reducing Spheres and Embedded Projective Planes after Dehn Surgery on a Knot','Louisiana State University','',''),
(408,'Li','Shan','<NAME>','Ph. D','1995','A new approach to sensitivity analysis of the DEA models and its applications in ranking and productivity growth','',NULL,NULL),
(409,'Mossinghoff','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1995','Algorithms for the Determination of Polynomials with Small Mahler Measure','Appalachian State Univ.','',''),
(410,'Androulakis','George','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','Isomorphically Polyhedral Banach Spaces and Mixed Tsirelson Spaces of Arbitrary Distortion','Univ. of Missouri','',''),
(411,'Berg','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','On James Spaces','','University of Texas at Austin',''),
(412,'Choi','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','Diophantine Approximation on Projective Spaces over Number Fields','Princeton Institute for Advanced Study','',''),
(413,'Cui','Xuewei','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','Construction of Time Trend Free Run Orders','',NULL,NULL),
(414,'Dean','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','Hyperbolic Knots with Small Seifert-fibered Dehn Surgeries.','Mathematical Sciences Research Institute','',''),
(415,'Dworkin','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','Ergodic Theory, X-Ray Diffraction and Tilings of Euclidean Space','Rice University','',''),
(416,'Epperson','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','Percolation on the Randomized Sierpinski Carpet','Univ. of Texas, Austin','',''),
(417,'Fuller','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','Distinguishing Embedded Curves in Rational Complex Surfaces','Univ. of Calif. at Irvine','',''),
(418,'Gasparis','Ioannis','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','Quotients of C(K) Spaces','','University of Crete',''),
(419,'Kim','Meelae','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','Sharp Moser Inequalities','Korea University, Instructor','',''),
(420,'Lee','Joongul','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','On Refined Class Number Formula','Ohio State','',''),
(421,'Shieh','Jiunn-I','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','The Topological and Geometrical Properties of a Uniquely Ergodic Tiling System','',NULL,NULL),
(422,'Swets','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','Global Sections of Higher Powers of the Twisting Sheaf on a Brauer-Severi Variety','Indiana University','',''),
(423,'Yun','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1996','The Fundamentality Problem for Translates of Continuous Functions','Korea University','',''),
(424,'Chen','Jen-yuan','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1997','Iterative Solutions of Large Sparse Nonsymmetric Linear Systems','','National Kaohsiung Normal Univ., Korea',''),
(425,'Chiu','Wan-Yi','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','Optimal Fractional Factorial Designs','',NULL,NULL),
(426,'Dresden','Gregory','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','Spectra of Heights over Certain Finite Groups','','Washington and Lee Univ.',''),
(427,'Etnyre','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','Symplectic Constructions on 4-Manifolds','','University of Pennsylvania',''),
(428,'Guilfoyle','Brendan','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','The Cauchy Initial Value Problem for Yang-Mills Metrics','','Institute of Technology, Tralee Ireland',''),
(429,'Hahm','Nahm-woo','<NAME>, Jr.','Ph. D','1997','Degree of Approximation by Neural Networks','',NULL,NULL),
(430,'Heinz','Martin','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','Quasiconformal Groups','',NULL,NULL),
(431,'Judd','Robert','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','On Bourgain\'s Index and Schreier Sets','Oklahoma State University','University of Denver',''),
(432,'Lane','David','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','Exceptional Surfaces For Resolution of Isolated Threefold Singularities','','John Hopkins',''),
(433,'Lochhead-Rock','Laura','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','A Coupled System of Semilinear Parabolic Equations with Hysteresis','','University of Washington',''),
(434,'Oh','Seungsang','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','Exceptional manifolds After Dehn Filling','Mathematical Sciences Research Institute','',''),
(435,'Rieck','Yo\'av','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','Heegaard Surfaces and Dehn Fillings: G(M)-1 Less than T(X) Less than G(M)','','University of Arkansas',''),
(436,'Sedgwick','Eric','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','On the Classification and Stabilization Problems for Heegaard Splittings of Three-Manifolds','','Depaul Univ.',''),
(437,'Tandy','Brian','<NAME>','Ph. D','1997','Cantor Sets and Lipschitz Actions on Circles and Trees','','Diego Corp., Palo Alto',''),
(438,'Abramson','Daniel','<NAME>','Ph. D','1998','On an Integral Related to Vinogradov\'s Integral','United Arab Emirates University','',''),
(439,'Bergbauer','Chinyoung','<NAME>','Ph. D','1998','The Degeneracy Slopes and the Stretching Factors of Fibered Alternating Knots','','Lone Star College',''),
(440,'Chen','Hongqiu','<NAME>','Ph. D','1998','Solitary Waves and Long-Wave Phenomena','','University of Memphis',''),
(441,'Fogel','Karrolyne','<NAME>','Ph. D','1998','Stark\'s Conjecture in the Octahedral Case','','California Lutheran University',''),
(442,'Handfield','Jay','<NAME>','Ph. D','1998','Adiabatic Limits of the Anti-Self-Dual Equation','',NULL,NULL),
(443,'Harper','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1998','Segre Class of Almost Complete Intersections','','University of Texas at Austin',''),
(444,'Lerma','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','1998','An Extremal Majorant for the Logarithm and Its Applications','','Northwestern University',''),
(445,'Osoinach','John','<NAME>','Ph. D','1998','Manifolds Obtained by Dehn Surgery on Infinitely Many Distinct Knots in s^3','','Univ. of Dallas',''),
(446,'Paul','Randall','<NAME>','Ph. D','1998','Normal Form Techniques in Degenerate Hamiltonian Systems','','Oregon Institute of Technology',''),
(447,'Shults','Benjamin','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','1998','Discoveries and Experiments In the Automation of Mathematical Reasoning','','Bethel University',''),
(448,'Bachman','David','<NAME>','Ph. D','1999','A Piecewise-Linear Theory of Minimal Surfaces of Non-Zero Index','','Pitzer College, California',''),
(449,'Barton','Jeffery','<NAME>','Ph. D','1999','Analogs of the Beurling-Selberg Functions in N Dimensions and their applications','','Birmingham-Southern College',''),
(450,'Cadavid','Carlos','<NAME>','Ph. D','1999','On a Remarkable Set of Words in the Mapping Class Group','','Universidad Nacional de Columbia',''),
(451,'Jeong','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1999','Diophantine Problems in Function Fields of Positive Characteristic','','Inha University, Korea',''),
(452,'Kang','Cong','<NAME>','Ph. D','1999','On Lang\'s diophantive conjecture for surfaces of general type','','Texas A&M Univ. at Galveston',''),
(453,'Linhart','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','1999','Numerical Investigations of Singularity Formation in Non-Linear Wave Equations in the Adiabatic Limit','','Texas A&M Univ.',''),
(454,'Masters','Joseph','<NAME>','Ph. D','1999','Lengths and Homology of Hyperbolic 3-Manifolds','','Univ. at Buffalo',''),
(455,'Blue','Meredith','<NAME>','Ph. D','2000','Generic Galois extensions for groups of order p^3','Assistant Professor, Eckerd College','Assistant Professor, Florida Atlantic University',NULL),
(456,'Chern','Shey-Jey','<NAME>','Ph. D','2000','Estimates for the Number of Polynomial with Bounded Degree and Bounded Measure','',NULL,NULL),
(457,'Gibney','Angela','<NAME>','Ph. D','2000','Fibrations of the Closure of M_{g,n}','Postdoctoral Assistant Professor (VIGRE),
University of Michigan','Assistant Professor, University of Pennsylvania',NULL),
(458,'Haskins','Mark','<NAME>','Ph. D','2000','Constructing Special Langrangain Cones','Postdoctoral Assistant Professor, Johns Hopkins University',NULL,NULL),
(459,'Pak','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2000','Two Distributed Capacitance Models','Assistant Professor, Sogang University, Korea',NULL,NULL),
(460,'Park','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2000','Sobolev trace inequality and logarithmic Sobolev trace inequality','Sejong University, Seoul, Korea',NULL,NULL),
(461,'<NAME>','Cynthia','<NAME>','Ph. D','2000','Essential Surfaces after Dehn Filling','Assistant Professor, St. Edward\'s University',NULL,NULL),
(462,'Zhang','Zuoshun','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','2000','Proper Posterior Distributions for some Hierarchical models and Roundoff Effects in the Gibbs Sampler','Research Scientist, Quintiles, Inc.',NULL,NULL),
(463,'Abad','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2001','Renormalization, invariant tori, and periodic orbits for Hamiltonian flows','McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada',NULL,NULL),
(464,'Buck','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2001','The Topology and Geometry of DNA and DNA-Protein Interaction','Assistant Professor, Applied Mathematics, Brown University',NULL,NULL),
(465,'Finotti','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2001','Canonical and Minimal Degree Liftings of Curves','University of California Santa Barbara','Instructor, Ohio State University',NULL),
(466,'Hayes','Leslie','<NAME>','Ph. D','2001','The Plus Closure of an Ideal','Assistant Professor, St. Joseph\'s University',NULL,NULL),
(467,'Kalisch','<NAME>.','<NAME>','Ph. D','2001','Models for Internal Waves in Two-Fluid Systems','Research Fellow, Norwegian University of Sciences and Technology, Trondheim, Norway',NULL,NULL),
(468,'Krashen','Daniel','<NAME>','Ph. D','2001','Birational Isomorphisms between Severi-Brauer Varieties','University of California Los Angeles','Gibbs Assistant Professor, Yale University',NULL),
(469,'Momken','Bahareh','<NAME>','Ph. D','2001','Fluid Flow and Deformable Multi-Porous Media','Avaya Communication, Westminster, CO',NULL,NULL),
(470,'Revesz','Mike','<NAME>','Ph. D','2001','The L p Theory of Random Measures','Engineering Scientist, Applied Research Lab, University of Texas at Austin',NULL,NULL),
(471,'Richardson','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2001','Rare events and conditional limit theorems for a class of spectrally positive, heavy-tailed Levy processes','Visiting Instructor, Macalester College, St. Paul, MN',NULL,NULL),
(472,'Rulla','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2001','The Birational Geometry of M3 and M2,1','VIGRE Postdoc, University of Georgia at Athens',NULL,NULL),
(473,'Visarraga','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2001','Heat Transport Models With Distributed Microstructure','University of Texas at Austin','Los Alamos National Laboratory',NULL),
(474,'Bowen','Lewis','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','Density in Hyperbolic Spaces','University of California at Davis','Zorn Postdoctoral Fellow, Indiana University',NULL),
(475,'Goncalves','Alexander','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','An Application of The Continuity Method for an Equation on Line Bundles','Universidade de Federal, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil',NULL,NULL),
(476,'Jiang','Jiaosheng','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','Bounded Operators without Invariant Subspaces on Certain Banach Spaces','The University of Texas at Austin',NULL,NULL),
(477,'Kim','Christina','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','Uniqueness and Existence Results on Viscosity Solutions of Some Free Boundary Problems','Assistant Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology','Assistant Professor, University of California at Los Angeles',NULL),
(478,'Leasure','Jason','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','Geodesics in the Complex of Curves of a Surface','National Security Agency',NULL,NULL),
(479,'Leininger','Chris','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','Essential Surfaces in Hyperbolic Three-Manifolds','Post-Doc Columbia University,','Assistant Professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign',NULL),
(480,'Oehrtman','Michael','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','Collapsing Dimensions, Physical Limitation, and other Student Metaphors for Limit Concepts','Assistant Professor, Arizona State University',NULL,NULL),
(481,'Slepcev','Dejan','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','On Level Set Approach to Motion of Manifolds of Arbitrary Codimension','Visiting Assistant Professor, University of Toronto','Assistant Adjunct Professor, University of California at Los Angeles',NULL),
(482,'Socha','Katherine','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','Modal Expansions of Surface Wave Model Equations','Assistant Profesor, Michigan State University','Assistant Professor, St. Mary\'s College of Maryland',NULL),
(483,'Tiu','Christian','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','On the Merton Problem in Incomplete Markets','Graduate Research Assistant, The University of Texas at Austin',NULL,NULL),
(484,'Torres','Monica','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','Plane-like minimal surfaces in periodic media with inclusions','Assistant Professor, Northwestern University','University of Houston',''),
(485,'Valdinoci','Enrico','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','Plane-like Minimizers in Periodic Media: Jet Flows and Ginzburg-Landau','Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa, Italy','University of Rome III',NULL),
(486,'Vano','John','<NAME>','Ph. D','2002','A Nash-Moser Implicit Function Theorem with Whitney Regularity and Applications','University of Wisconsin at Madison',NULL,NULL),
(487,'Yuan','Juan-Ming','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','2002','Numerical Schemes for Systems of Non-linear Dispersive Wave Equations','Visiting Mathematician, Oklahoma State University',NULL,NULL),
(488,'Goodman','Noah','<NAME>','Ph. D','2003','Contact Structures and Open Books','St. Edward\'s University at Austin','Post Doctoral Appointment, Massachusetts Institute of Technology',NULL),
(489,'Mandolesi','Andre','<NAME>','Ph. D','2003','Adiabatic Limits of the Hermitian Yang-Mills Equations on Slicewise Stable Bundles','Professor, Feira de Santana, Brazil',NULL,NULL),
(490,'Neira','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2003','Power Series in P-ADIC Roots of Unity','Mercer Human Resource Consulting, San Francisco, California',NULL,NULL),
(491,'Pacetti','Ariel','<NAME>','Ph. D','2003','A formula for the central value of certain Hecke L-functions','University of Buenos Aires',NULL,NULL),
(492,'Pal','Mihaela','<NAME>','Ph. D','2003','Theory of Principal Component Filter Banks with Applications to Multicomponent Imagery','Los Alamos National Labs',NULL,NULL),
(493,'Savin','Ovidiu','<NAME>','Ph. D','2003','Phase Transitions: Regularity of Flat Level Sets','Post Doctoral Visiting Faculty, University of California at Berkeley',NULL,NULL),
(494,'Terhune','David','<NAME>','Ph. D','2003','Evaluations of Multiple L-Values and Double Zeta Values of Quadratic Fields','VIGRE Postdoc, Pennsylvania State University',NULL,NULL),
(495,'Baker','Kenneth','<NAME>','Ph. D','2004','Knots on Once-punctured Torus Fibers','VIGRE, University of Georgia at Athens',NULL,NULL),
(496,'Condon','John','<NAME>','Ph. D','2004','Mahler Measure Evaluations in terms of Polylogarithms','Visiting Assistant Professor, City University of New York',NULL,NULL),
(497,'Fukshansky','Leonid','<NAME>','Ph. D','2004','Algebraic Points of Small Height with Additional Arithmetic Conditions','Visiting Assistant Professor, Texas A & M University',NULL,NULL),
(498,'Lehr','Heather','<NAME>','Ph. D','2004','Analysis of a Darcy-Stokes System Modeling Fluid Flow in Vuggy Porous Media','Ohio State University',NULL,NULL),
(499,'Petsche','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2004','Distribution of Galois Orbits of Low Height','VIGRE Post Doctoral Associate, University of Georgia at Athens',NULL,NULL),
(500,'Portillo-Bobadilla','Francisco','<NAME>','Ph. D','2004','Computations on an Equation of the BSD Type','Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico',NULL,NULL),
(501,'Brunson','Dana','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','Simulating Fluid Flow in Vuggy Porous','',NULL,NULL),
(502,'Kelliher','James','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','The vanishing Viscosity Limit for Incompressible Fluids in two dimensions','Tamarkin Assistant Professor, Brown University',NULL,NULL),
(503,'Lalin','Matilde','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','Some relations of Mahler measure with hyperbolic volumes and special values of L-Functions','Member, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton.','Associate Professor, Universite de Montreal, Canada',''),
(504,'Lamar','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','Human Acoustics: From Vocal Chords to Inner Ear','Postdoctoral Associate, Cornell University',NULL,NULL),
(505,'Masri','Riad','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','Some applications of classical modular forms to number theory','Postdoctoral Fellow, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics,',NULL,NULL),
(506,'Parker','Adam','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','An Elementary Construction of M0,0','Assistant Professor, Wittenberg University, Springfield, Ohio',NULL,NULL),
(507,'Petersen','Kathleen','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','One-Cusped Congruence Subgroups of PSL2','Coleman Postdoctoral Fellow, Queen\'s University, Ontario, Canada',NULL,NULL),
(508,'Silvestre','Luis','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','Regularity of the obstacle problem for a fractional power of the Laplace Operator','Postdoctoral Instructor, Courant Institute, New York, New York',NULL,NULL),
(509,'Sinclair','Christopher','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','Multiplicative Distance Functions','Postdoctoral Fellow, Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences','Univ. of Oregon',''),
(510,'Stoikov','Sasha','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','Optimal Strategies in incomplete financial markets','Postdoctoral Instructor, Courant Institute, New York, New York',NULL,NULL),
(511,'Teixeira','Eduardo','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','Regularity of Free Boundary in variational problems','Postdoctoral Assistant Professor, State University of New Jersey at Rutgers',NULL,NULL),
(512,'Tornaria','Gonzalo','<NAME>','Ph. D','2005','The Brandt Module of Ternary Quadratic Lattices','Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Montreal, Canada','Profesor Adjunto, Universidad de la Rep�blica, Uruguay','http://www.cmat.edu.uy/~tornaria/'),
(3858,'Pan','Feng','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3857,'Murphy','<NAME>','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3856,'Kim','Dongseok','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3855,'Higosaki','Ai','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3854,'Fleming','<NAME>','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3853,'Dai','Yanqing','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3852,'Bryan','<NAME>','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3851,'Arguello','<NAME>','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3850,'Wen','Zhihong','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','Logistic Regression and its Applications in Insurance Industry Data Analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3849,'Li','Shangjing','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','D-Optimal Experimental Designs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3848,'Kawasaki','Teresinha','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','Wallpaper Groups: Their Recognition and Construction of Representative Patterns',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3847,'Iskra','Matthew','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','Hasse\'s Theorem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3846,'Ham','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','The Global Minimization of a Concave Quadratic',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3845,'Zhang','Yan','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','Model Selection and Automated Smoothing of Marketing Survey Data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3844,'Yoo','Bongin','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','Performing Analysis of Variance Calculations with Regression Software',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3843,'Shomenta','Christopher','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','The Algebra of Public Key Encryption Systems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3842,'Sherburne','Gwenn','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','Polya\'s Enumeration Theorems and Their Applications',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3841,'Ottinger','Julene','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','Discriminant Analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3840,'Mun','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','The Use of SAS in Statistical Methodology of Pharmaceutical Industry',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3839,'Liang','Shuhua','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','Box and Behnken Methods for Second Order Designs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3838,'DSouza','Michael','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1997','Numerical Determination of the Smallest Eigenvalue for Large and Sparse',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3837,'Wu','Shwu-Jen','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','An Integrated Approach to Regression Analysis Through the Statistical Analysis System',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3836,'White','Frankie','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','Modeling the Fire Arrival Process in Australia\'s Great Western Desert',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3835,'Lin','Zong-Tsang','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','Equation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3834,'Garcia','Mario','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','An Overview of Natural Neighbor Interpolation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3833,'Bennett','Patricia','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','An Automated Fitting and Selection Method for Growth Curves',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3832,'Shen','Yung-Yao','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','The Approximation Property for Banach Spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3831,'Scott','James','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','A Characterization of Dedekind Domains',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3830,'Park','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','A Study o fthe Asymptotically Good Towers of Function Fields',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3829,'Nakamura','Mutsumi','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','On the Universal Approximation Property of Neural Networks',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3828,'McChesney','Amatist','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','Estimating Nonconformance Rates for Imperfect Inspection Processes with Random Inspection Error',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3827,'Ling','Herbert','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','Applications of Nonlinear Differential Equations: Models in Developmental Biology and Plasma Physics',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3826,'Lemieux','James','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','Geometria Situs: A Survey of Early Developments in Knot Theory and Related Fields',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3825,'Jensen','Jeffrey','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','A Study of the Halo Orbits',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3824,'Hua','Cuong','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','Dedekind Domains: Some Characterizations and Examples',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3823,'Chang','Yung-Ming','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','Shepard\'s Interpolation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3822,'Ye','Yehong','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','Difference Between Repeated Measure Design and Randomized Complete Block Design',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3821,'Welton','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','The Center of Mass in the Wave Equation for the CP1 Nonlinear R $ Sigma$-Model',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3820,'Sims','<NAME>.','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','Fractals, Wavelets and Vanishing Moments',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3819,'McCormack','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','In ABS 872 Process Capability for Nonnormal Dara Report',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3818,'Lyttle','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','Responser Surface Methods & Robust Design',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3817,'Hong','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','Evolutionary Operation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3816,'Graves','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1996','The Rigidity Conjecture and Consequences',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3815,'Brown','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1996','Near Hyperbolicity and the Henon Map',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3814,'Arthur','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1996','The Impossibility of Simultaneously Unique Degenerate Optimal Primal and Dual Solutions to Linear Programming Problems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3813,'Soeharyadi','Yudi','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Explicit Algebraic Integration of Euler\'s Equations of the Dynamics of an N-Dimensional Rigid Body',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3812,'Ryan','Cathleen','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','The Equivalence of Ring Homomorphisms into Division Algebras',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3811,'Nallana','Asha','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Cray-T3D Performance Study',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3810,'Huang','Li-Fei','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Analysis of Group Divisible Design',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3809,'Hoang','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Personal Ozone Moniter: The Eco-Badge',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3808,'Eure','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Robust Statistics',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3807,'Chen','Chih-Chuan','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','A Parallel Ssor Method for a Class of Periodic Elliptic Problems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3806,'Barnholtz','Jill','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Analysis of Covariance and Balancing with Respect to the Covariate',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3805,'Zook','Nathan','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','On the Classification of Finite Coxeter Groups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3804,'West','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','An Introduction to Fourier Series',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3803,'Wei','Wei','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Estimation of Variance Components in Split Plot Designs Using Generalized Linear Models',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3802,'Stovall','Sarah','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Density of Primes Yielding Primitive Points on Elliptic Cures',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3801,'Qi','Jinghong','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Methods of Constructing Nested Partially Balanced Incomplete Block Designs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3800,'Kyle','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Mathematical Modeling with Polytopes',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3799,'Gladish','Aaron','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Wallpaper Groups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3798,'Daghighi','Abdolnaser','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Race, Age, Mathematics Background and Mathematics Achievement',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3797,'Chowdhury','Maruful','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Control Charts for Process Variance',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3796,'Chen','Wan','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Parallel Implementation of an Alternating-Type Method',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3795,'Branstetter','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Parallel Multigrid Method',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3794,'Tsuo','I-Chun','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Box-Behnken Designs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3793,'Smith','Brian','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Analysis of Soybean Futures: a Case Study of Forecasting Seasonal Time Series',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3792,'Lee','Shu-Nan','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Multivariate Analysis Using Practical Components and Clusters Analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3791,'Jen','Hsiao-Lih','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Balanced Incomplete Block Design',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3790,'Chien','Yung-Hsin','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Model Checking for Generalized Linear Models',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3789,'Yi','Sang-ik','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Robust Minimum Distance Estimators Based on the Modified L2 Distance',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3788,'Tang','Yu-Pang','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Stability of the Multiple Queuing System Using Drift Analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3787,'Stephens','<NAME>.','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Computing Grobner Bases',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3786,'Kuo','Jo-Kang','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Robust Estimation and Modified L2 Distance',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3785,'Jones','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','A Survey of Credibility Theory in Relation to Bayesian Estimation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3784,'Johnson','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Linear Cyclic Codes',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3783,'Harder','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Functions of Single and Several Complex Variables: a Comparison',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3782,'Gutierrez-Zamora','A.','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Code for Detecting and Correcting Consecutive Errors',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3781,'Gonzales','Jesse','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','On Abelian Pi-Regular Rings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3780,'Chen','R-Sya','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','A Distributed Thin Film Capacitance Model',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3779,'Caughlin','Mary','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','Estimation of Deviance Components in Generalized Linear Models',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3778,'Bookhart','James, Jr.','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1995','The Development of Methods and Techniques to Detect and Model the Underlying Structure of Chaotic Systems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3777,'Sacry','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','Spectral Theory for Compact Linear Operators on Banach Spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3776,'Lesser','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','Reliability and the Construciton & Interpretation of Tests',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3775,'Kubicek','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','Two Tests on the Optimal Nodes in Polynomial Interpolation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3774,'Kessler','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','Statistical Analysis of National Atmospheric Deposition Program (NADP) Texas Data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3773,'Hernandez','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','A Report on Sullivan\'s Eventual Periodicity Theorem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3772,'Burnell','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','Parameter Orthononality and the Mean in Exponential Families',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3771,'Atchison','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','Closure Operator Lattices',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3770,'Watnik','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','Polynomial Rings and the High School Curriculum: A More Theoretical Approach',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3769,'Sumartinah','Endang','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','The Matrix Equation AX + XB = C and its Applications',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3768,'Stanley','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','Generalizations of Stein\'s Estimator',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3767,'Rendek','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','On Numerical Solutions to a Particular Problem in Optimal Control',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3766,'Nanry','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','Select Ordering Techniques used in Conjunction with the Preconditional Conjugate Gradient Method',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3765,'Kennedy','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','Computer Experiments on the Lorenz Attractor',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3764,'Kamman','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1989','Introduction to p-adic Analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3763,'Buffum','<NAME>','Hinkkanen','M.S.','1989','Balanced Measures on Julia Sets: An Introduction to the Fatou-Julia Theory of Iteration of Complex Rational Functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3762,'Baribault','<NAME>.','Showalter','M.S.','1989','A Porous Medium Model Dependent on Storage Cell Geometry',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3761,'Merz','Brigit','<NAME>','M.S.','1988','Analysis of a Nonlinear Bounday Value Problem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3760,'Choe','Seung-hyun','<NAME>','M.S.','1988','Ozone Data Analysis Based on the Extreme Value Theory',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3759,'Bishop','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1988','The Use of Empirical Bayes Method in Traffic Accident Estimation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3758,'Stankus','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1988','The Skein Relation and the Alexander Polynomial',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3757,'Santiageo','Marilyn','<NAME>','M.S.','1988','Improvement of the Implicit Finite Difference Code',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3756,'Bao','Shiao-Chu','<NAME>','M.S.','1988','Orthogonal Main Effects Design for 2 37/16',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3755,'Ting','Yun-Lung','<NAME>','M.S.','1988','Error Rates of Four Multiple Comparison Methods',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3754,'Feng','Wenchun','<NAME>','M.S.','1988','Analysis of Convariance Using Regression Packages',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3753,'Dickson','Patty','<NAME>','M.S.','1988','Analysis of Variance with Unequal Numbers of Observations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3752,'Berberian','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1988','Simultaneous Variance Estimation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3751,'Woodburn','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Applications of the Bootstrap Technique to Linear Regression Models in the Empirical Bayes Framework',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3750,'Vance','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Estimating Variability of Radiation Measurement Devices from Replicated Data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3749,'Shannon','Susan','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Mostow\'s Ridigity Thearem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3748,'Park','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Simultaneous Confidence Intervals in Unbalanced Control and Treatment Design',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3747,'Liang','<NAME>','Hinkley','M.S.','1987','Simultaneous Transformation in Regression Models Using GLIM',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3746,'Vance','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','A Kaplansky Result for Free Modules of Finite Rank Over a P.I.D.',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3745,'Chen','Nai-Ghing','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','A Computer Program of Exact Simultaneous Confidence Intervals for Multiple Comparisons in General Linear Models',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3744,'Yee','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Double Bootstrap Calculations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3743,'Xiao','Shengyou','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Modified Difference Correction Method for Elliptic Boundary Value Problems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3742,'White','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Strongly Pi-Regular Rings and Matrix Rings over Regular Rings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3741,'Straw','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Modules and Radicals of Hilbert Rings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3740,'Martinez','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Survival Data Analysis: Some Models and Examples',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3739,'Lin','Fu-Jen','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','On Pairwise Comparisons of the Components of the Mean Vector in Multivariate Distribution',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3738,'Liau','Pen-Hwang','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Eliminating Time Trends in 2n Factorials',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3737,'Huang','Pi-Hsiang','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Orthogonal Main Effects Plans',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3736,'Howe','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Zero-temperature Limits of Gibbs States',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3735,'Hatch','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Some Extremal Functions in Fourier Analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3734,'Djojosugite','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1987','Components-of-Variance Model, the Likelihood-Ratio Test',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3733,'Sun','Li','Hinkley','M.S.','1986','Review of Spline Method in Regression',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3732,'McGough','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1986','The Axiom of Choice',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3731,'Kim','Deok-Yeong','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','Seasonal Adjustment of Economic Time Series',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3730,'Killam','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','The Singleton Relative Chebyshev Center in Best Simultaneous Approximation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3729,'Kapitza','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','On a Theorem of Stallings and Neuwirth Concerning Fibred Knots',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3728,'Jarre','Florain','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','Multigrid Methods',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3727,'Park','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','Gauge Theory and its Application to Physics',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3726,'Linn','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','Models and Software for Solar Ponds',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3725,'Ghjewski','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','A Certain Problem in the Conduction of Heat',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3724,'Barros','Monica','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','One Parameter Exponential Families: An Overview',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3723,'Alverado','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','Regression Models for the Imputation of Missing Values in Ambient Ozone Data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3722,'Wilczak','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','The Solution of Milne\'s Equation by The Technique of Wiener and Hopf',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3721,'Nam','Kwanghee','Vick','M.S.','1986','Controllability of Affine Nonlinear Systems defined on Compact Manifolds',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3720,'Lee','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','Martingale Properties and their Applications to Financial & Economic Theory',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3719,'Lau','Sherry','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','Approximation to a Bivariate Function by the Sum of Products of Two Univariate Functions in the Chebyshev NORM',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3718,'Gonsalves','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','Mathematics Anxiety: Inplications of Selected Research',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3717,'Gardner','<NAME>','Vaaler','M.S.','1986','Algebraic Properties of the Ring of Arithmetical Functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3716,'Crampton','Myrick','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','A Mathematical Introduction to Fluid Mechanics & the Numerical Solution of the Navier-Stokes Equations for the Flow in a Channel with a Backward Step',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3715,'Coker','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1986','Correction of Cycle Slips in Nondifferenced Phase Data From the TI 4100 Receiver',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3714,'Vona','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','Finite Difference Solutions of Elleptic and Parabolic Partial Differential Equations on Rectangular Regions: Programs ELIPBVP and IVPROBM',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3713,'Stevens','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','A Statistical Model for Forecasting University Enrollment',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3712,'Scheiffele','Eberhard','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','Types of points in the Stone-Cech Compartifications of the natural numbers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3711,'Rutter','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','Selected Topics in Algebraic Number Theory',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3710,'Nelson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','A Study of Mathematical Models Used to Simualte the Human Thermal System',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3709,'Guang','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','Multinode Classification Tree',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3708,'Denny','Stephen','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','D\'Alembert\'s Principle',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3707,'Toellner','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','Microbundles are fiber bundles',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3706,'Morse','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3705,'Kim','Kyungsook','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','Network Models with Convex Costs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3704,'Khazenie','Nahid','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','Bound on the P-Value of the Best Fitting Regessor Variable Calculated to a Prespecified Accuracy',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3703,'Johnson','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','Properties of the Extreme Stable Laws and Numerical Evaluation of Natural Exponential Families Generated from Extreme Stable Laws',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3702,'McDaniel','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','Actuarial Graduation: Statistical Techniques for Analyzing Mortality Data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3701,'Lee','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','A Partial Review of Ancillarity',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3700,'Church','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1985','Cominatorics and Banach Spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3699,'Steffy','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','The Group Sampling Model: A Computer Program for Statistical Experimental Desgin',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3698,'Pan','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','Rigde Regression: Biased Estimation in Practice',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3697,'Lu','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','Diagnostic Tests for Transformations in Linear Models',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3696,'Loh','Yin-Loong','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','Diagnostic Measures for Detecting Influential Points and Outliers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3695,'Liu','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','The Use of Splines for The Solution of Singular Integral Equation of Cauchy Type',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3694,'<NAME>','Elizabeth','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','1984','Comparative Study of Direct and Iterative Methods of Solving Linear Systems Arising from Waterflooding Problems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3693,'Chang','Lichin','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','Three-Quarter Replicates of 2n Designs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3692,'Snyder','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','An Application of Semi-State Analysis to a Distributed Network',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3691,'Schneider','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','The Treatment of Questionable Observations in the Analysis of Variance for Crossed Classification',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3690,'Dong-Hun','Han','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3689,'Daniels','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','The Detection of a Bad Observation in an Unreplicated 2n Factorial Experiment',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3688,'Castillo-Moreno','Jose','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','Symmetric Matrices Using the Lanczos Algorithms',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3687,'Babich','Amy','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','The Loop and Sphere Theorems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3686,'Wu','Tsui-Fen','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','M. D. I. Theorem Review and Application',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3685,'LeKander','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','Asymptotic Expansion Methods for Jump Phenomena',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3684,'Jung','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','Steins Paradox Review',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3683,'Choi','Seungnook','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','Separability Test in Monetary Aggregates',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3682,'Abbasian','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1984','Lanczos Algorithms for the Acceleration on Nonsymmetrizable Iterative Methods',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3681,'Yu','Chien-Chih','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','Three tree structures for data processing in Dynamic Programming',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3680,'Seymour','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','A Theorem of Grauert\'s on Stein Manifolds',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3679,'Schneider','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','An Analytic Characterization of Two Dimensional Banach Spaces with Applications to Extenders',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3678,'Norris','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','The Structure of Clifford Algebras Over Fields of Characteristic Not Tow',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3677,'Nguyen','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','Decomposition Spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3676,'Linn','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','Oscillatory Modes in Finite Element Approximation of Shallow Water Equations: Free Oscillations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3675,'Hu','Li-Hwa','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','Applications of Chance-constrained Programming Method',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3674,'Cheng','Chi-Lun','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3673,'Ashcraft','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','Adams Type Methods Using Cubic Splines',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3672,'McCutcheon','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','Bers Imbedding of the Teichmiller Space',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3671,'Lu','Wanh-Shu','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','Parametric Empirical Bayes Estimation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3670,'Jones','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','The Noncentral Chi-Squated and Chi Distributions with an Application to Radioastronomy',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3669,'High','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','Center Points in Response Surface Designs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3668,'Haensly','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','Stability and Convergence of Spectral Method Approximations to Solutions of Mixed Initial Value - Boundary Value Problems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3667,'Chao','Chiangsun','<NAME>','M.S.','1983','Optimal Design in Statistical Experiments',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3666,'Anderson','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1983','An Investigation of a Shifted Incomplete Choles? Facterication Procedure Used as an Iterative Method to Solve Large Sparse Linar Systems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3665,'Guerra','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1982','Analysis of Some Transformation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3664,'Smith','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1982','Tests for Non-Additivity in the Two-Way Layout with One Observation Per Cell',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3663,'Hill','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1982','Improving Failure Rate Estimation Using Parametric Empirical Bayes',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3662,'Whipple','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1982','Regions of Stability about the Triangular Equilibrium Points of the Restricted Problem of Three Bodies',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3661,'Gordon','David','<NAME>','M.S.','1982','Classical Lie Groups in the Study of Twistor Theory',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3660,'Sadeghan','Hossein','<NAME>','M.S.','1982','Classical Lie Groups in the Study of Twistor Theory',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3659,'Dosch','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1982','Methods of Criticizing Linear Regression Models in Statistics',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3658,'Moore','<NAME>','Gibb','M.S.','1982','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3657,'King','Marcia','Cain','M.S.','1982','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3656,'Dempsey','<NAME>','Gibb','M.S.','1982','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3655,'Cantwell','<NAME>.','Gibb','M.S.','1982','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3654,'Holley','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1981','Eigenvalue Characterication by Variational Principles',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3653,'Friedrichs','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1981','Methods for Determining the Eigenvalues of the Regular Sturm-Liouville System',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3652,'Matovsky','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1981','The Neumann Problem in Lp over a Bounded Domain in Rn',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3651,'Diamond','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1981','Sperical Harmonics and Satellite Orbits',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3650,'Lodell','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1981','Use of Minimum Discrimination Information in an Applied Problem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3649,'Beneish','Esther','<NAME>','M.S.','1981','Polynomials with Galois Group PSL (2.7)',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3648,'Hutchinson','<NAME>','Bichteler','M.S.','1981','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3647,'Leonard','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1980','A Comparison of Fibrations and Covering Projections',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3646,'Shaparenko','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1980','Topics in Geometric Function Theory',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3645,'Petkewicz','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1980','A Comparison of Linear and Quantile Test Equating',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3644,'Parks','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1980','Koebe Uniformization Theorem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3643,'Neidinger','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1980','Three Versions of the Spectral Theorem for Normal Operators',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3642,'Hintaka','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1980','On the Solution of a Block Banded System of Linear Equations Arising from Finite Difference Approximations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3641,'Crockett','<NAME>, III','<NAME>','M.S.','1980','Walter\'s Pennies',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3640,'Bern','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1980','The Problem of Identifying Multivariate Survival Distributions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3639,'Young','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Asymptotic Analysis of Product Integrals as Solutions of Ordinary Differential Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3638,'Wiese','<NAME>','','M.S.','1979','On the Use of Conformal Mapping Theory in the Study of Irrotational and Incompressible Flows',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3637,'White','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Automorphism Groups on Compact Riemann Surfaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3636,'Poppen','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Properties fo a Special Ring of Integers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3635,'Lee','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Saturated Functions on 2n Designs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3634,'Gonzalez','Ruth','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1979','The Numerical Solution of the Depth Separated Acostic Wave Equation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3633,'Evans','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Transcendental Fixed Fields',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3632,'Whittington','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Topology of Metric Spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3631,'Tsutsui','Masanori','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Boundary Extension Problems fo rQuasiconformal Mappings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3630,'Rasmussen','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','The Hamiltonian Operator',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3629,'Powell','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1979','Linear Bearing Estimation for Sonar Line Arrays',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3628,'Petkoff','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Stein\'s Estimator with Examples and Extensions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3627,'Jordan','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Variable Domain Evolutions Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3626,'Gentry','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','A comparison of the Computer Rounding Errors of the Implicit Method, Parallel Shooting, and Invariant Imbedding',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3625,'Durrin','<NAME>, III','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','A Comparison of Two Strategies for the Multi-Level Solution of Finite Element Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3624,'Booth','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','On Conditional Expectation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3623,'Berkas','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Half-Normal Plots',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3622,'Wolf','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Comparative Monte Carlo Study of Discrete Discriminant Analysis Error Rates',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3621,'Smith','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','On Partial Fraction and Infinite Product Decompositions of Meromorphic and Analytic Functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3620,'Shi-San-Ju','Lin','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Extended Partially Balanced Incomplete Block Designs with Two Associate Classes',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3619,'Renka','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Nonlinear Membrane Analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3618,'Leon','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Principal Component Analysis and Factor Analysis As Exploratory Tools in the Analysis of Categorical Data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3617,'Hanson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','The Complexity of Only Matrix Multiplication',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3616,'Fountain','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','The Stability of the Assassinator',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3615,'Chavous','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','The Chance-Constrained Programming Method',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3614,'Bradford','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','The Dirichlet Problem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3613,'Boyd','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1979','Domains of Holomorphy',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3612,'Avini','Mostafa','Armendariz','M.S.','1979','Self-Injective Rings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3611,'Thierer','<NAME>','Sherman','M.S.','1978','A Comparison of Ordering Schemes for Profile Minimazation of Sparse Symmetric Matrices',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3610,'Streeter','<NAME>','Daniel','M.S.','1978','Stability, Consistency, and Convergence of Numerical Solutions for Differential Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3609,'Starbird','<NAME>','Eaton','M.S.','1978','Alexander Linear Isotopy Theorem in R2',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3608,'Sinnett','<NAME>','Dollard','M.S.','1978','The Spaces: Variations on a Theme by Lebesque',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3607,'Keeton-Williams','<NAME>','McAdam','M.S.','1978','Graded Rings and Their Applications',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3606,'Farr','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1978','The Accuracy of Three Condition Number Estimates',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3605,'Woo','Kin-Chu','<NAME>','M.S.','1978','The Effectiveness of the Interpolating Programs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3604,'Richardson','<NAME>','John','M.S.','1978','The Analysis of Variance of Incomplete Block Designs With A Missing Block',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3603,'Morton','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1978','Simultaneous Inference Procedures',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3602,'Lee','Hsiang','<NAME>','M.S.','1978','Comparison of Step-Size Monitors for Initial-Value Codes',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3601,'Gully','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1978','Factorial Structure in 2n Factorial Experiments',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3600,'Ismail','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1978','On the solution of singularly perturbed linear systems with application to boundary-value problems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3599,'Hooper','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1978','Subnormality and Semi-Groups of Bounded Linear Operators',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3598,'Goodrich','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1978','Statistics: A Frequentist Approach',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3597,'Fisher','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1978','Mathematical Background and User\'s Guide for LINPACK',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3596,'Emmons','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1978','On the Existence of an Equilibrium in a Pure Exchange Economy with Perfect Competition',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3595,'Pearce','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1978','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3594,'Morton','<NAME>','John','M.S.','1978','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3593,'Jordan','<NAME>','Dollard','M.S.','1978','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3592,'Wang','Li-hsing','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Comparison of Several Methods for Fitting Surface to Scattered Data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3591,'Shaparenko','I-Ming <NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Reflexivity and Order Continuity on Banach Lattices',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3590,'Rusk','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Group Algebras of Finite Groups of Low Order',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3589,'Rusk','David Alla+C257n','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','An Integral Transform with Kernel e-(st)m(st)m-1',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3588,'McKenzie','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','The Analysis and Adjustment of Survey Networks',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3587,'Knaus','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Consistency Properties of Two Nonparametric Density Estimates',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3586,'Foley','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','The Fundamental Group of the Compliment of a Finite Graph',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3585,'Harbin','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Partially Balanced Association Schemes for 64 Varieties',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3584,'Christiansen','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Optimization of Functionals',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3583,'Ruiz','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Numerical and Analytical Studies of the Flow Between Counter-Rotating Disks',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3582,'Raburn','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','A Characterization of the 2-sphere',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3581,'Phillips','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Non-Isomorphic Symmetric Balanced Incomplete Block Designs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3580,'Jerkofsky','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Pseudoinverses and Similar Matrices',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3579,'Guillementte','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Modules and Rings with DCC on Essential Sobmodules',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3578,'Eldred','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Response Surface Designs for Constrained Three-Factor Mixture Problems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3577,'<NAME>','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Additive and Multiplicative Decomposition of Square Matrices',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3576,'Caples','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Communicative Semihereditary Rings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3575,'Barber','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1977','Four Queueing Systems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3574,'Bonner','<NAME>','Eaton','M.S.','1977','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3573,'Shaparenko','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1976','Discontinuous Groups and Automorphic Functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3572,'Richter','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1976','Group Optimal Bidding for Oil Land Leases',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3571,'Niblack','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1976','Computing the Singular Value Decomposition Using Relaxation with Application to Image Matrices',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3570,'McGlothlin','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1976','Some Properties of Conformal Mappings of Simply and Multiply Connected Domains',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3569,'Grimes','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1976','Flow in a Two-dimensional Reservoir and Connecting Pipe',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3568,'Embry','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1976','Optimization of a Non-differentiable Functional',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3567,'Chan','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1976','On Stochastic Approximation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3566,'Tran','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1976','Some Basic Results in Finite Permutation Groups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3565,'Miller','Charlotte','<NAME>','M.S.','1976','On The Geometry of Finite Dimensional Banach Spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3564,'Garcia','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1976','On Ultraproducts of Lp Spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3563,'Shorba','<NAME>','McAdam','M.S.','1976','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3562,'Long','<NAME>','Greenleaf','M.S.','1976','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3561,'Hobbs','<NAME>','Armendariz','M.S.','1976','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3560,'Harbin','<NAME>, Jr.','John','M.S.','1976','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3559,'Gentry','<NAME>','Daniel','M.S.','1976','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3558,'Evans','<NAME>','John','M.S.','1976','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3557,'Collier','<NAME>','Friedman','M.S.','1976','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3556,'Thurmond','<NAME>.','Edmondson','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3555,'Klinksiek','<NAME>.','Guy','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3554,'Corser','<NAME>.','John','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3553,'Coldwell','<NAME>','Hamrick','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3552,'Bean','<NAME>','John','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3551,'Stover','<NAME>','Russell','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3550,'Hamilton','<NAME>.','Armendariz','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3549,'Dolan','Cynthia','Russell','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3548,'Coldwell','Peggy Ann','','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3547,'Chao','<NAME>','John','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3546,'Barnes','Kathy','Pledger','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3545,'Shirley','<NAME>','Smith','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3544,'Henderson','<NAME>.','','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3543,'Brooks','<NAME>.','','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3542,'Stewart','<NAME>','Iarrabino','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3541,'Smith','<NAME>','Cheney','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3540,'Schlattman','<NAME>','Greenleaf','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3539,'Rapp','<NAME>','Daniel','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3538,'Martin','<NAME>','Daniel','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3537,'Markarsky','<NAME>','Wolff','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3536,'Kennedy','<NAME>','Daniel','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3535,'Chow','<NAME>','Gregory','M.S.','1975','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3534,'Steward','<NAME>.','Iarrobino','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3533,'Martin','<NAME>.','','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3532,'Chow','<NAME>.','Gregory','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3531,'Barreto','<NAME>','Gregory','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3530,'Richard','<NAME>','Pledger','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3529,'Owen','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3528,'McCollum','<NAME>','McAdam','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3527,'Kay','May','Osborn','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3526,'Hayes','<NAME>','Young','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3525,'Godfrey','<NAME>','Charnes','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3524,'Carter','<NAME>','Eaton','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3523,'Baldwin','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3522,'Baker','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1974','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3521,'Whitman','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3520,'Urick','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3519,'Thompson','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3518,'Sunderland','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3517,'Ssebayigga','<NAME>.','<NAME>. <NAME>','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3516,'Pearson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3515,'Kulvicki','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3514,'Hill','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3513,'Bonner','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3512,'Ray','<NAME>','Greenleaf','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3511,'Miller','<NAME>., III','Dollard','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3510,'Ferguson','<NAME>','Joshi','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3509,'Coffman','<NAME>','Vick','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3508,'Clark','<NAME>','Wolff','M.S.','1973','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3507,'Yuan','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1972','Some Properties of the Correlated Bivariate Power Series Distributions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3506,'Bell','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1972','The Jordan Curve Theorem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3505,'Ward','<NAME>','Joshi','M.S.','1972','Stochastic Epidemic Processes',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3504,'Walton','<NAME>','John','M.S.','1972','Experiments with mixtures: transformation of the response',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3503,'Seiford','<NAME>','Lorentz','M.S.','1972','On the E-entropy of totally bounded subsets of Metric spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3502,'Neunaber','<NAME>.','Vick','M.S.','1972','Smith Homology Theory',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3501,'Jensen','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1972','Theoretic Theorems Concerning the Submodule of a Module',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3500,'Wilson','<NAME>','Lacey','M.S.','1972','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3499,'Well','<NAME>','Cannon','M.S.','1972','On the determination of the diffusivity of a medium',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3498,'Ewing','<NAME>.','Cannon','M.S.','1972','The approximation of the solution to Laplace\'s Equation in a bounded subset of half space from interior data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3497,'Duyka','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1972','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3496,'Pfein','Tran','Young','M.S.','1972','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3495,'Kincaid','<NAME>','McAdam','M.S.','1972','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3494,'Hagy','<NAME>','Ramanoorthy','M.S.','1972','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3493,'Williams','Elizabeth','Lacey','M.S.','1971','Characterizations of Compact Metric Spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3492,'Thuan','<NAME>','Joshi','M.S.','1971','Minimum Variance Unbiased Estimation for Functions of Truncation Properties',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3491,'Johnson','<NAME>','Lacey','M.S.','1971','Semi-Continuous Functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3490,'Stones','<NAME>','Lacey','M.S.','1971','Banach Space of Universal Disposition',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3489,'Parsons','<NAME>','Lacey','M.S.','1971','Concerning Partitions of Unity',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3488,'Faller','<NAME>.','Joshi','M.S.','1971','A Survey of Selected Solutions of the Behrens-Fisher Problem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3487,'Belshe','<NAME>','Osborn','M.S.','1971','On the Proof o fthe Quadratic Reciprocity Law',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3486,'Tipton','Marilyn','Guy','M.S.','1971','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3485,'Rogers','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1971','An Examination of Room Square',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3484,'Midence','<NAME>','Ker','M.S.','1971','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3483,'Clay','<NAME>','Armendariz','M.S.','1971','The Jacobson Radical of Rings and Moduls',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3482,'Blair','Georgianna','<NAME>','M.S.','1971','A Theory for Integrating Functions which are Bounded on a Countable Set',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3481,'Pratt','<NAME>, Jr.','Schumaker','M.S.','1971','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3480,'Montano','<NAME>','Kerr','M.S.','1971','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3479,'Meyer','Loreli','Joshi','M.S.','1971','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3478,'Lennington','<NAME>','Joshi','M.S.','1971','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3477,'<NAME>','<NAME>','Richter','M.S.','1971','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3476,'Coldwell','Peggy','Hamrick','M.S.','1971','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3475,'Anderson','<NAME>','Schumaker','M.S.','1971','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3474,'Wilson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Perfect Squares',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3473,'Wene','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Commutativity Theorems for Devision Rings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3472,'Murray','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Primitive Root of Gaussian Primes',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3471,'Bordano','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Some Congruence Properties of the Petition Function',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3470,'Packwood','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Test of Primality',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3469,'Kinnersley','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Topology of the Irrational Numbers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3468,'Henderson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Pseudoprime Numbers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3467,'Zimmermann','Patricia','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Gradient Methods for Solving Systems of Linear Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3466,'Micklethwait','James','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Numerical Determination of Unknown Parameters in Analytic Systems of Ordinary Differential Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3465,'Luebbe','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3464,'Hoa','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','The Uniqueness of the Circle Group',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3463,'Guy','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Strategic Aspects of a Game with Odd Number of Coins',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3462,'Gregory','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Concerning Proofs of Fermat\'s Auler\'s and Wilson\'s Theorems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3461,'Friesen','<NAME>.','Osborn','M.S.','1970','Are Investments of Distribution of Primitive Roots and Quadratic Residue fo Odd Prime Moduli',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3460,'Driscoll','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','Probabilities in Bridge',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3459,'Castro','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3458,'Smith','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3457,'Martin','<NAME>','Whiteman','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3456,'Jacob','<NAME>, Jr.','Wall','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3455,'Friesen','<NAME>','Osborn','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3454,'Fisher','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3453,'Finegeld','Joel','Wall','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3452,'Eifler','<NAME>','Dollard','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3451,'DAsto','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3450,'Chen','Yu-Ming','Showalter','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3449,'Brauner','Lonnie, Jr.','Showalter','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3448,'Brasch','Randolph','Schumaker','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3447,'Blackwell','Suzanne','Osborn','M.S.','1970','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3446,'Thomason','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','Stabilizing Averages for Multistep Methods of Solving Ordinary Differential Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3445,'Smallwood','<NAME>.C544','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','A Comparison of Five Numerical Methods for Solving Polynomial Equations with Real Coefficients',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3444,'Karney','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','A Collection of Matrices for Testing Computational Algorithms',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3443,'Howell','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','Solving Systems of Linear Algebraic Equations Using Residue Arithmetic',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3442,'Chen','Yii-Ming','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','On Solutions of Ordinary Differential Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3441,'Cates','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','Concerning Numerical Integration for Functions Involving Fractional Powers of the Variable',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3440,'Brauner','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','Definitions of Ellipticity',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3439,'Wilkinson','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','A Polyalgorithm for Finding Roots of Polynomial Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3438,'Vinson','<NAME>.','Walson','M.S.','1969','On the Trapezoidal Rule with Interval Numbers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3437,'Tormollan','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','A Reduced Pascal Triangle',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3436,'Shawe','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','Topical Outlines in the History of Mathematics',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3435,'Sharpley','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3434,'Reeves','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3433,'Price','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','The Infinitude of Primes',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3432,'McNeely','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','The Space of Distributional Derivative of L2 Functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3431,'Gerdes','<NAME>, II','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3430,'Cracraft','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3429,'Stallings','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','An Upper-Bound for the Tau-Function',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3428,'Schulz','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','Symmetric Correspondence Semigroups Selected Topics',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3427,'Parker','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3426,'Humphreys','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3425,'Goldman','<NAME>','Haskell','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3424,'Eisenstein','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3423,'Eidson','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','The Convergence of Richardson\'s Finite-Difference Analogue for the Heat Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3422,'Broussard','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3421,'Sykes','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3420,'Snyder','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3419,'Reagor','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3418,'Lewis','<NAME>','Craig','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3417,'Justice','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3416,'Garland','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3415,'Fogwell','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3414,'Ewell','<NAME>, Jr.','Wall','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3413,'Eskut','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3412,'Carter','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3411,'Carl','<NAME>','Osborn','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3410,'Beidel','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1969','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3409,'Todd','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3408,'Stiles','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3407,'Lochbrooke','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3406,'Lankford','<NAME>, IV','Boessenroth','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3405,'Kavanaugh','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3404,'Justice','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3403,'Helton','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3402,'Hansen','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','Factorization and Multiplicative Cyclic Semigroups in rings of Residue Classes o fGaussin Integers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3401,'Carter','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3400,'<NAME>)','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','Interval Analysis and Applications',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3399,'Buck','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3398,'Ulrich','<NAME>','','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3397,'Swanson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3396,'Stevenson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3395,'Smith','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','The Measurement of Regional Blood Flow Using Hydroden Gas as a Tracer and the Analysis of Resultant Multiple Component Negative Exponential Washout Curves',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3394,'Schaefer','<NAME>','Boessenroth','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3393,'Roesler','<NAME>.','Ettlinger','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3392,'Ray','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3391,'Pyle','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','Sequences Generated by Sieves',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3390,'Kosaka','<NAME>','Boessenroth','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3389,'Gibson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3388,'Baker','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3387,'Stromberg','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3386,'Stephenson','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3385,'Roden','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3384,'Okhuysen','<NAME>','Craig','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3383,'McIlroy','<NAME>','Durbin','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3382,'Lashbrooke','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3381,'Langford','<NAME>, IV','Boessenroth','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3380,'Enfield','<NAME>','Bledsoe','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3379,'Crews','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3378,'Courtney','<NAME>','Kezlan','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3377,'Bishop','<NAME>.','Greenwood','M.S.','1968','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3376,'Wilson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3375,'Williams','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','The Methods Brauer and Yamamata for Finding the Spectror Radius of an Irreducible Non-Negative Matrix',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3374,'Stromberg','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3373,'Okhuysen','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3372,'McIlroy','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Group Rings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3371,'Courtney','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3370,'Bishop','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','A Strategy for a Two Person Game with Incomplete Information',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3369,'Williamson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','A Survey of the Riemann Stieltjes Integral and its Generalizations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3368,'Ward','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Sufficient Conditions fo rthe Imbeddability of a Semigroup in a Multiplicative Simigroup of Residue Classes',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3367,'Stringer','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','A Globally Convergent Method for Computing the Zeros of Polynomial Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3366,'Sawey','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','A Comparison of Ralston and Lobatto Quadrature',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3365,'Richert','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Generalized Birthday Problems with a Related Problem in Personnel Management',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3364,'Orozco','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','The Stieljis Transform',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3363,'Meynig','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','A Development of Selected Topics from the Theory of Numbers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3362,'McBroom','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Concerning Reduction of the Indeterminacy of Descartes\' Rule of Signs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3361,'Kozuh','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','A Brief Survey of the Measure-Thoretic Approach to Probability',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3360,'Kincaid','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Algorithmic Procedures for Computing the Greatest Common Divisor of n Integers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3359,'Hall','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Topological Product Measures',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3358,'Fuller','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Containment Relations Among Certain Classes of Modules',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3357,'Foerster','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Infinite Coprime Sequences',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3356,'Duplissey','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Theory and Applications of Unmeasurable Cardinals',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3355,'Copeland','<NAME>','','M.S.','1967','Construction and Operation of a Barium Contact Plasma Machine',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3354,'Coats','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Lattice Point Counting Problems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3353,'Blair','<NAME>','','M.S.','1967','Finite Difference Approximations for Ordinary Differential Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3352,'Adar','Tuvia','Ettlinger','M.S.','1967','Angles in the Plane',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3351,'Underwood','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','The Triangle with Minimum Perimeter for a Fixed Area',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3350,'Strickmeier','<NAME>, Jr.','','M.S.','1967','An Analysis of Trends in the Placement of Trigonometry in the Mathematics Curiculum of Texas High Schools',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3349,'Spitzenberger','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1967','Simple Graphs f and g Each with X-Projection (0,1) such that f is g-Integrable but f is not Strongly g-Integrable',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3348,'Semrod','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Concerning Some Sorting Techniques',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3347,'Sawey','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Essential Limit Sets',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3346,'Pritchett','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','An Exponential Thransform',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3345,'Peabody','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','A Theorem Containing Sufficient Conditions for a Set of Simple Graphs to be Equi-Continuous',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3344,'Naiser','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','The OR Algorithm Applied to Hessenberg',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3343,'Mouradoglou','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Numerical Studies on the Convergence of the Peaceman-Rachford Alternating Direction Implicit Method',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3342,'Moreman','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Well-Ordering',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3341,'Miller','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Some Methods of Numerical Integration of Ordinary Differential Equations Using Quadrature Formulas and Extrapolation to the Limit',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3340,'Magness','<NAME>','','M.S.','1967','Theorems Concerning Components and Boundaries of Domains',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3339,'Heimbuck','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Negative Base Numeral Systems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3338,'Durrenberger','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Transitive Semigroups of Correspondence',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3337,'Brown','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Two Theorems Concerning the Links and Improper Points of a Compact Continuum',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3336,'Bales','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','The Generation and Testing of Pseudo-Random Noise on a Digital Computer',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3335,'Anderson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1967','Concerning Ordered Array Representation of Numbers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3334,'Stone','<NAME>','Gregory','M.S.','1967','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3333,'Stafford','<NAME>','Shaw','M.S.','1967','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3332,'Sorensen','<NAME>','Lynch','M.S.','1967','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3331,'Martin','<NAME>','Weaver','M.S.','1967','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3330,'Hollon','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1967','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3329,'England','<NAME>','Innis','M.S.','1967','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3328,'Davis','<NAME>','Innis','M.S.','1967','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3327,'Wiggins','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Construction of Globally Convergent Iteration Function for the Solution of Polynomial Equations by the Method of Traub',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3326,'Sorensen','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Error Analysis and Modeling for Numerical Approximations to the Telegraph Equation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3325,'Bradford+B312','G<NAME>, III','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A System of Unsigned Integer Arithmetic',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3324,'Beavers','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Convergence of a Modified Sequence',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3323,'Zimmermann','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Uniform Structures on Topological Groups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3322,'Young','<NAME>.','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1966','An Integral Transform With Kernal x2 e (-px3)/3',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3321,'Webb','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Random Walks on a Square Lattice?',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3320,'Vannatta','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Tables of Primative Roots of Admissible Composite Moduli Less Than 2000',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3319,'VanDoren','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Concerning Proper-Function Expansions of Positive Simple Kernals',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3318,'Templeton','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Tortran to Agol Translator',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3317,'Smith','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Cyclic Product Theory',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3316,'Schaevitz','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Lie and Jordan Structures in Simple Rings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3315,'Pressly','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Theorem on Separation of Point Sets',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3314,'Pledger','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Probability Spaces and Real Random Variables',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3313,'Phillips','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Two Theorems Involving Well-Ordering',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3312,'Pepper','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Study of Algorithms',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3311,'ORear','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Duality in Graph Theory with Applications',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3310,'Murphy','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Theorem Concerning the Separation of Compact Subsets of a Continuum',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3309,'Moore','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Numerical Simulation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3308,'McBride','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','An Analysis and Comparison of Certain Algorithms for Generating Memory Wheels',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3307,'Matuska','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Generation o fa Stationary Gaussian Random Process with a Specified Power Spectral Density Function',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3306,'Marshall','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Embedding of Countable Groups in Two Generator Groups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3305,'MacKee','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Structural Definitions of Certain Subsets of a Complete Ordered Field',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3304,'Johnston','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Confidence Interval for the x-Intercept of a Linear Regression Model',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3303,'Jackson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Theorem Concerning Compact Continua',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3302,'Hale','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Concerning Connected Point Sets in Moore Space',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3301,'Green','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Concerning R. L. Moore\'s Axiom I\'.3',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3300,'Garrett','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Problems Concerning Countable Collections of Nowhere Dense Sets',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3299,'Farmer','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Study of Infinite Products',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3298,'England','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','On Four, Five Spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3297,'Cooper','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Hawthorne\'s Report',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3296,'Asar','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Finite T Semigroups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3295,'Ahlers','Carl','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','On Sufficient Statistics',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3294,'Waddell','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Extrapolation of Numerical Solutions to an Initial Value Problem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3293,'Stallings','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','An Upper-Bound for the Tau-Function',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3292,'Sparks','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Groupoids with Pairwise Conditions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3291,'Schoch','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Romberg Quadrature',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3290,'Schandua','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','The Fundamental Mode of Vibration of a Hexagonal Membrane',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3289,'Proffitt','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Theorem Concerning Compact Point Set',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3288,'Pope','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','On the Wishart Distribution',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3287,'Norris','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','The Traveling Salesman Problem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3286,'Morgan','Sister <NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Topics in Modern Mathematics',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3285,'Mauldin','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Theorem on the Mean Integral',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3284,'Hitz','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A symptotic Expansions and Methods',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3283,'Harrington','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Theorem About Sequences in a Normal Linear Space',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3282,'Gott','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1966','A Heuristic Approach to the Numerical Solution of Functions of Several Real Variables Using Digital Computer Techniques',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3281,'Garrett','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','A Problem Concerning The Convergence of Certain Point Sequences',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3280,'Bokn','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Continuity of Parameters in Approximation Problems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3279,'Black','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1966','Some Theorems Concerning Hebert Space',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3278,'Smith','<NAME>','Odell','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3277,'Slottebeck','<NAME>','Lacey','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3276,'Skinner','<NAME>','Gregory','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3275,'Pope','Terry','Odell','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3274,'Morris','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3273,'McGowan','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3272,'Hoa','<NAME>','Lacey','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3271,'Hagan','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3270,'Gerdes','<NAME>, II','Craig','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3269,'Garrett','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3268,'Foster','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3267,'Durrenberger','<NAME>','Weaver','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3266,'Camden','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1966','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3265,'Wallace','<NAME>., Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Numerical Analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3264,'Wacaser','<NAME>., Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','A Study of Quasi-Frobenuis Rings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3263,'Tillinghast','<NAME>.','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1965','Energy Eigenvalues, of the Deuteron Approximated with the Aid of the Laplace Transform',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3262,'Smith','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','On the Generation and Testing of Uniformly Distributed Pseudo-Random Numbers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3261,'Slottebeck','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Cantor Spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3260,'Skinner','<NAME>','Gregory','M.S.','1965','Computing the Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors o fa Matrix',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3259,'Morris','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','A Class of Finite Groups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3258,'Downing','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','The Automatic Construction of Contour Plots with Application to Numerical Analysis Research',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3257,'Barton','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Pseudo Inverses of Rectangular Matrics',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3256,'Suhucany','<NAME>.','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1965','Orthogonal Polynomials and the Holmgren Riesz Transform',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3255,'McElhone','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','A Matrix Formulation of Steepest Ascent Methods for Optimization Problems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3254,'Copley','Patricia','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','The Periodic Solution of a Class of Nonlinear Differential Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3253,'Azuela-Arriaga','Arturo','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Arc Length Curvature and Applications',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3252,'Woolsey','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','On Integer Linear Programming in Combinatorial Analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3251,'Spacek','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Some Results Concerning MJ(x) + xJy1(x) = 0',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3250,'Shaw','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','A Theorem Concerning the Separation of Point Sets',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3249,'Reed','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Functions of Bounded Variation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3248,'Rash','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','A Problem Concerning Linear Fractional Transformations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3247,'Purifoy','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','A Compact Point-set Whose Closure Is Not Compact',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3246,'Lewis','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','An Error Analysis of Kiser\'s Algorithm for Diagonalizing a Real Symmetric Matrix',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3245,'Jones','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','On Exsurfaces and the Riemann Extensor',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3244,'Hibbs','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','On Estimation of Vector Parameter',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3243,'Henry','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','The Second Expansion Theorem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3242,'Hansard','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Finding Eigenvalues with Laguerre Iterations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3241,'Freeman','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Design Consideration for Time-Sharing Systems on Small Computers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3240,'Fain','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','An Analytic Development of Circular Functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3239,'Dingle','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','The First Expansion Theorem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3238,'Coppin','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Concerning perfectly compact point sets',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3237,'Clark','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Geometry Lattices',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3236,'Bonner','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','On the Construction of Squared Rectangles',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3235,'Blevins','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Some Properties of an Integral in E1',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3234,'Becker','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Probabilities of Matches In Card Decks',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3233,'Baker','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1965','Coefficients of a Class of Symmetric Polynomials',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3232,'Steib','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3231,'Stambaugh','<NAME>','Osborn','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3230,'Shaw','<NAME>, Jr.','Wall','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3229,'Rogers','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3228,'Poole','<NAME>','Young','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3227,'Maddox','<NAME>','Yett','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3226,'MacKee','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3225,'Jackson','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3224,'Gray','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3223,'Freeman','<NAME>.','Gregory','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3222,'Fortson','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3221,'Fikes','<NAME>.','Gregory','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3220,'Dingle','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3219,'Demic','<NAME>','Innis','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3218,'Dean','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1965','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3217,'White','Allen','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Some Properties of Quadratic Non-Residues Which are not Primitive Roots',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3216,'Tolar','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Sequences of Permutations Obtained by Interchanges',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3215,'Stambaugh','John','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Concerning the Generating of Primitive Roots of a Prime Using Constant Exponentation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3214,'Nader','Walter','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','The Fitting of Planes in n Dimensions when all Coordinates are Affected with Error',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3213,'Johnson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','The Existence of a Solution and Green\'s Function for a Fourth Order Differential Equation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3212,'Jackson','Jimmy','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Simplex Approximation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3211,'Gray','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Radical Flow Equation with Non-Constant',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3210,'Fikes','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','SYCK: A System for Checking the SYNTAX of FORTRAN - 63 PROGRAMS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3209,'Williams','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Some Theorems Concerning Uncountable Point Sets',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3208,'Wilks','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1964','Some Algebraic Properties of Dependence Relations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3207,'Roberson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','The Algebraic Structure of a Class of Groups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3206,'Repass','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Every Interval has Length',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3205,'Reagh','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Property of the Mean Stieltje\'s Integral and an Application',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3204,'Nillsson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','On Extensors and the Navier-Stokes Equation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3203,'Lippincott','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Exponent Structure of Selected Congruence Relations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3202,'Kendall','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Consideration of the Euler 0-Function',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3201,'Hinrichsen','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Characterization of Hilbert Space',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3200,'Hagan','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Numerical Integration Near Singularity in the Restricted Three-Body Problem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3199,'Fisher','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','An Algebraic and Topological Study of the Solution Space of the Matrix Equation System Y\' = A Y, Y(0) = 06o.',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3198,'Dyer','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Geometry of Rational Points',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3197,'Doerr','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Characterizations of Boolean Algebras',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3196,'Davis','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Concerning the Solutions of Certain Linear Differential Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3195,'Dale','<NAME>','Gregory','M.S.','1964','An Associative Model for Information Retrieval',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3194,'Croft','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Some Related Theorems Concerning Quasi-Continuous Simple Graphs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3193,'Conklin','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Some Theorems on the Mean Integral for Functions From the Real Numbers to the Real Numbers and From the Ordered Real Numbers Pairs to the Real Numbers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3192,'Chamgapne','<NAME>, Jr.','Kripke','M.S.','1964','On Finding Roots of Polynomials by Hook or by Crook',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3191,'Castroll','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Numerical Integration of Functions with Singularities',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3190,'Bridges','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Three-Dimensional Tic-Tac-Toe',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3189,'Bednar','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Absolute Valued Division Rings and Inner-Products',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3188,'Baj','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1964','Simultaneous Solution of Linear Matrix Equations with Square Matrix Coefficients',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3187,'Bailey','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Study of the Structure of a Module Over a Ring',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3186,'Wood','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','An Analytical Definition of Cirbular Functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3185,'Warren','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Development of the Concepts of an Ordered Pair, a Function, and Certain Recursive Definitions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3184,'Tanner','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Derivatives of Measures',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3183,'Souchek','Julianne','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Metric Space of Measurable Functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3182,'Shoemake','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Technique for Extracting Multiple Roots from Polynomial Equations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3181,'Newman','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Topological Aspects of nxn Matricies',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3180,'Muecke','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Topologies of Uniform Convergence',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3179,'Melugin','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','On the Identification of Controllable Linear Systems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3178,'Meicler','Marcel','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Comparative Study of Methods for Solving Polynomials with Complex Coeffiecients',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3177,'Launer','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Contributions to the Theory of Crossed Extensors',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3176,'Jordahl','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Study of Left Zero and Right Zero Semigroups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3175,'Fowler','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Iterative Methods for Approximating (N)1/n',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3174,'Cook','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','An Analytical Definition of Hyperbolic Functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3173,'Clark','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','Systems of Equations with Coefficients in a Commutative Ring',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3172,'Brooks','<NAME>, Jr.','M<NAME>','M.S.','1964','A Study of the General Ternary Operation Under Group-like Conditions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3171,'Secker','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1964','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3170,'Powers','<NAME>.','Wall','M.S.','1964','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3169,'Miller','<NAME>','Odell','M.S.','1964','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3168,'Manougian','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1964','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3167,'Kumin','<NAME>','M.S.','1964','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3166,'Childress','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1964','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3165,'Castroll','<NAME>','Krikpe','M.S.','1964','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3164,'Carlisle','<NAME>.','Weaver','M.S.','1964','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3163,'Bunten','<NAME>.','Weaver','M.S.','1964','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3162,'Secker','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','A Theorem on Upper Semicontinuous Simple Graphs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3161,'Miller','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Spacing of Information in Polynomial Regression',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3160,'Manougian','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Elliptic Orbit of Artificial Earth Satellites Under the Influence of Atmospheric Drag',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3159,'Kumin','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','The Enumeration of Trees by Height and Diameter',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3158,'Childress','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Two Properties of Upper Semi-Continuous Graphs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3157,'Carlisle','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','On Doubly Projected Subrings of the Form eRe',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3156,'Bunten','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Magic Squares: Brief Examination and History with a Development of Some Properties',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3155,'Beck','<NAME>','W. T. Guy, Jr.','M.S.','1963','Octal Arithmetic',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3154,'Alston','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Separation Axioms of Topological Spaces',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3153,'Scanlon','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Curve Length in a Metric Space',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3152,'Rine','<NAME>','W. T. Guy, Jr.','M.S.','1963','An Approach to Real and Complex Numbers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3151,'Meek','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Density Properties of Some Metric Spaces of Riemann-Integrable Functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3150,'Lopez','Frank','Edmondson','M.S.','1963','Solution of the Harmonics Generated by a Time-Varying Capacitance',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3149,'Lo','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Gaussian Elimination Using a Modified Complete Pivotal Strategy',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3148,'Leopold','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Some Properties of Iterated Simple Kernels',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3147,'Kaiser','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','An Expansion Formula for Xm - Ym, m Odd',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3146,'Hebert','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Topological Lattices',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3145,'Hanna','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Machine Computation of the Classical Projections of Descriptive Geometry',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3144,'Halliday','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','A Solution for a Characteristic Vector Problem and Two Related Problems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3143,'Fredericks','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Thermal Neutron Flux Distribution Due to a Plane Wave in a Unreflected Reactor Assembly',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3142,'Draper','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','A Matrix Representation of the Set of Relations on a Nonempty Set',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3141,'Copeland','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','On Condition Numbers for Matrices',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3140,'Baird','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','An Algebra of Modulo Five Arithmetic',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3139,'Vaughan','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Prediction of Range from Atmospheric Waveform Envelopes',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3138,'Saylor','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Some Properties of Product Measures and Regular Borel Measures',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3137,'Pratt','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Alec-A Hueristic Algebraic Identity Proving Program',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3136,'Morris','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','On the Invariance of Certain Integrals Under Parameter Transformation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3135,'Miller','Lafe','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','A Modern Approach to Beginning High-School Algebra',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3134,'McPherson','<NAME>','Curtis','M.S.','1963','Boolean Rings, Measure Rings, and Metric Spaces Associated with Measure Rings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3133,'Lacy','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Approximation of Continuous Functions by Polynomials',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3132,'Jarratt','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','The Divisible Structure of a Set of Polynomials',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3131,'Fox','<NAME>','Craig','M.S.','1963','On Surfaces and Two Parameter Extensors',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3130,'Farnsworth','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1963','Relationships Involving Bessel Functions Using Laplace Transforms',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3129,'Fanett','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Application of the Remes Algorithm to a Problem in Rational Approximation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3128,'Donn','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1963','Independence of Choice of Point-Set Sequence on Rayleigh Probability Density Function',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3127,'Bryant','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','A Study of Certain Multiplications on a Plane',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3126,'Brodie','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1963','On the Legendre Finite Integral Transform',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3125,'Bloyd','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','An Approach to the Definition of Real Exponents',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3124,'Bither','<NAME>, Jr.','Weaver','M.S.','1963','Semigroups that Contain Exactly Two Maximal Cyclic Subsemigroups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3123,'Beer','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Approximating the Variance of a Nonlinear Function Using a Truncated Taylor\'s Expansion',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3122,'Allday','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1963','Properties of a Linear Transformation on a Vector Space',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3121,'Scheiblich','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1963','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3120,'Ragsdale','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1963','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3119,'Plummer','<NAME>','Craig','M.S.','1963','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3118,'Miller','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1963','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3117,'Huffman','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1963','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3116,'Goodrich','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1963','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3115,'Dorroh','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1963','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3114,'Davis','<NAME>','Osborn','M.S.','1963','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3113,'Walker','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1962','A Contribution to the Solution of the Wave Equation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3112,'Scheiblich','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1962','Constant Coeffiecient Linear Difference Equations on a Finite Field',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3111,'Ragsdale','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1962','A Solution for a Characteristic Value Problem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3110,'Plummer','<NAME>, Jr.','<NAME>','M.S.','1962','Linear Extensor Equations for Vibrating Systems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3109,'Miller','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1962','A Transformational Analysis of Turkish Suprasegmentals',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3108,'Huffman','<NAME>','<NAME>y, Jr.','M.S.','1962','The Fractional Integral Transform',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3107,'Goodrich','<NAME>','<NAME>, Jr.','M.S.','1962','Numerical Solution of a Certain Nonlinear Partial Differential Equation in Three Dimensions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3106,'Bowman','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','1962','An Extension of Cammel\'s Formula',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3105,'Sorrells','<NAME>.','Lane','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3104,'Slaten','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3103,'Scully','<NAME>','Young','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3102,'Schramm','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3101,'Rhodes','<NAME>.','Ettlinger','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3100,'Price','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3099,'Nowotny','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3098,'Northcott','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3097,'McGee','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3096,'Malloy','Sister Mary of the Assumption','Wall','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3095,'Maher','<NAME>, Jr.','Lane','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3094,'Kite','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3093,'Kirk','<NAME>, Jr.','Curtis','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3092,'Jones','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3091,'Johnson','<NAME>','Yett','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3090,'Hunt','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3089,'Estes','<NAME>','Weaver','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3088,'Dodd','<NAME>','Curtis','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3087,'Davis','<NAME>','Curtis','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3086,'Cude','<NAME>','Curtis','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3085,'Cobb','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3084,'Buzbee','Billy','Gregory','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3083,'Brown','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3082,'Brady','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3081,'Berman','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3080,'Baker','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1962','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3079,'Symons','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3078,'Stephen','<NAME>','Young','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3077,'Smith','<NAME>','Weaver','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3076,'Smetzer','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3075,'Schawe','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3074,'Ryan','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3073,'Rogers','<NAME>)','Wall','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3072,'Robinson','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3071,'Ortiz-Aponte','Pedro, Jr.','Lane','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3070,'Nipp','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3069,'Morey','<NAME>','Craig','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3068,'Mitchell','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3067,'Minton','<NAME>, Jr.','Craig','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3066,'McPhail','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3065,'McNeill','<NAME>, IV','Wall','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3064,'Lo','<NAME>','Gregory','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3063,'Leonard','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3062,'Lay','<NAME>, Jr.','Guy','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3061,'Kowalik','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3060,'Jones','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3059,'Innis','<NAME>, Jr.','Greenwood','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3058,'Harrell','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3057,'Hampton','Mozelle','Greenwood','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3056,'Ellis','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3055,'Darwin','<NAME>','Craig','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3054,'Cash','<NAME>','Young','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3053,'Boessenroth','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3052,'Barthel','<NAME>','Weaver','M.S.','1961','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3051,'Tajiri','Razuo','Guy','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3050,'Stocks','<NAME>, Jr.','Greenwood','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3049,'Smith','<NAME>, Jr.','Lane','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3048,'Sahtout','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3047,'Roach','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3046,'Roach','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3045,'Pillow','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3044,'Perryman','<NAME>','Weaver','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3043,'ORear','<NAME>.','Curtis','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3042,'Norwood','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3041,'Miller','Sister <NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3040,'Lumpkin','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3039,'Hernandez','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3038,'Hensley','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3037,'Greathouse','<NAME>.','Curtis','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3036,'Gillentine','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3035,'Evans','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3034,'Cook','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3033,'Becker','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3032,'Bean','<NAME>','Craig','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3031,'Bailey','<NAME>','Gregory','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3030,'Baghdassarian','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3029,'Atchison','<NAME>.','Curtis','M.S.','1960','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3028,'Steger','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3027,'Simpson','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3026,'Sibley','<NAME>','Young','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3025,'Schellhase','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3024,'Samman','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3023,'Rader','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3022,'Proett','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3021,'Overton','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3020,'Matlock','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3019,'Marks','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3018,'Marett','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3017,'Long','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3016,'Jones','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3015,'Jaugen','Suparng','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3014,'Jaroszeweski','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3013,'Hudson','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3012,'Hu','Li-Hiva','Charnes','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3011,'Hollingsworth','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3010,'Hawkins','<NAME>.','Weaver','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3009,'Hashim','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3008,'Hamner','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3007,'Finnin','<NAME>.','Lane','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3006,'Fields','<NAME>.','Greenwood','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3005,'Dalrymple','Harris','Greenwood','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3004,'Cornette','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3003,'Archer','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3002,'Anthony','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3001,'Abell','Sister <NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1959','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3000,'Sullivan','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2999,'Sparkman','Sister <NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2998,'Rowley','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2997,'Rosada','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2996,'Romberg','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2995,'Rhodes','<NAME>.','Greenwood','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2994,'Price','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2993,'Pigeon','Bradley','Guy','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2992,'Nolle','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2991,'Myers','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2990,'Monger','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2989,'Koch','<NAME>.','Greenwood','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2988,'Inami','Tadao','Greenwood','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2987,'Haddad','<NAME>.','Ettlinger','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2986,'Fitzpatrick','Ben, Jr.','Ettlinger','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2985,'Falbo','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2984,'Ellis','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2983,'Drobnies','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2982,'Crump','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2981,'Cockrell','<NAME>., Jr.','Greenwood','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2980,'Calder','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2979,'Brown','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2978,'Broussard','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2977,'Baker','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1958','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2976,'Smyrl','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2975,'Nicholson','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2974,'Morton','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2973,'Kahlbau','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2972,'Hoffman','<NAME>.','Guy','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2971,'Hershfield','<NAME>, Jr.','Greenwood','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2970,'Foote','<NAME>.','Greenwood','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2969,'Falkner','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2968,'Danahy','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2967,'Coleman','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2966,'Cilley','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2965,'Brenizer','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2964,'Bohn','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1957','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2963,'Pandres','Dave','Guy','M.S.','1956','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2962,'Ling','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1956','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2961,'Kimes','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1956','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2960,'Helton','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1956','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2959,'Hayes','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1956','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2958,'Evans','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1956','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2957,'Deacon','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1956','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2956,'Craig','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1956','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2955,'Morton','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1955','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2954,'Lightsey','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1955','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2953,'Lewis','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1955','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2952,'Lee','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1955','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2951,'Erma','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1955','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2950,'Owen','<NAME>.','Ettlinger','M.S.','1954','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2949,'Merzbach','<NAME>','Lubben','M.S.','1954','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2948,'Jones','<NAME>','Guy','M.S.','1954','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2947,'Heller','Robert','Lane','M.S.','1954','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2946,'Handy','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1954','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2945,'Schockley','<NAME>.','Lane','M.S.','1953','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2944,'Kelisky','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1953','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2943,'Dibrell','Raymond Allan','Ettlinger','M.S.','1953','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2942,'Cole','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1953','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2941,'Bales','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1953','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2940,'Penn','<NAME>','Titt','M.S.','1952','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2939,'Nicol','<NAME>','Vandiver','M.S.','1952','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2938,'Kainen','<NAME>','Titt','M.S.','1952','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2937,'Hildebrand','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1952','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2936,'Burton','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1952','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2935,'Shur','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1951','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2934,'Rowell','<NAME>','Titt','M.S.','1951','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2933,'Murray','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1951','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2932,'Morris','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1951','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2931,'Minchew','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1951','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2930,'Mifsud','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1951','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2929,'McReynolds','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1951','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2928,'Garcia','<NAME>','Haskell','M.S.','1951','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2927,'Beltron','Henry','Batchelor','M.S.','1951','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2926,'Smith','<NAME>','Titt','M.S.','1950','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2925,'Roche','<NAME>.','Greenwood','M.S.','1950','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2924,'Resley','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1950','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2923,'Miller','<NAME>','Titt','M.S.','1950','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2922,'Jackson','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1950','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2921,'Haltom','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1950','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2920,'Fitzpatrick','<NAME>.','Greenwood','M.S.','1950','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2919,'Davis','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1950','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2918,'Blankenship','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1950','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2917,'Hillyer','Ruth','Ettlinger','M.S.','1949','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2916,'Glasgow','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1949','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2915,'Gallie','<NAME>','Haskell','M.S.','1949','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2914,'Evans','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1949','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2913,'Eason','<NAME> (Wier)','Titt','M.S.','1949','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2912,'Carnahan','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1949','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2911,'Stephenson','<NAME>','Lane','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2910,'Linday','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2909,'Lenz','<NAME>','Haskell','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2908,'Johnson','<NAME> (Hogan)','Ettlinger','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2907,'Guy','<NAME>, Jr.','Craig','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2906,'Guthrie','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2905,'Fitzpatrick','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2904,'Danforth','<NAME>.','Greenwood','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2903,'Clarkson','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2902,'Clark','<NAME>','Edmondson','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2901,'Carter','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2900,'Al-Bassam','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1948','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2899,'Summers','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1947','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2898,'Long','<NAME>','Titt','M.S.','1947','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2897,'Jones','<NAME>','Wall','M.S.','1947','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2896,'Jerkofsky','James','Armendariz','M.S.','1947','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2895,'Heyl','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1947','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2894,'Pearson','<NAME>','Vandiver','M.S.','1946','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2893,'McLachlan','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1946','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2892,'Jones','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1946','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2891,'Faircloth','<NAME>.','Titt','M.S.','1946','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2890,'Barrett','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1946','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2889,'Hurt','<NAME>','Craig','M.S.','1945','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2888,'Drandell','Milton','Beckenbach','M.S.','1945','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2887,'Sevedge','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1944','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2886,'Rees','<NAME>','Beckenbach','M.S.','1943','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2885,'Ettlinger','<NAME>','Moore','M.S.','1943','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2884,'Popham','Jewel','Batchelor','M.S.','1942','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2883,'Overton','<NAME>','Greenwood','M.S.','1942','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2882,'Osborn','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1942','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2881,'Gerland','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1942','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2880,'Dushek','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1942','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2879,'Caldwell','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1942','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2878,'Moore','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1941','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2877,'May','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1941','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2876,'Conner','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1941','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2875,'Bailey','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1941','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2874,'Seymour','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1940','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2873,'Lewis','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1940','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2872,'Hulse','Virginia','Batchelor','M.S.','1940','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2871,'Horton','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1940','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2870,'Adams','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1940','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2869,'Smith','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1939','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2868,'Love','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1939','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2867,'Cocanougher','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1939','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2866,'Anderson','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1939','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2865,'Martin','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1938','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2864,'Hughes','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1938','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2863,'Horak','<NAME>','Keller','M.S.','1938','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2862,'Hammerdiener','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1938','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2861,'Germany','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1938','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2860,'Connell','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1938','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2859,'Buchanan','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1938','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2858,'Nance','Beverly','Keller','M.S.','1937','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2857,'Morrison','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1937','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2856,'Jones','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1937','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2855,'Gilley','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1937','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2854,'Eiker','Edith','Dodd','M.S.','1937','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2853,'Dickard','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1937','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2852,'Samuel','Brice','Ettlinger','M.S.','1937','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2851,'Bramblett','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1937','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2850,'Avery','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1937','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2849,'Pfeiffer','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1936','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2848,'Mayhugh','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1936','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2847,'<NAME>','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1936','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2846,'Barry','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1936','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2845,'Stulken','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1935','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2844,'Schubert','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1935','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2843,'Fisk','Margaret','Dodd','M.S.','1935','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2842,'Fisk','Kathryn','Dodd','M.S.','1935','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2841,'Draeger','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1935','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2840,'Ramirez','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1934','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2839,'Leach','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1934','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2838,'Larimer','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1934','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2837,'Bright','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1934','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2836,'Alcorn','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1934','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2835,'Sanchez-Diaz','Raphael','Vandiver','M.S.','1933','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2834,'Notley','Llewellyn','Dodd','M.S.','1933','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2833,'Moths','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1933','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2832,'Hamilton','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1933','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2831,'Edwards','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1933','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2830,'Dickey','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1933','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2829,'Campos','Innocente Pascual','Dodd','M.S.','1933','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2828,'Biesele','<NAME>','Vandiver','M.S.','1933','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2827,'Beck','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1933','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2826,'Bagby','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1933','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2825,'Shankle','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2824,'Schiffers','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2823,'Reed','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2822,'Pinson','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2821,'Grissom','Bee','Dodd','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2820,'Grant','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2819,'Farek','Annie','Dodd','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2818,'Clark','Sybil','Batchelor','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2817,'Chenigo','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2816,'Burkholder','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2815,'Blackford','<NAME>','Porter','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2814,'Black','<NAME>.','Porter','M.S.','1932','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2813,'Svenson','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1931','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2812,'Sisk','<NAME>','Dollard','M.S.','1931','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2811,'Seidel','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1931','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2810,'Ross','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1931','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2809,'Oliphant','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1931','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2808,'Martin','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1931','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2807,'Hulse','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1931','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2806,'Heidman','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1931','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2805,'Dennise','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1931','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2804,'Boston','Mary','Ettlinger','M.S.','1931','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2803,'Temple','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1930','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2802,'Houssels','Della','Batchelor','M.S.','1930','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2801,'Chaney','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1930','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2800,'Burrows','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1930','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2799,'Breese','Anne','Ettlinger','M.S.','1930','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2798,'Atkin','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1930','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2797,'Abernathy','<NAME>','Vandiver','M.S.','1930','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2796,'Phenix','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1929','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2795,'Murray','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1929','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2794,'Jones','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1929','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2793,'Hicks','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1929','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2792,'Hargrave','Weldon','Batchelor','M.S.','1929','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2791,'Feenberg','Eugene','Ettlinger','M.S.','1929','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2790,'Edds','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1929','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2789,'Clack','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1929','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2788,'Benson','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1929','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2787,'Baker','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1929','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2786,'Badger','<NAME>','Vandiver','M.S.','1929','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2785,'Sturdivant','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1927','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2784,'Sanders','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1927','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2783,'Reid','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1927','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2782,'Nelson','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1927','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2781,'Moursund','<NAME>.','Dodd','M.S.','1927','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2780,'McCormick','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1927','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2779,'Dorroh','<NAME>','Moore','M.S.','1927','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2778,'Rees','<NAME>.','Ettlinger','M.S.','1926','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2777,'Oldham','<NAME>','Batchelor','M.S.','1926','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2776,'Newton','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1926','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2775,'Nelson','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1926','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2774,'Mullings','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1926','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2773,'Kennedy','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1926','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2772,'Rees','<NAME>.','Bennett','M.S.','1925','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2771,'McClelland','<NAME>','Bennett','M.S.','1925','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2770,'Jones','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1925','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2769,'Binney','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1925','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2768,'Duncan','<NAME>','Bennett','M.S.','1924','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2767,'Dice','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1924','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2766,'Cooper','<NAME>','Bennett','M.S.','1924','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2765,'Campbell','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1924','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2764,'May','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1923','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2763,'Grover','<NAME>','','M.S.','1923','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2762,'Smith','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1922','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2761,'Robinson','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1922','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2760,'Cowling','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1922','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2759,'Henry','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1920','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2758,'Henry','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1920','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2757,'Burnam','<NAME>','Dodd','M.S.','1920','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2756,'Porter','Hugh','Porter','M.S.','1918','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2755,'McCarty','<NAME>','Benedict','M.S.','1918','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2754,'Ofield','<NAME>','Ettlinger','M.S.','1916','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2753,'Sewell','<NAME>','Porter (?)','M.S.','1906','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2752,'Brown','<NAME>.','Porter','M.S.','1905','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2751,'Duval','<NAME>','Benedict','M.S.','1902','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2750,'Smith','<NAME>.','Halsted','M.S.','1901','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2749,'Moore','<NAME>','Halsted','M.S.','1901','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2748,'Lewis','<NAME>','Halsted','M.S.','1897','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2747,'Pierce','<NAME>','Halsted','M.S.','1894','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2746,'Dickson','<NAME>','Halsted','M.S.','1894','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2745,'Benedict','<NAME>','Halsted','M.S.','1893','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(2744,'Nagle','<NAME> (?)','M.S.','1892','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(3859,'Chesebro','Eric','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Undetected Boundary Slopes and Roots of unity for the character variety of a Three-Manifold','Evans Instructor, Rice University','',''),
(3860,'Derby-Talbot','Ryan','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Heegaard Splittings of Toroidal Three-Manifolds','Assistant Professor, American University in Cairo, Egypt','',''),
(3861,'Diaz','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Renormalization and Central Limit Theorem for Critical Dynamical Systems with external weak random noise','McMaster University','Precision Health Economics, Austin TX',''),
(3862,'Haynes','Alan','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Tools and Techniques in Diophantine Approximation','Lecturer, Mathematics, The University of Texas at Austin','',''),
(3863,'Jedlicka','David','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','On the suitability of power functions as S-boxes for symmetric cryptosystems','Research Mathematician, United States Department of Defense','',''),
(3864,'Kaplan','Jennifer','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Factors in statistics learning: Developing a dispositional attribution model to describe the development of statistical proficiency','Assistant Professor, Michigan State University','',''),
(3865,'<NAME>','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Geometry and Algebra of Hyperbolic 3-Manifolds','Tamarkin Assistant Professor and National Science Foundation Post-Doctoral Fellow, Brown University','',''),
(3866,'Macasieb','Melissa','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Derived Arithmetic Fuchsian Groups of Genus Two','Post-Doctoral Fellow, University of British Columbia','',''),
(3867,'McKinnie','Kelly','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Non-cyclic and Indecomposable P-algebras',': National Science Foundation Mathematical Sciences Post-Doctoral Fellowship, Emory University/Rice University','',''),
(3868,'McReynolds','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Cusps of Arithmetic Orbifolds','Ol<NAME>-John Todd Instructor, California Institute of Technology','',''),
(3869,'Nolen','James','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Reaction-Diffusion Fronts in Inhomogeneous Media','National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Scholar, Stanford University','',''),
(3870,'Pekker','Alexander','Jeff Vaaler','Ph. D','2006','Diophantine approximation in projective space and the absolute Siegel’s Lemma','Actuarial Analyst, Mercer Human Resource Consulting, Los Angeles, California','',''),
(3871,'Rand','Betseygail','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Pattern-Equivariant Chomology of Tiling Spaces with Rotations','Assistant Professor, Texas Lutheran University','',''),
(3872,'Scholl','Matthew','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Local Elliptic Boundary Value Problems for the Dirac Operator','Lecturer, The University of Texas at Austin','',''),
(3873,'Zarzar','Marcos','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Error-Correcting Codes on low Neron-Severi rank surfaces','Assistant Professor, Emory and Henry College, Emory, Virginia','',''),
(3874,'Fokam','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2006','Forced Vibrations via Nash-Moser Iterations','Post-Doctoral Fellow, McMaster University, Ontario, Canada','',''),
(4212,'Li','Jiuyuan','<NAME>','M. S.','2006','Walrasian equilibrium in exchange economy','','',''),
(4211,'Kwong','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Value at risk estimation using markov chain monte carlo',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4210,'Heggen','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','A mathematical investigation into the division of the octave to produce musical scales',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4209,'Erdin','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Berry\'s phase',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4208,'Talbot','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Using computers in the study of polynomials and their galois groups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4207,'Shi','Bo','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Application of the structural equation modeling method',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4206,'Nanda','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Defined benefit pension valuations demystified',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4205,'Mathew','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Cluster analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4204,'Malta','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Effect size estimates for independent-groups repeated measures designs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4203,'Li','Xin','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Assessing publication bias in meta-analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4202,'Lee','Miran','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','A practical study of the propertional odds assumption violation for categorical data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4201,'Hong','Myounghi','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Evaluating the sequential defect removal sampling',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4200,'Fisk','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Actuarial calculations in reinsurance commutations',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4199,'Fisher','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','An analysis of the finite element method using B-spline basis functions',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4198,'Dor','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','The Sarbanes-Oxley act',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4197,'Domingue','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Understanding the mathematics gender gap: strategies for examining the performance defferential in achievement',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4196,'Cisneros','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Making business better: frequency and severity in spectrum holdings',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4195,'Brewer','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Pension consulting and the actuarial valuation process',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4194,'Gallaway','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Dynamic forecasting model for the prediction of NBA game scores',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4193,'Zhu','Xianjun','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Effect of sample design on demographic survey data analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4192,'Zhang','Wei','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Education and psychological distress among the oldest old people in China',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4191,'Wu','Wanfu','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','2005','Missing data and mulivariate regression analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4190,'Willett','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','The smith conjecture',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4189,'Wiley','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Forensic economic analysis of personal injury case study',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4188,'Copeland','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','A brief love affair with numbers: the mathematician Ramanujan',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4187,'Bonaparte','Yosef','','M.S.','2005','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4186,'Yarbrough','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Boltzmann equation for an excited dissipative gas',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4185,'Xiao','Ni','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Bayesian analysis with MCMC simulation for insurance and energy markets',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4184,'Wiley','Elizabeth','Daniel','M.S.','2005','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4183,'Whitehead','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','An overview of the teaching and learning of the function concept: past and present',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4182,'Thornley','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','FAS 106 retiree medical report: a case study of oceanic airlines',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4181,'Teixeira','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','2005','Investment in times of inflation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4180,'Roberts','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Effective spam filtering using bayesian statistics and artificial intelligence',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4179,'Ristov','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Tiling dynamical systems: ergodic properties of self-similar tilings and pure discrete spectrum',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4178,'Pompa','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','The contaminated exponential dispersion loss model',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4177,'Nichols','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Review and comparison of analysis of covariance and gain score analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4176,'Miao','Chuan','','M.S.','2005','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4175,'Li','Xiyui','','M.S.','2005','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4174,'Jones','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Analysis of a syphilis outbreak through the lens of percolation theory',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4173,'Jeffreys','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Bayesian analysis of RR Lyrae distances and kinematics',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4172,'Hobbs','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Related rates across the curriculum',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4171,'Fulton','Lawrence','','M.S.','2005','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4170,'Fong','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Highlights of FAS 106 & age 65 per capita claims cost',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4169,'Counts','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Actuarial pension model reform',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4168,'Chen','Paula','','M.S.','2005','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4167,'Brown','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Preparing students for optimization; a vertically aligned approach',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4166,'Brainin','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Improving mathematics teaching and learning in the university: lessons from mathematics education and educational anthropology',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4165,'Allison','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2005','Improving minority achievement in ninth-grade algebra: insights from current research in social psychology and successful intervention programs',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4164,'Narayanan','Vivek','<NAME>','M.S.','2004','Reduction, algebras and moments',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4163,'Miao','Chuan','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4162,'Li','Xiuyu','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4161,'Heggen','Melissa','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4160,'Fulton','Lawrence','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4159,'Chen','<NAME>','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4158,'Yu','Wei','<NAME>','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4157,'Rodriguez','Rolando','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4156,'Portillo-Bobadilla','<NAME>.','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4155,'Offenhauser','Sheri','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4154,'Lehr','<NAME>','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4153,'Keng','Leslie','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4152,'Fukshansky','<NAME>','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4151,'Condon','<NAME>','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4150,'Cao','Jia','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4149,'Baker','<NAME>','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4148,'Westmoreland','Shawn','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4147,'<NAME>','Heather','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4146,'Tanaka','Kristen','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4145,'Seckiner','Sive','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4144,'Rodriguez','<NAME>','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4143,'Raei','Faezeh','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4142,'Offenhauser','<NAME>','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4141,'Li','Yunfeng','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4140,'Lee','Changsub','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4139,'Keng','Leslie','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4138,'Jia','Mei','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4137,'Cao','Jia','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4136,'Bowles','Amie','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4135,'<NAME>','Aby','','M.S.','2004','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4134,'Yang','Xiaoqing','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','A survival analysis on a long-term chemotherapy colon cancer clinical data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4133,'Wilson','Dennis','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4132,'Wegner','Melanie','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4131,'Wang','Shubing','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Numerical approximation of C1,1-curves and their thickness',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4130,'Wang','Quian','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4129,'Rhiati','Nabil','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Finite difference methods in option pricing',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4128,'Kshatriya','Amit','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4127,'Kim','Hyunchung','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4126,'Kantor','Gregory','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4125,'Jian','Shuling','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Statistical analysis of determinants of earnings in the life insurance industry',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4124,'Jha','Prabhat','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Basic iterative methods for solving linear systems',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4123,'Ghanem','Abi','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4122,'Duvall','Jason','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4121,'Ditanna','Anthony','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4120,'Acevedo','Carlos','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4119,'Whitehead','Jay','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4118,'Shu','Tao','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Order flow and stochastic clock of asset returns',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4117,'Renehan','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Examining steady state time courses of glucose and insulin in type I diabetics',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4116,'McCullough','Thomas','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4115,'Lucey','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Good-deal pricing in incomplete markets',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4114,'Li','Shihong','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Multiple imputation for multivariate insurance data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4113,'Leonardi','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Contact geometry and topology of tangent circle bundles',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4112,'Jian','Shuling','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4111,'Howe','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','A bayesian approach to galactic distance estimation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4110,'Cheng','Xuan','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','The cox regression model with time-varying covariates: an application of survival analysis on the standford heart transplant data using SAS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4109,'Wilson','Dennis','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Binary quadratic forms',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4108,'Wegner','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Discrimination- what is your contribution? An introduction to non-discrimination testing os defined contribution plans (not including 401(K)/(M) PLANS)',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4107,'Wang','Qian','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Statistical analysis of changes and determinants of asset allocation in the life insurance industry',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4106,'Shu','Tao','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4105,'Li','Shihong','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4104,'Kshatriya','<NAME>.','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','2003','Combinatorial views of the Kakeya-Besicovitch problem',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4103,'Kim','Hyunchung','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4102,'Kantor','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','All\'s fair in love and retirement: an in-depth look at QDROS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4101,'Jian','Shuling','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4100,'Howe','Andromache','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4099,'Duvall','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Two banach space therorems of W.T. Gowers',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4098,'Ditanna','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Pricing catastophic losses through the use of simulation software',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4097,'Cheng','Xuan','','M.S.','2003','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4096,'Acevedo','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','A statistical model to estimate the efficiency of the diagnosis and treatment of bipolar disorder',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4095,'<NAME>','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2003','Performing benefit calculations: steps and examples',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4094,'Gabbard','<NAME>','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','2002','Consequences of the use of size-classes in demographic models',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4093,'Batchelor','<NAME>.','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','2002','Consequences of insluding demographic heterogeneity in population',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4092,'Petrov','Nikola','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Tree structures and Nonlinear approximation with wavelets',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4091,'Marsack','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Note onset detection: a fourier transform method and a wavelet',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4090,'Jwa','Sangil','<NAME> & Rafael de la Llave','M.S.','2002','On risk-sensitive criteria of a discrete time controlled markov',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4089,'Emberton','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','A tropical approach to biochemistry',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4088,'Zhang','Yuan','','M.S.','2002','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4087,'Wu','Ting-Ting','','M.S.','2002','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4086,'Wang','Shu-Chuan','','M.S.','2002','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4085,'Shin','Seon-Hi','','M.S.','2002','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4084,'Obas','Sanchez','','M.S.','2002','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4083,'Miller','<NAME>','','M.S.','2002','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4082,'Lai','Judy','','M.S.','2002','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4081,'Cai','Guowen','','M.S.','2002','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4080,'Zhou','Qiaoyu','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Alternative models in the analysis of variance',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4079,'Vigil','Rafael','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','2002','A statistical analysis of a study in exercise physiology using�',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4078,'Schneider','Jodi','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Comparing three PDE models of traffic flow',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4077,'Schirmers','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','The development of an insurance premium for a house',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4076,'Ri','Yun','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Valuation of pension plans',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4075,'Povich','Timothy','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Hilbert space methods for one dimensional linear thermoelasticity',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4074,'Lendvai','Gabor','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Estimators of the genetic correlation: a comparative analysis',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4073,'Kuang','Jinghua','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Actuarial funding valuation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4072,'Kang','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Verification of the performance difference between mutual and stock',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4071,'Jwa','Sangil','','M.S.','2002','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4070,'Hau','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Critical illness insurance--------a new star in the US insurance',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4069,'Firoozi','Fathali','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','An essay on stochasic integration and random measures',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4068,'Chang','Cindy','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Defining density of disc packings in the hyperbolic plane',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4067,'Behn','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','On the steady hydrodynamic migration of ridig, knotted filaments',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4066,'Armon','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2002','Variable universal life insurance: Testing VUL illustration software',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4065,'Zhang','Wei','<NAME>','M.S.','2001','Statistical Analysis of Internet-Related Business Patents',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4064,'Miller','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2001','What You Don\'t Know Can Hurt You: Estimating IBNR Reserves',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4063,'Korig','V.','','M.S.','2001','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4062,'Kendrick','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2001','Multiple Comparison Methods',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4061,'Kaplan','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2001','Regression and Cluster Analysis of Demographic Data: A Study of Clustering Techniques Used in Creating Campus Comparison Groups',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4060,'Zhu','Xiqin','<NAME>','M.S.','2001','The Highest-Order Cross-Over Desing',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4059,'Yoon','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2001','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4058,'Rengarajan','Tara','<NAME>','M.S.','2001','Numerical Investigations of a Model for Open Market Opterations: Stability of Equilibrium Prices',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4057,'Lee','Changsub','<NAME>','M.S.','2001','Bayesian Parameter Estimation of Klein Model-I Using Markov Chain Monte Carlo Method',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4056,'Jeon','Seungwon','<NAME>','M.S.','2001','Hierarchical Market Structure Analysis Using Bayesian Inference',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4055,'Carey','Varis','<NAME>','M.S.','2001','A Tetrahedral Adaptive Refinement Finite Element Scheme',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4054,'Teszler','Natali','<NAME>','M.S.','2000','Using Principal Components',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4053,'Devaul','Elizabeth','<NAME>','M.S.','2000','Waiting for Godot-examples of statistical modeling of the elevators of RLM',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4052,'Ritter','<NAME>','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4051,'Pan','Feng','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4050,'Murphy','<NAME>','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4049,'Merino','<NAME>','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4048,'Mariasingham','Lavanya','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4047,'Lalla','Allison','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4046,'Kim','Dongseok','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4045,'Higosaki','Ai','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4044,'Gambrell','Bruce','','M.S.','1998','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4213,'Li','Zhihua','<NAME> & <NAME>','M.S.','2006','Statistical analysis of the proteomic data to identify the ribosome-binding factors',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4214,'','','','M.S.','','','','',''),
(4215,'Mercer','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','The tits cone',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4216,'Wang','Xiaobin','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Short-term load forecasting for industrial customers using time series methods',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4217,'Chen','Xin','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','The Magnitude of Agenda Setting Effects: A Meta-analysis of Pearson\'s Correlation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4218,'Mao','Rui','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Statistical Methods for Pivot Selection of Distance-based Indexing',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4219,'Woo','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Statistical Modeling for Incomplete Repeated Measures Data',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4220,'Xia','Jun','<NAME>','M.S.','2006','Pricing American Call Options Using Simulation',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4221,'Deblois','Jason','<NAME>','Ph. D','2007','Totally Geodesic Surfaces in Hyperbolic 3-Manifolds','Research Assistant Professor/NSF Postdoc','University of Illinois at Chicago',''),
(4338,'Achath','Sudhakar','Cheney','M. A.','1998','Applications of the Fourier Transform','','Amrita School of Business, Coimbatore, India',''),
(4223,'Gagliardo','Michael','<NAME>','Ph. D','2007','The Higher Flows of Harmonic Maps','Assistant Professor','Jacksonville University',''),
(4224,'Kwon','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2007','Strong Trace for Degenerate Parabolic-Hyperbolic Equations and Applications','Research Associate','University of Maryland at College Park',''),
(4225,'<NAME>','Mario','<NAME>','Ph. D','2007','A Three-Dimensional Finite Element Method and Multigrid Solver for a Darcy-Stokes System and Applications to Vuggy Porous Media','State University of New York at Buffalo','',''),
(4234,'Ghosh','Rohit','<NAME>','Ph. D','2007','Incompleteness of the Glalietti-Ughi Arc','Quantitative Risk Control, UBS, New York, NY','',''),
(4228,'Cozzi','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2007','Incompressible Fluids with Vorticity in Besov Spaces','Postdoctoral Associate, Carnegie Mellon University','',''),
(4229,'Carreon','Fernando','<NAME>','Ph. D','2007','Singular Limits of Reaction Diffusion Equations of KPP type in an infinite Cylinder','Visiting Professor, Arizona State University','',''),
(4230,'Hitt','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2007','Genus 2 Curves in pairing-based Cryptography and the minimal embedding field','Postdoctoral Researcher, University College Dublin','21st Century Technologies, Austin',''),
(4231,'Samuels','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2007','Auxiliary Polynomials and Height Functions','Max Planck','Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver',''),
(4232,'<NAME>-Morris','Jeremy','<NAME>','Ph. D','2007','Constructions on Open Book Decompositions','Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Quebec at Montreal','',''),
(4233,'Moreira','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2007','Least Supersolution Approach to regularizing Elliptic Free Boundary Problems','Visiting Assistant Professor, University of Iowa','',''),
(4236,'Chan','<NAME>','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','The De Giorgi\'s Method as Applied to the Regularity Theory of Incompressible Navier Stokes equations','University of Minnesota','',''),
(4237,'Czubak','Magdalena','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','Well-Posedness for the Space-Time Monopole Equation and Ward Wave Map','University of Toronto','',''),
(4238,'Garza','John','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','The Height in Terms of the Normalizer of a Stabilizer','Kansas State University','',''),
(4239,'Hammond','John','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','Regular Realizations of P-Groups','University of Texas at Austin','',''),
(4240,'Klonoff','Kevin','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','An Index Theorem in Differential K-Theory','Constellation Energy','',''),
(4241,'Luxton','Mark','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','The Log Canonical Compactification of the Moduli of Six Lines in P^2','','',''),
(4242,'Young','Andrea','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','Modified Ricci Flow on a Principal Bundle','University of Arizona','',''),
(4243,'Alonso','Ricardo','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','The Boltzmann Equation: Sharp Povzner Inequalities applied to regularity theory','Visiting Professor, Brown University','',''),
(4248,'Anthropelos','Michail','<NAME>','','2008','Agents\' Agreement and Partial Equilibrium pricing in Incomplete Markets','Athens, Greece','',''),
(4245,'Kahle','Alexander','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','Superconnections and Index Theory','Goettingen University, Germany','',''),
(4246,'Mallmann','Katja','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','The Discriminant Algebra in Cohomology','S D & M Software, Munich, Germany','',''),
(4247,'Stirling','Spencer','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','Abelian Chern-Simons Theory with Toral Gauge Group, Modular Tensor Categories, and Group Categories','Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Utah','',''),
(4249,'Zhou','Ti','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','Essays on Pricing and Portfolio Choice in Incomplete Markets','','',''),
(4250,'Anthropelos','Michail','<NAME>','Ph. D','2008','Agents\' Agreement and Partial Equilibrium Pricing in Incomplete Markets','Athens, Greece','',''),
(4251,'Callahan','Jason','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','The Arithmetic and Geometry of Two-Generator Kleinian Groups','St. Edward\'s University','',''),
(4252,'Callaja','Renato','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Existence and persistence of invariant objects in dynamical systems and mathematics physics','McGill University','',''),
(4253,'Carneiro','Emanuel','<NAME> and <NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Extremality, Symmetry and Regularity Issues in Harmonic Analysis','Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University','',''),
(4254,'Charters','Philippa','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Generalizing Binary Quadratic Residue Codes to higher power Residues over larger fields','Federal Government','',''),
(4255,'Ditanna','Anthony','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','The Optimal Control of a Levy Process','Bloomberg L.P.','',''),
(4256,'Ortiz','Michael','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Differential Equivariant K-theory','Sul Ross State University','',''),
(4257,'Salerno','Adriana','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Hypergeometric Functions in Arithmetic Geometry','Bates College','',''),
(4258,'Schwab','Russell','<NAME>/<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Random and Periodic Homogenization for some Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations','Carnegie Mellon University','',''),
(4259,'Swenson','Michelle','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Phylogenetic Supertree Methods','University of Texas at Austin','',''),
(4260,'Chang','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','AN OVERVIEW OF THE PENSION PROTECTION ACT OF 2006',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4261,'Chuang','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','DEVELOPMENT OF THE AUTOMATED PANJER PRINTER',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4262,'Kim','Moses','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','THE COMPETING RISKS MODEL: AN OVERVIEW AND ANALYSIS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4263,'Martinez','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','THE TEXAS DISALLOWED EXPENSE REPORT',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4264,'Neely','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','LOGISTIC REGRESSION',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4265,'Riviello','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','ESTIMATING AND DETECTING AUTOCORRELATION IN THE CASE OF TWO-PHASE',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4266,'Roberts','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','THE ANALOG OF THE AHARONOV BOHM EFFECT IN A ROTATING BOSE EINSTEIN',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4267,'Christian','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','COMPARISON OF FIVE MULTIVARIATE STATISTICAL METHODS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4268,'Li','Jinzheng','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','LOGISTIC REGRESSION AND ITS APPLICATION TO E-BUSINESS DATA',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4269,'Lu','Zhaohui','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','MICROARRAY ANALYSIS OF GENE EXPRESSION IN DBA/2J MOUSE MODEL OF GLAU',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4270,'Mcclain','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','STATISTICAL MECHANICS OF STATIC GRANULAR MATERIALS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4271,'Younger','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','OF FINDING ELEMENTS OF LARGE ORDER IN FINITE FIELDS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4272,'Liu','Hui','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','BAYESIAN INFERENCE FOR COUNT DATA WITH EXCESS ZEROS IN SOCIAL SCIENC',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4273,'Yao','Jianchao','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF THE REPLICATED MICROARRAY DATA',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4274,'Zhang','Zhenyu','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','USING STRUCTURAL EQUATIONS TO IDENTIFY DETERMINANTS OF EVOLUTIONARY',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4275,'Thron','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','STUDY AND IMPLICATIONS OF MOMENT INEQUALITIES AND HIGH-ENERGY TAILS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4276,'Ge','Jun','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','A GENERAL LINEAR MIXED MODEL FOR BACTERIAL PHAGE MU TRANSPOSITION',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4277,'Wu','Ke','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','STEPWISE REGRESSION METHODS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4278,'Xu','Da','<NAME>','M.S.','2007','REGRESSION ANALYSIS OF THE LINEAR SIMULTANEOUS-EQUATIONS MODEL WITH',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4279,'Anderson','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','A CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN RICCI SOLITONS AND EINSTEIN MANIFOLDS VIA',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4280,'Bradfield','<NAME>.','PHILIP U TREISMAN','M.S.','2008','REVISED STUDY ON ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS AND THE MATHEMATICS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4281,'<NAME>','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','CATASTROPHE MODELING',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4282,'Duran','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','AN OPTIMAL STOPPING PROBLEM IN BROWNIAN MOTION',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4283,'Havens','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','DETERMINING THEHEALTH OF THE INSURANCE COMPANY: CALCULATING LOSS/LA',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4284,'Hendricks','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','EXOTIC SPHERES',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4285,'Ivanov','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','EFFICIENT ATTACK AGAINST THE ALGEBRAIC SURFACE PUBLIC-KEY CRYPTOSYST',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4286,'Kujovic','Michal','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','HEDGING FIXED INDEX ANNUITIES AT AN INSURANCE COMPANY',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4287,'<NAME>','<NAME>.','ROBERT E GOMPF','M.S.','2008','THE GEOGRAPHY OF SIMPLY-CONNECTED MINIMAL SYMPLECTIC FOUR-MANIFOLDS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4288,'Christian','<NAME>','CHANDLER W STOLP','M.S.','2008','MULTIPLE IMPUTATION OF BREAST CANCER RISK DATA',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4289,'Li','Xinan','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','FINANCIAL LIBERALIZATION AND THE DOMESTIC STOCK MARKET: THE CASE OF',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4290,'Malaka','<NAME>.','THOMAS W SAGER','M.S.','2008','APPLICATION OF FIXED AND RANDOM EFFECTS MODEL ON PANEL DATA',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4291,'Rao','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','THE EFFECT OF EDUCATION LEVEL AND INCOME ON DIABETES IN THE U.S.',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4292,'Becerra','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2008','KNOT THEORY, EULER ANGLES, AND THEIR APPLICATION TO DNA STRUCTURES',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4293,'Fails','<NAME>.','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2008','METHODS OF FINDING ROOTS OF HIGHER ORDER POLYNOMIALS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4294,'Lopez','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2008','WAVELETS AND CAPTCHAS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4295,'Peterson','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2008','PROBABILITY THEORY: A REVIEW OF THE MATHEMATICS OF BLACKJACK',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4296,'Richard','<NAME>','','M.S.','2008','REPORT',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4297,'Russell','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2008','AN OVERVIEW OF CONSTRAINED OPTIMIZATION',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4298,'Stein','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2008','USING PARAMETRIC EQUATIONS TO ANALYZE PATHWAYS OF MOTIONS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4299,'Swanson','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2008','INVESTIGATIONS OF CONTINUED FRACTION EXPANSIONS AND THE APPROVIMATIO',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4300,'Sweet','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','VOLROVER AND LBIE',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4301,'Watson','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2008','CONNECTING THE DEFINITIONS OF THE CONIC SECTIONS BY USING DANDELIN',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4302,'Welch','Julie','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2008','APPLICATIONS OFMATHEMATICS IN VOTING POWER',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4303,'Brown','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','PERCOLATION THEORY APPLIED TO MODELING EPIDEMICS IN MODULAR NETWORKS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4304,'Ma','Junsheng','<NAME>','M.S.','2008','LONGEVITY RISK AND INSURANCE DEMAND',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4305,'Hernandez','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','ON THE CURRENT STATE OF COLLEGE MATHEMATICS PLACEMENT IN THE US',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4306,'Jin','Xiaoli','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','CASH FLOW TESTING IN A LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4307,'Marsh','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','SPIN-ORBIT COUPLING IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4308,'Zhang','Lu','','M.S.','2009','',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4309,'Kim','Donghyun','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','APPLICATION OF STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODEL FOR CAPITAL STRUCTURE OF',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4310,'Masferrer','<NAME>.','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','L\'EMBARRASS DU CHOIX: MODELING MEXICAN RETURN MIGRATION DECISIONS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4311,'Smith','<NAME>','BERETVAS, SUSAN N','M.S.','2009','ESTIMATION OF THE STADARDIZED MEAN DIFFERENCE USING REPEATED MEASURES DATA',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4312,'Bennett','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF LOGARITHMS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4313,'Berkopes','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','SIMPSON\'S PARADOX; EXAMPLES AND APPLICATIONS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4314,'Calton','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','FOUR COLOR THEOREM',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4315,'Carroll','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','HOW ADVANCES IN MATHEMATICS CREATE ADVANCES IN ART',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4316,'Chen','Jacob','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','RATE INDICATIONS FOR FLORIDA',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4317,'Clabes','Kris','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','THE LOOP THEOREM USING HIERARCHES',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4318,'Cowley','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','SPHERICAL AND HYPERBOLIC GEOMETRY IN THE HIGH SCHOOL CURRICULUM',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4319,'Gusmer','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','THE IMPORTANCE OF TEACHING APPLICABLE MATHEMATICS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4320,'Hicks','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','BASIC MATHEMATICS EXTENDED TO MULTIPLE DIMENSIONS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4321,'Lalani','<NAME>.','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','MULTIPLE REPRESENTATIONS AND PROPERTIES OF PYTHAGOREAN TRIPLES',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4322,'Martinez','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','APPLICATION OF THE SADDLEPOINT APPROXIMATION FOR THE COUPON COLLECTOR\'S PROBLEM',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4323,'Oktavia','Rini','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','A BRIEF SURVEY OF SELF-DUAL CODES',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4324,'Penaflor','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','PROOFS BY PICTURE AND OTHERWISE',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4325,'Rivas','<NAME>','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','CONNECTIONS AND APPLICATIONS BETWEEN THE GOLDEN RATIO, FIBONACCI SEQUENCE, PASCAL\'S TRIANGLE AND CONTINUED FRACTIONS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4326,'Whitfield','<NAME>.','EFRAIM P ARMENDARIZ','M.S.','2009','UNDERSTANDING COMPLEX NUMBERS AND IDENTIFYING COMPLEX ROOTS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4327,'Cai','Yihua','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','STATISTICAL ANALYSIS IN DOWNSCALING CLIMATE MODELS: WAVELET AND BAYESIAN METHODS IN MULTIMODEL ENSEMBLES',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4328,'Ho','<NAME>','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','IDENTIFYING HISTORICAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: BAYESIAN STOCHASTIC SEARCH VAIRABLE SELECTION IN LOGISTIC REGRESSION',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4329,'Jiang','Xiaoyan','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','ESTIMATING GROUND-LEVEL PM2.5 IN TEXAS FROM REMOTE SENSING SATELLITE DATA WITH INTERPOLATION AND REGRESSION METHODS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4330,'Mou','Sijiong','<NAME>','M.S.','2009','IDENTIFYING OVER- OR UNDER-REPRESENTED AMINO ACID SEQUENCES BY STATISTICAL METHODS',NULL,NULL,NULL),
(4331,'Baig','Salman','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','L-Functions of Elliptic Curves over Function Fields','University of Washington','',''),
(4332,'<NAME>','Herivelto','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Characterization of Multi-Frobenius Non-Classical Plane Curves and construction of complete Plane (N,D)-ARCS','University of Sao Paulo, Sao Carlos Campus','',''),
(4333,'Conceicao','Ricardo','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Twists of Elliptic Curves with a larger set of integral points over (FQ(T)','Oxford College of Emory University','',''),
(4334,'Geldon','Todd','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Computing the Tutte Polynomial of Hyperplane Arrangements','Applied Research Laboratories','',''),
(4335,'Kang','Sungmo','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Reducible and Toroidal Dehn Fillings with Distance 3','Boston College','',''),
(4336,'Qu','Zhenhua','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Toric Schemes over a discrete Valuation Ring and Tropical Compactifications','East China Normal University','',''),
(4337,'Thoren','Elizabeth','<NAME>','Ph. D','2009','Linear Instability for Incompressible inviscid fluid flows: two classes of perturbations','University of California Santa Barbara','',''),
(4339,'McDonald','Devan','<NAME>','M. S.','2009','Individual benefits calculations and introduction to a career as a corporate pensions actuary.','','',''),
(4340,'Sims','Nicole','<NAME>','M. A.','2009','DNA UNKNOTTING AND DECATENATION BY SELECTIVE TYPE-2 TOPOISOMERASE ACTION AT HOOKED JUXTAPOSITIONS','','',''),
(4341,'Kanwar','Ridhi','<NAME>','M. S.','2009','MULTIPLE REGRESSION APPLICATIONS TO CAPITAL STRUCTURE MODELING FOR LIFE INSURERS','','',''),
(4342,'Santos','Juan','<NAME>','M. S.','2009','THE IMPLEMENTATION OF PHYLOGENETIC STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODELING FOR BIOLOGICAL DATA FROM VARIANCE-CONVARIANCE MATRICES','','',''),
(4343,'Sun','Wenwen','<NAME>','M. S.','2009','SAMPLING APPROACHES IN BAYESIAN COMPUTATIONAL STATISTICS WITH R','','',''),
(4344,'Farley','John','Daniel','M. A.','2010','','','','No Thesis option'),
(4345,'Ji','Yuhee','Sirbu','M. A.','2010','ON THE OPTIMAL MULTIPLE STOPPING PROBLEM','','',''),
(4346,'Ying','Li','Daniel','M. A.','2010','ASSET LIABILITY MANAGEMENT IN A LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY','','',''),
(4347,'Maciejewski','James','De <NAME>','M. A.','2010','AN APPLICATION OF KAM THEORY TO A MODEL FOR PARTICLE CHANNELING IN CRYSTALS AND SOME RELATED NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS','','',''),
(4348,'Okura','Arthur','Daniel','M. A.','2010','','','','No Thesis option'),
(4349,'Rosen','David','De La Llave','M. A.','2010','Geometric Mechanics','','',''),
(4350,'Ross','Jenny','Beckner','M. A.','2010','GROBNER BASIS THEORY AND ITS APPLICATIONS FOR REGULAR AND BIREGULAR FUNCTIONS','','',''),
(4351,'Chen','Zhu','Greenberg','M. S.','2010','THE EFFECTS OF THREE DIFFERENT PRIORS FOR VARIANCE PARAMETERS IN THE NORMAL-MEAN HIERARCHICAL MODEL','','',''),
(4352,'Feng','Haoqi','Greenberg','M. S.','2010','QUANTIFICATION OF STOCK OPTION RISKS AND RETURNS','','',''),
(4353,'Kim','Yeolib','Greenberg','M. S.','2010','COUNT MODELS: WITH APPLICATIONS TO PRICE PLANS IN MOBILE TELECOMMUNICATION INDUSTRY','','',''),
(4354,'Luo','Liming','Sarkar','M. S.','2010','ESTIMATION OF POPULATION SIZES FOR THE JOLLYVILLE PLATEAU SALAMANDER','','',''),
(4355,'Ng','<NAME>','Waller','M. S.','2010','GENERALIZING THE MULTIVARIATE NORMALITY ASSUMPTION IN THE SIMULATION OF DEPENDENCIES IN TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS','','',''),
(4356,'Song','Li','Greenberg','M. S.','2010','AN EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATION INTO THE VALIDITY OF THE SECURITY MARKET LINE','','',''),
(4357,'Xu','Dongping','Powers','M. S.','2010','A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF PARAMETER ESTIMATION METHODS','','',''),
(4358,'Yang','Meng-Ta','McCulloch','M. S.','2010','A REVIEW ON COMPUTATION METHODS FOR BAYESIAN STATE-SPACE MODEL WITH CASE STUDIES','','',''),
(4359,'Beaver','Donald','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','EXPLORING METHODS FOR FINDING SOLUTIONS TO POLYNOMIAL EQUATIONS','','',''),
(4360,'Craig','Tara','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','COURSE SUMMARY OF GEOMETRY AND TOPOLOGY','','',''),
(4361,'Curci','Allison','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','AN EXPLORATION OF FERMAT NUMBERS','','',''),
(4362,'Fitzpatrick','Daniel','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','UTEACH SUMMER MASTERS STATISTICS COURSE: A JOURNEY FROM TRADITIONAL TO BAYESIAN ANALYSIS','','',''),
(4363,'Jensen','Crystal','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','ELLIPTIC CURVES','','',''),
(4364,'Johnson','William','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','CONICS AND GEOMETRY','','',''),
(4365,'Lehman','Sandra','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','SHOULD I SWITCH? CONTROVERSIES CREATED BY AN ADVICE COLUMN','','',''),
(4366,'Lucas','Jeremiah','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','APPLICATIONS OF CALCULUS','','',''),
(4367,'Newton','Joshua','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','DISCRETE DETERMINISTIC CHAOS','','',''),
(4368,'Povondra','Amy','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','THE SECRETS BEHIND CRYOTOGRAPHY: A MATHEMATICAL OVERVIEW','','',''),
(4369,'Vickers','Meagan','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','METHODS OF DISCOVERING POLYNOMIAL SOLUTIONS','','',''),
(4370,'Wardlaw','Cathy','Armendariz','M. A.','2010','ROOTS OF POLYNOMIALS AND THEIR CONNECTIONS','','',''),
(4371,'Weil','Pierre','','M. A.','2010','No thesis/ No report','','',''),
(4372,'Weintraub','Karl','','M. A.','2010','No Thesis/No Report','','',''),
(4373,'Deng','Yinglu','Brockett','M. S.','2010','THE EFFICIENCY ANALYSIS OF THE LIFE INSURANCE INDUSTRY IN CHINA-BASED ON THE DEA METHOD','','',''),
(4374,'Sabouri','Pooneh','Powers','M. S.','2010','ALTERNATIVE ESTIMATION APPROACHES FOR SOME COMMON ITEM RESPONSE THEORY MODELS','','',''),
(4375,'Wunderlich','Ruth','Sadun','M. S.','2010','THE USE OF MULTILEVEL MODELING TO ASSESS TEACHER EFFECTIVENESS WITHIN A SCHOOL USING TAKS SCORES','','',''),
(4376,'Katerman','Eric','Reid','Ph. D','2010','ON SOME RESIDUAL AND LOCALLY VIRTUAL PROPERTIES OF GROUPS','Software Engineer at Hurricane Inc.','',''),
(4377,'Rodriguez','MIguel','Rodriguez-Villegas','Ph. D','2010','THE DISTRIBUTION OF ROOTS OF CERTAIN POLYNOMIALS','','',''),
(4378,'Stover','Matthew','Reid','Ph. D','2010','CUSPS OF HERMITIAN LOCALLY SYMMETRIC SPACES','University of Michigan','',''),
(4379,'Meth','John','Saltman','Ph. D','2010','RATIONAL EMBEDDINGS OF THE SEVERI-BRAUER VARIETY','University of Texas at Austin','','Lecturer'),
(4380,'Patterson','Cody','Allcock','Ph. D','2010','FIXED-POINT-FREE ACTIONS OF COXETER GROUPS ON THREE-DIMENSIONAL CAT(0)','University of Arizona','',''),
(4381,'Hopkins','Kimberly','Rodriguez-Villegas','Ph. D','2010','PERIODS OF MODULAR FORMS AND CENTRAL VALUES OF L-FUNCTIONS','UCLA','Director-R &D Tax Credits',''),
(4382,'Teixeira','Ricardo','Odell','Ph. D','2010','ON S1-STRICTLY SINGULAR OPERATORS','Univ. of Houston-Victoria','',''),
(4383,'Jensen','David','Keel','Ph. D','2010','BIRATIONAL GEOMETRY OF THE MODULI SPACES OF CURVES WITH ONE MARKED POI','Stony Brook University','',''),
(4384,'Fili','Paul','Vaaler','Ph. D','2010','ORTHOGONAL DECOMPOSITIONS OF THE SPACE OF ALGEBRAIC NUMBERS MODULO TOR','University of Rochester','',''),
(4385,'Lowrey','Parker','Ben-Zvi','Ph. D','2010','AUTOEQUIVALENCES, STABILITY CONDITIONS, AND N-GONS','Western Ontario University','',''),
(4386,'Adduci','Silvia','Rodriguez-Villegas','Ph. D','2010','ON REAL AND P-ADIC BEZOUTIANS','','Universidad Nacional de Moreno',''),
(4387,'Williams','Jonathan','Gompf','Ph. D','2010','BROKEN LEFSCHETZ FIBRATIONS ON SMOOTH FOUR-MANIFOLDS','Univ. of California-Berkeley','',''),
(4388,'Leger','Nicholas','Vasseur','Ph. D','2010','A FRAGMENTATION MODEL FOR SPRAYS AND L2 STABILITY ESTIMATES FOR SHOCKS','Carnegie-Mellon University','',''),
(4389,'Kalahurka','William','Sadun','Ph. D','2010','ROTATIONAL COHOMOLOGY AND TOTAL PATTERN EQUIVARIANT COHOMOLOGY OF TILING','University of Texas at Austin','Huston-Tillotson University',''),
(4390,'Mautner','Carl','Ben-Zvi','Ph. D','2010','SHEAF THEORETIC METHODS IN MODULAR REPRESENTATION THEORY','Harvard University','',''),
(4391,'Martin','Mereb','Rodriguez-Villegas','Ph. D','2010','ON THE E-POLYNOMIALS OF A FAMILY OF CHARACTER VARIETIES','Oxford University','',''),
(4392,'Hunt','Joseph','No Thesis','M. A.','2010','','','',''),
(4393,'Jones','James','Voloch','M. A.','2010','TWO THEOREMS RELATED TO GROUP SCHEMES','','',''),
(4394,'Kaplan','Andrea','Luecke','M. A.','2010','AN OVERVIEW OF MULTILEVEL REGRESSION','','',''),
(4395,'Khan','Urmee','<NAME>','M. A.','2010','COEXISTENCE OF ATTRACTORS AND WADA BASIN BOUNDARIES IN DYNAMICAL SYSTEMS: A SURVEY OF RESULTS','','',''),
(4396,'Mitra','Roni','No Thesis','M. A.','2010','','','',''),
(4397,'Monin','Phillip','No Thesis','M. A.','','','','',''),
(4398,'Popoff','Robert','No Thesis','M. A.','2010','','','',''),
(4399,'Staron','Eric','No Thesis','M. A.','2010','','','',''),
(4400,'Feng','Shujuan','Wilke','M. S.','2010','MIXED-EFFECT MODELING OF CODON USAGE','','',''),
(4401,'Lu','Zhou','Stolp','M. S.','2010','A STUDY OF COURTEOUS BEHAVIOR ON THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS CAMPUS','','',''),
(4402,'Mao','Zhehui','Sager','M. S.','2010','INDIVIDUAL DISABILITY INSURANCE CLAIM INCIDENCE STUDY','','',''),
(4403,'Guillen','Nestor','Caffarelli','Ph. D','2010','REGULARIZATION IN PHASE TRANSITIONS WITH GIBBS-THOMSON LAW','Univ. of California-Berkeley Post-Doc','UCLA','Asst. Professor'),
(4404,'Orcan','Betul','Caffarelli','Ph. D','2010','ABOUT THE LARGEST SUBSOLUTION FOR A FREE BOUNDARY PROBLEM IN R2: ELLIP','Univ. of California-Berkeley Post-Doc','Rice University',''),
(4405,'Monin','Phillip','No Thesis','M. A.','2010','','','',''),
(4406,'Ballas','Samuel','','M. A.','2011','','','','No thesis'),
(4407,'Blazevski','Daniel','','M. A.','2011','','','','No Thesis'),
(4408,'Glenn-Levin','Jacob','','M. A.','2011','','','','No Thesis'),
(4409,'Gunther','Joseph','','M. A.','2011','','','','No Thesis'),
(4410,'Khan','Zubair','','M. A.','2011','','','','No Thesis'),
(4411,'Samuel','Matthew','','M. A.','2011','','','','No thesis'),
(4412,'Simmons','Jefferson','','M. A.','2011','','','','No Thesis'),
(4413,'Wang','Xiaojie','<NAME>','M. A.','2011','Introduction to Statutory Reserves in Life Insurance Companies','','',''),
(4414,'Yen','Yuchen','','M. A.','2011','','','','No Thesis'),
(4415,'Zhan','Wenjing','','M. A.','2011','','','','No Thesis'),
(4416,'Ringer','Nathanael','Zariphopolou','Ph. D','2011','Three Essays on Valuation and Investment in Incomplete Markets','Susquehanna International Group--Philadelphia, PA','',''),
(4417,'Blass','Timothy','<NAME>','Ph. D','2011','ON THE AUBRY-MATHER THEORY FOR PARTIAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS AND THE STABILITY OF STOCHASTICALY FORCED ORDINARY DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS','Carnegie-Mellon','',''),
(4418,'Aristoff','David','Radin','Ph. D','2011','ORDERING IN DENSE PACKINGS','Univ. of Minnesota','',''),
(4419,'Hoffman','Neil','Reid','Ph. D','2011','PROPERTIES OF COMMENSURABILITY CLASSES OF HYPERBOLIC KNOT COMPLEMENTS','Boston College','',''),
(4420,'Gillette','Andrew','Bajaj','Ph. D','2011','STABILITY OF DUAL DISCRETIZATION METHODS FOR PARTIAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS','Univ. of Calif. at San Diego','',''),
(4421,'Guntel','Brandy','Gordon','Ph. D','2011','PRIMITIVE/PRIMITIVE AND PRIMITIVE/SEIFERT KNOTS','Univ. of Texas, Austin','',''),
(4422,'Miner','Zachary','Vaaler','Ph. D','2011','NORMS EXTREMAL WITH RESPECT TO THE MAHLER MEASURE AND A GENERALIZATION OF DIRICHLET\'S UNIT THEOREM','Univ. of Texas, Austin','',''),
(4423,'Davidovich','Orit','Freed','Ph. D','2011','STATE SUMS IN TWO DIMENSIONAL FULLY EXTENDED TOPOLOGICAL FIELD THEORIES','Max Planck','Northwestern University',''),
(4424,'Tang','Lan','Caffarelli','Ph. D','2011','RANDOM HOMOGENIZATION OF P-LAPLACIAN WITH OBSTACLES ON PERFORATED DOMAIN AND RELATED TOPICS','Univ. of Iowa','',''),
(4425,'Sun','Chia-Liang (Tony)','Voloch','Ph. D','2011','THE INTERSECTION OF CLOSURE OF GLOBAL POINTS OF A SEMI-ABELIAN VARIETY WITH A PRODUCT OF LOCAL POINTS OF ITS SUBVARIETIES','Academia Sinica, Taiwan','',''),
(4426,'Williams','Michael','<NAME>','Ph. D','2011','ANALYSIS OF GEOMETRIC FLOWS, WITH APPLICATIONS TO OPTIMAL HOMOGENEOUS GEOMETRIES','UCLA','',''),
(4427,'Rich','Sarah','','M. A.','2011','No Thesis option','','',''),
(4428,'Dumav','Martin','Zitkovic','M. A.','2011','THE VON NEUMANN/MORGENSTERN APPROACH TO AMBIGUITY','','',''),
(4429,'Boyd','Jerry','Armendariz','M. A.','2011','A SUMMARY OF M396C: ANALYSIS AND THE REAL LINE UTEACH SUMMERS','','',''),
(4430,'Chu','Jessica','Armendariz','M. A.','2011','TRIGONOMETRIC SEQUENCES AND SERIES','','',''),
(4431,'Foster','Stephanie','Armendariz','M. A.','2011','PARAMETRIC EQUATIONS: AN INVESTIGATION INTO LADDERS','','',''),
(4432,'Garrett','Katherine','Armendariz','M. A.','2011','A BRIEF INTRODUCTION INTO FAIR DIVISION','','',''),
(4433,'Hannsz','Baron','Armendariz','M. A.','2011','CONTINUED FRACTIONS','','',''),
(4434,'Lau','Christina','Armendariz','M. A.','2011','PYTHAGOREAN THEOREM EXTENSIONS','','',''),
(4435,'Newberry','Anthony','Armendariz','M. A.','2011','INVESTIGATING METHODS OF PARTIAL FRACTION DECOMPOSITION','','',''),
(4436,'Sandoval','Matthew','Armendariz','M. A.','2011','A PROPOSAL FOR A SEMESTER-LONG COURSE: PRIME NUMBERS AT THE SECONDARY LEVEL','','',''),
(4437,'Song','Kyoyong','Armendariz','M. A.','2011','MATHEMATICS OF ORIGAMI','','',''),
(4438,'Wheeler','Jodi','Armendariz','M. A.','2011','FRACTALS: AN EXPLORATION INTO THE DIMENSIONS OF CURVES AND SURFACES','','',''),
(4439,'Sugarek','Darlene','Armendariz','M. A.','2011','ANALYSIS OF THE REAL LINE','','',''),
(4440,'Bulut','Aynur','Beckner/Pavlovic','Ph. D','2011','GLOBAL WELL-POSEDNESS AND SCATTERING FOR THE DEFOCUSING ENERGY- SUPERCRITICAL CUBIC NONLINEAR WAVE EQUATION','Princeton Institute for Advanced Study','',''),
(4441,'Yang','Ray','Caffarelli','Ph. D','2011','OPTIMAL REGULARITY AND NONDEGENERACY FOR MINIMIZERS OF AN ENERGY RELATED TO THE FRACTIONAL LAPLACIAN','Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences','',''),
(4442,'Landes','Emily','Reid','Ph. D','2011','ON THE CANONICAL COMPONENTS OF CHARACTER VARIETIES OF HYPERBOLIC 2-BRIDGE LINK COMPLEMENTS','Technion-Israel Institute of Technology','',''),
(4443,'Rothlisberger','Mark','Vaaler','Ph. D','2010','AN ANALOGUE OF THE KORKIN-ZOLOTAREV LATTICE REDUCTION FOR VECTOR SPACES OVER NUMBER FIELDS','','',''),
(4444,'Schmitz','Phillip','Ying','Ph. D','2010','FAST DIRECT ALGORITHMS FOR ELLIPTIC EQUATIONS VIA HIERARCHICAL MATRIX COMPRESSION','','',''),
(4445,'Homma','Kosuke','Vaaler','Ph. D','2009','On some distribution problems in Analytic\r\n Number Theory','Yahoo Japan Corporation','',''),
(4446,'Goetz','Benjamin','','M. A.','2012','No Thesis','','',''),
(4447,'Martin','Peter','','M. A.','2012','No Thesis','','',''),
(4448,'Xu','Xinyuan','','M. A.','2012','No Thesis','','',''),
(4449,'Zhao','Yunjie','Zitkovic','M. A.','2012','UTILITY-BASED VALUATION FOR UNDERWATER EMPLOYEE STOCK OPTIONS','','',''),
(4450,'Baer','Eric','Figalli','Ph. D','2012','','NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship MIT','',''),
(4451,'Blazevski','Daniel','<NAME>','Ph. D','2012','ON THE ROLE OF INVARIANT OBJECTS IN APPLICATIONS OF DYNAMICAL SYSTEMS','ETH-Zurich','',''),
(4452,'Choi','<NAME>','Zitkovic','Ph. D','2012','','Carnegie Mellon','',''),
(4453,'Choi','Kyudong','Vasseur','Ph. D','2012','','Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison','',''),
(4454,'Bowman','Sean','Luecke','Ph. D','2012','KNOTS IN HANDLEBODIES WITH HANDLEBODY SURGERIES','Oklahoma State','',''),
(4455,'Glenn-Levin','Jacob','Vishik','Ph. D','2012','INCOMPRESSIBLE BOUSSINESQ EQUATIONS AND SPACES OF BORDERLINE BESOV TYPE','Lockheed Martin Corp.','',''),
(4456,'Davila','Gonzalo','Caffarelli','Ph. D','2012','','Univ. of British Columbia','',''),
(4457,'Girao','Darlan','Reid','Ph. D','2012','','Universidad Federal do Ceara','',''),
(4458,'Kang','Ning','Keel','Ph. D','2012','','','',''),
(4459,'Katz','Brian','Helm','Ph. D','2012','','Augustana College','',''),
(4460,'Lakeland','Grant','Reid','Ph. D','2012','ARITHMETIC REFLECTION GROUPS AND CONGRUENCE SUBGROUPS','Univ. of Illinois Urbana-Champaign','',''),
(4461,'Lewko','Mark','Vaaler','Ph. D','2012','COMBINATORIAL AND PROBABILISTIC TECHNIQUES IN HARMONIC ANALYSIS','NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship UCLA','',''),
(4462,'Noguiera','Joao','Gordon','Ph. D','2012','','University of Coimbra','',''),
(4463,'Paige','David','Helm','Ph. D','2012','','Liberal Arts Science Academy (LASA),
Austin','',''),
(4464,'Staron','Eric','Gordon','Ph. D','2012','PRETZEL KNOTS OF LENGTH THREE WITH UNKNOTTING NUMBER ONE','Concordia University','',''),
(4465,'Yu','Xiang','Sirbu','Ph. D','2012','UTILITY MAXIMIZATION WITH CONSUMPTION HABIT FORMATION IN INCOMPLETE MARKETS','Univ. of Michigan','',''),
(4466,'Zhao','Yingwu','Zitkovic','Ph. D','2012','STOCHASTIC EQUILIBRIUM IN A GENERAL CLASS OF INCOMPLETE BROWNIAN MARKET ENVIRONMENTS','salesforce.com (San Francisco)','',''),
(4467,'Orr','John','Maxwell','M. A.','2012','No Thesis','Swiss Reinsurance','',''),
(4468,'Collier','Braxton','Freed','Ph. D','2012','','Regensburg','',''),
(4469,'Bey','Matthew','','M. A.','2012','No Thesis','','',''),
(4470,'Chen','Su','','M. A.','2012','No Thesis','','',''),
(4471,'Cheng','Christopher','','M. A.','2012','No Thesis','','',''),
(4472,'Friedman-Gerlicz','Camila','','M. A.','2012','No Thesis','','',''),
(4473,'Larson','Kyle','','M. A.','2012','No Thesis','','',''),
(4474,'Yang','Scott','','M. A.','2012','No Thesis','','',''),
(4475,'Alter','Mio','Freed','Ph. D','2013','DIFFERENTIAL T-EQUIVARIANT K-THEORY','','',''),
(4476,'Ballas','Sam','Reid','Ph. D','2013','FLEXIBILITY AND RIGIDITY OF THREE-DIMENSIONAL CONVEX PROJECTIVE STRUCTURES','UC Santa Barbara','',''),
(4477,'Chang','Hector','Caffarelli','Ph. D','2013','REGULARITY FOR SOLUTIONS OF NONLOCAL FULLY NONLINEAR PARABOLIC EQUATIONS AND FREE BOUNDARIES ON TWO DIMENSIONAL CONES','Columbia','',''),
(4478,'Haque','Mohammad','Helm','Ph. D','2013','REALIZABILITY OF TROPICAL LINES IN THE FAN TROPICAL PLANE','Greenhill School','',''),
(4479,'Indrei','Emanuel','Figalli','Ph. D','2013','OPTIMAL TRANSPORT, FREE BOUNDARY REGULARITY, AND STABILITY RESULTS FOR GEOMETRIC AND FUNCTIONAL INEQUALITIES','Carnegie Mellon','',''),
(4480,'Kim','<NAME>','Tsai','Ph. D','2013','NUMERICAL METHODS FOR HIGHLY OSCILLATORY DYNAMICAL SYSTEMS USING MULTI SCALE STRUCTURE','Georgia Tech','',''),
(4481,'Lee','Yoonsang','Engquist','Ph. D','2013','TOWARDS SEAMLESS MULTISCALE COMPUTATIONS','Courant','',''),
(4482,'Lu','Peijia','Engquist','Ph. D','2013','APPROXIMATION OF THE 2D COMPLEX EIKONAL EQUATION: ANALYSIS AND SIMULATION','','',''),
(4483,'Maximo','Davi','Knopf','Ph. D','2013','ON THE BLOW-UP OF FOUR-DIMENSIONAL RICCI FLOW SINGULARITIES','Stanford','',''),
(4484,'Monin','Phil','Zariphopoulou','Ph. D','2013','ESSAYS ON ACHIEVING INVESTMENT TARGETS AND FINANCIAL STABILITY','US Department of the Treasury','',''),
(4485,'Moore','Allison','Gordon','Ph. D','2013','BEHAVIOR OF KNOT FLOER HOMOLOGY UNDER CONWAY AND GENUS TWO MUTATION','Rice','',''),
(4486,'Norfleet','Mark','Allcock','Ph. D','2013','FUCHSIAN GROUPS OF SIGNATURE (0:2,...,2;1;0) WITH RATIONAL HYPERBOLIC FIXED POINTS','University of Nevada, Reno','',''),
(4487,'Rauh','Nick','Vaaler','Ph. D','2013','RESULTANTS AND HEIGHT BOUNDS FOR ZEROS OF HOMOGENEOUS POLYNOMIAL SYSTEMS','Texas State University','The Museum of Mathematics, NYC',''),
(4488,'Quitalo','Veronica','Caffarelli','Ph. D','2013','REGULARITY OF A SEGREGATION PROBLEM WITH AN OPTIMAL CONTROL OPERATOR','Purdue','',''),
(4489,'Vipismakul','Cid','Vaaler','Ph. D','2013','THE STABILIZER OF THE GROUP DETERMINANT AND BOUNDS FOR LEHMER\'S CONJECTURE OF FINITE ABELIAN GROUPS','Burapha University','',''),
(4490,'Wu','Haotian','Knopf','Ph. D','2013','ANALYSIS OF RICCI FLOW ON NONCOMPACT MANIFOLDS','Oregon','',''),
(4491,'Yao','Yuan','Keel','Ph. D','2013','A CRITERION FOR TORIC VARIETIES','CGG','',''),
(4492,'Berrizbeitia','Ana','','M. A.','2013','','Iowa (grad school)','',''),
(4493,'Cerini','Chelsea','','M. A.','2013','','Florida Blue','',''),
(4494,'Entzminger','Stephanie','','M. A.','2013','','TBD (Dallas)','',''),
(4495,'Griest','Erica','','M. A.','2013','','Liberty Mutual','',''),
(4496,'Hood','Beth','','M. A.','2013','','Mathnasium','',''),
(4497,'Lopez','Oscar','','M. A.','2013','','','',''),
(4498,'Hart','Sean','','M. A.','2013','','','',''),
(4499,'Ding','Tian','<NAME>','Ph. D','2014','NUMERICAL ALGORITHMS FOR INVERSE PROBLEMS IN ACOUSTICS AND OPTICS','CGG','',''),
(4500,'Frederick','Christina','<NAME>','Ph. D','2014','NUMERICAL METHODS FOR MULTISCALE INVERSE PROBLEMS','Georgia Tech','',''),
(4501,'Grizzard','Bobby','','','','','','',''),
(4502,'Grizzard','Bobby','<NAME>','Ph. D','2014','HEIGHTS AND INFINITE ALGEBRAIC EXTENSIONS OF THE RATIONALS','Wisconsin','',''),
(4503,'Kang','Ning','<NAME>','Ph. D','2014','THE FUNCTORIAL INTERPRETATION OF THE NAIVE COMPACTIFICATION OF REGULAR MORPHISM FROM PI1 TO PI1','','',''),
(4504,'Kelly','Michael','<NAME>','Ph. D','2014','SOME INEQUALITIES IN FOURIER ANALYSIS AND APPLICATIONS','Michigan','',''),
(4505,'Long','Ligang','<NAME>','','','','','',''),
(4506,'Kidwell','Keenan','Mirela Ciperiani','Ph. D','2014','SOME RESULTS IN IWASAWA THEORY AND THE P-ADIC REPRESENTATION THEORY OF P-ADIC GL2','Indiana','',''),
(4507,'Mandel','Travis','<NAME>','Ph. D','2014','TROPICAL THETA FUNCTIONS FOR LOG CALABI-YAU SURFACES','Aarhus University','',''),
(4508,'Meier','Jeff','<NAME>','Ph. D','2014','EXCEPTIONAL SEIFERT FIBERED SURGERIES ON MONTESINOS KNOTS AND DISTINGUISHING SMOOTHLY AND TOPOLOGICALLY DOUBLY SLICE KNOTS','NSF postdoc: Indiana','',''),
(4509,'Safronov','Pavel','','','','','','',''),
(4510,'Safronov','Pavel','<NAME>','Ph. D','2014','GEOMETRY OF INTEGRABLE HIERARCHIES AND THEIR DISPERSIONLESS LIMITS','Oxford','',''),
(4511,'Taylor','Sam','<NAME>','Ph. D','2014','GEOMETRIC PROPERTIES OF OUTER AUTOMORPHISM GROUPS OF FREE GROUPS','NSF postdoc: Yale','',''),
(4512,'Xie','Zhihui','<NAME>','Ph. D','2014','FROM QUANTUM MANY BODY SYSTEMS TO NONLINEAR SCHROEDINGER EQUATIONS','University of Illinois at Chicago','',''),
(4513,'Long','Ligang','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2014','SLICE RIBBON CONJECTURE, PRETZEL KNOTS AND MUTATION','CGG Veritas Inc.','',''),
(4514,'Carlson','William','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','ON THE LINEAR STABILITY PROBLEM FOR JEFFERY-HAMEL FLOWS','','',''),
(4515,'Knudson','Karin','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2014','RECOVERY OF CONTINUOUS QUANTITIES FROM DISCRETE AND BINARY DATA WITH APPLICATIONS TO NEURAL DATA','Phillips Academy, Andover, MA','','Instructor, Math, Statistics and Computer Science'),
(4516,'Pancia','Matthew','Dr. <NAME>','','2014','THE GOODWILLIE TOWER OF FREE AUGMENTED ALGEBRAS OVER CONNECTIVE RINGS SPECTRA','Data Scientist, Grand Rounds, Inc.','',''),
(4517,'Jo','Jason','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','STRUCTURED LOW COMPLEXITY DATA MINING','','',''),
(4518,'Kriventsov','Dennis','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','A LOCAL-NONLOCAL TRANSMISSION PROBLEM','NSF Postdoc, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences','',''),
(4519,'Mark','Alice','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','THE CLASSIFICATION OF RANK 3 REFLECTIVE HYPERBOLIC LATTICES OVER Z [SQRT-(2)]','Arizona State University','',''),
(4520,'Moss','Gil','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','INTERPOLATING GAMMA FACTORS IN FAMILIES','Oklahoma State University','',''),
(4521,'Orem','Hendrik','Dr. <NAME>','','2015','COORDINATE SYSTEMS AND ASSOCIATIVE ALGEBRAS','','',''),
(4522,'Starkston','Laura','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','CLASSIFICATIONS AND APPLICATIONS OF SYMPLECTIC FILLINGS OF SEIFERT FIBERED SPACES OVER S^2','NSF Postdoc Stanford University','',''),
(4523,'Taliaferro','Kenneth','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','THE DYNAMICS OF BOSE GASES','Data Science Fellow','Insight Data Science, Inc.',''),
(4524,'Vallelian','Sarah','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','QUANTITATIVE PAT WITH UNKNOWN ULTRASOUND SPEED: UNCERTAINTY CHARACTERIZATION AND RECONSTRUCTION METHODS','SAMSI / North Carolina State University','',''),
(4525,'Zhu','Yuecheng','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','COMPACTIFICATION OF MODULI SPACES AND MIRROR SYMMETRY','University of Pennsylvania','',''),
(4526,'Zufelt','Nicholas','Dr. <NAME>','','','','','',''),
(4527,'Zufelt','Nicholas','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','THE COMBINATORICS OF REDUCIBLE DEHN SURGERIES','Imperial College','',''),
(4528,'Garza','Cesar','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','A CONSTRUCTION OF HYPERK�HLER METRICS THROUGH RIEMANN-HILBERT PROBLEMS','Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis','',''),
(4529,'Kontaxis','Andrew','Dr. <NAME>','','2015','ASYMPTOTICS FOR OPTIMAL INVESTMENT WITH HIGH-WATER MARK FEE','','',''),
(4530,'Pool','Jamie','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','A QUADRATURE EULERIAN-LAGRANGIAN WENO SCHEME FOR RESERVOIR SIMULATION','University of Texas at Austin','',''),
(4531,'Orem','Hendrik','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','COORDINATE SYSTEMS AND ASSOCIATIVE ALGEBRAS','Rabobank (Netherlands); Model Validator','',''),
(4532,'Kontaxis','Andrew','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','ASYMPTOTICS FOR OPTIMAL INVESTMENT WITH HIGH-WATER MARK FEE','Data Science Fellow','Insight Data Science, Inc.',''),
(4533,'Li','Jiexian (Jessie) Li','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','EXISTENCE, CHARACTERIZATION AND APPROXIMATION IN THE GENERALIZED MONOTONE FOLLOWER PROBLEM','Machine Learning Scientist, Amazon Inc.','',''),
(4534,'Delfeld','James','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','LABELING AND DENOISING GEOMETRICALLY PARAMETERIZED DATA WITH APPLICATIONS TO CRYO-EM','','',''),
(4535,'White','Christopher','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','','Principle Quantitative Analyst, Capital One Banking','',''),
(4536,'Bennett','Julia','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','EXOTIC SMOOTHINGS VIA LARGE R4\'S IN STEIN SURFACES','Netflix, Inc.','',''),
(4537,'Larson','Kyle','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','SOME CONSTRUCTIONS INVOLVING SURGERY ON SURFACES IN 4-MANIFOLDS','Postdoc Research Fellow, Renyi Institute, Budapest, Hungary','',''),
(4538,'Chen','Chieh (Charlie)','Dr. Yen-Hsi (Richard) Tsai','Ph. D','2015','IMPLICIT BOUNDARY INTEGRAL METHODS','Quantitative Analyst, Goldman Sachs','',''),
(4539,'Franklin','Giovanni','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2015','THE ANDRE-QUILLEN SPECTRAL SEQUENCE FOR PRE-LOGARITHMIC RING SPECTRA','','',''),
(4540,'Goswami','Pulak','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2016','RECOVERING THE PAYOFF STRUCTURE OF A UTILITY MAXIMIZING AGENT','','',''),
(4541,'Gal','Itamar','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2016','EXPLORATIONS IN ALGEBRA AND TOPOLOGY','Center for Transportation Research, University of Texas at Austin','',''),
(4542,'Hughes','Adam','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2016','MULTIPLICATIVE AND DYNAMICAL ANALYSIS ON IDELES AND IDELE CLASS GROUPS','','',''),
(4543,'Berg','Jennifer','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2016','OBSTRUCTIONS TO THE INTEGRAL HASSE PRINCIPLE FOR GENERALIZED AFFINE CHATELET SURFACES','Rice University, RTG Lovett Instructor','',''),
(4544,'Fenyes','Aaron','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2016','WARPING GEOMETRIC STRUCTURES AND ABELIANIZING SL2R LOCAL SYSTEMS','University of Toronto, Postdoctoral Fellow','',''),
(4545,'Royer','Aaron','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2016','ASPECTS OF DERIVED KOSZUL DUALITY','University of California Los Angeles, NSF Postdoctoral Fellow','',''),
(4546,'Jain','Rohit','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2016','REGULARITY ESTIMATES FOR SOME FREE BOUNDARY PROBLEMS OF OBSTACLE-TYPE','McGill University, Postdoctoral Fellow','',''),
(4547,'Fredrickson','Laura','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2016','ASYMPTOTIC LIMITS IN THE HITCHIN MODULI SPACE','Stanford University, Szego Visiting Assistant Professor','',''),
(4548,'Taskovic','Maja','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2016','MITTAG-LEFFLER MOMENTS AND WEIGHTED POINTWISE ESTIMATES FOR SOLUTIONS TO THE BOLTZMANN EQUATION FOR HARD POTENTIALS WITHOUT CUTOFF','University of Pennsylvania, Hans Rademacher Instructor of Mathematics','',''),
(4549,'Ganev','Iordan','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2016','THE WONDERFUL COMPACTIFICATION FOR QUANTUM GROUPS','Institute of Science and Technology Austria, Postdoctoral Researcher','',''),
(4550,'Cohn','Lee','Dr. <NAME>','Ph. D','2016','Rectifying Stable Infinity-Categories and Relative Koszul Duality for Operads','Data Scientist, In-Q-Tel, Washington, DC','','');
|
<filename>src/test/resources/sql/select/8a408394.sql
-- file:tinterval.sql ln:85 expect:true
SELECT '' AS five, t1.f1
FROM TINTERVAL_TBL t1
WHERE not t1.f1 <<
tinterval '["Aug 15 14:23:19 1980" "Sep 16 14:23:19 1990"]'
ORDER BY t1.f1
|
-- --------------------------------------------------------
-- Host: 127.0.0.1
-- Server version: 5.1.63-community - MySQL Community Server (GPL)
-- Server OS: Win64
-- HeidiSQL version: 7.0.0.4053
-- Date/time: 2012-10-14 17:59:19
-- --------------------------------------------------------
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@@CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET NAMES utf8 */;
/*!40014 SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0 */;
-- Dumping structure for table swganh_static.spawn_shuttle
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `spawn_shuttle`;
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `spawn_shuttle` (
`id` int(11) unsigned NOT NULL,
`oX` float NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
`oY` float NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
`oZ` float NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
`oW` float NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
`X` float NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
`Y` float NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
`Z` float NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
`planet_id` int(11) NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
KEY `spawn_shuttle_planetid` (`planet_id`),
CONSTRAINT `shuttle_spawn_planet_id` FOREIGN KEY (`planet_id`) REFERENCES `planet` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
-- Dumping data for table swganh_static.spawn_shuttle: ~64 rows (approximately)
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `spawn_shuttle` DISABLE KEYS */;
INSERT INTO `spawn_shuttle` (`id`, `oX`, `oY`, `oZ`, `oW`, `X`, `Y`, `Z`, `planet_id`) VALUES
(1, 0, 0.00100429, 0, 0.946813, 3598.1, 5, -4776, 8),
(2, 0, 0.740416, 0, 0.999957, 3419.9, 5, -4647.1, 8),
(3, 0, 0.634851, 0, 0.376626, -1358.8, 12, -3600.5, 8),
(4, 0, -0.681038, 0, -0.174716, -1094.4, 12.3, -3561.8, 8),
(5, 0, -0.997989, 0, 0.699624, -2834.7, 5, 2110.9, 8),
(6, 0, -0.191618, 0, 0.883836, -2893.6, 5, 1936.5, 8),
(7, 0, -0.632075, 0, -0.604032, -3113.8, 5, 2179.5, 8),
(8, 0, -0.911067, 0, 0.997526, -2804.9, 5, 2185.3, 8),
(9, 0, 0.84383, 0, 0.971628, 43.1, 52, -5341.2, 8),
(10, 0, -0.769691, 0, 0.883836, 1267.3, 7, 3067.7, 8),
(11, 0, -0.441517, 0, -0.665485, 1392.9, 7, 3467.7, 8),
(12, 0, 0.942352, 0, 0.94829, 1727, 7, 3181.7, 8),
(13, 0, -0.995538, 0, 0.999957, -4862.2, 6, 4163, 5),
(14, 0, -0.725013, 0, -0.546518, -5002.8, 6, 4075.7, 5),
(15, 0, -0.96716, 0, 0.997191, -5410, 6, 4325.3, 5),
(16, 0, -0.891295, 0, -0.0256717, -5855.9, 6, 4170.1, 5),
(17, 0, -0.958565, 0, 0.951183, 5277.5, -192, 6686.7, 5),
(18, 0, -0.961174, 0, 0.888121, 5121.2, -192, 6614.9, 5),
(19, 0, -0.994915, 0, 0.798509, 1371.1, 13, 2744.5, 5),
(20, 0, -0.260402, 0, 0.98585, 1564.4, 25, 2838.6, 5),
(21, 0, 0.0364384, 0, 0.297371, 2024.6, 19.1, 2526.6, 5),
(22, 0, 0.419494, 0, 1, 5329.8, 326.9, -1573.4, 5),
(23, 0, -0.994939, 0, 0.754219, -5491.6, -150, -21, 5),
(24, 0, -0.978501, 0, 0.0538918, 4730.8, 4.2, -4674.7, 5),
(25, 0, -0.205444, 0, 0.809499, 4963.1, 3.8, -4897, 5),
(26, 0, 0.786126, 0, 0.888121, 620.4, 6, 3090.1, 2),
(27, 0, -0.598487, 0, -0.402636, -46.8, 18, -1586.9, 2),
(28, 0, 0.34379, 0, -0.870273, -6924.9, 73, -5727.7, 9),
(29, 0, 0.274962, 0, 0.846314, -262.6, 35, 4897.9, 9),
(30, 0, 0.987635, 0, 0.754219, 4051.6, 37, -6214.7, 9),
(31, 0, -0.880705, 0, -0.908621, 482.8, 8.9, 5512.4, 4),
(32, 0, 0.923728, 0, 0.577519, -5376.6, 80, -2185.7, 6),
(33, 0, -0.459846, 0, -0.256917, -5258, 80.7, -2164.9, 6),
(34, 0, 0.716324, 0, -0.904722, 5340, 80, 5726, 6),
(35, 0, 0.716324, 0, 1, 5215.6, 80, 5792.2, 6),
(36, 0, -0.501677, 0, -0.0958773, 3695.8, 96, -6400.9, 6),
(37, 0, -0.967355, 0, 0.988079, 3201, 24, -3499, 3),
(38, 0, -0.682172, 0, -0.183808, -950.6, 73, 1548.8, 3),
(39, 0, -0.999997, 0, 0.951183, 1573.1, 4, -6414, 1),
(40, 0, 0.993095, 0, -0.998908, -4211.5, 3, -2350, 1),
(41, 0, -0.999865, 0, 0.923634, -638.1, 3, 2506.2, 1),
(42, 0, -0.674044, 0, -0.247974, -6789.4, 46, 5574.7, 1),
(43, 0, -0.977276, 0, -0.830934, 4453.4, 2, 5351, 7),
(44, 0, -0.893845, 0, 0.97271, 4332.5, 9.9, 5433.1, 7),
(45, 0, -0.715777, 0, 0.372341, 267.5, 6, -2950.3, 7),
(46, 0, -0.108406, 0, -0.100476, 698.6, 6, -3037.9, 7),
(47, 0, 0.342138, 0, -0.546518, -2226, 20, 2323, 7),
(48, 0, 0.906347, 0, 0.0585057, -69.9, 28, -4711.3, 0),
(49, 0, 0.912766, 0, 0.996834, -27.9, 28, -4406.3, 0),
(50, 0, 0.994138, 0, 0.506804, -331.2, 28, -4639.2, 0),
(51, 0, -0.997379, 0, -0.992032, -5001, 21, -2229.2, 0),
(52, 0, -0.895223, 0, -0.935729, -5600.9, 21, -2788.3, 0),
(53, 0, -0.967613, 0, 0.692991, -5007.5, 21, -2391.2, 0),
(54, 0, 0.961315, 0, 0.846314, -5553.8, 15.2, -6062.3, 0),
(55, 0, 0.177776, 0, 0.920052, 6645.3, 330, -5918.4, 0),
(56, 0, -0.370171, 0, 0.748118, 6932.1, 330, -5530.7, 0),
(57, 0, 0.560854, 0, 0.921853, -3156, 31, 2873.9, 0),
(58, 0, -0.0651836, 0, -0.105073, -3772.7, 86, 3235.8, 0),
(59, 0, -0.436682, 0, 0.970524, 3354.5, 308, 5599.2, 0),
(60, 0, 0.986357, 0, 0.999989, 3081.2, 280.3, 4991, 0),
(61, 0, -0.247448, 0, -0.672355, -6520.3, 398, 6042.2, 0),
(62, 0, 0, 0, 1, 320, 45, 3764, 42),
(63, 0, 0, 0, 1, 119.2, 45, 3917.9, 42),
(64, 0, 0, 0, 1, 3151, 40, -3817, 42);
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `spawn_shuttle` ENABLE KEYS */;
/*!40014 SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=1 */;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
|
/*
Enter your query here.
*/
SELECT DISTINCT city FROM station WHERE city REGEXP "^[aeiou].*";
|
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION longest_path(
IN paths_return refcursor
) RETURNS refcursor AS $$
DECLARE
num_growing_path INTEGER;
BEGIN
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE paths(path text, tail INTEGER, flag boolean) ON COMMIT DROP DISTRIBUTED BY (tail);
INSERT INTO paths
SELECT ''||zero_in_degree.src AS path, edges.dst_id as tail , TRUE FROM
(SELECT t1.src_id AS src FROM
(SELECT DISTINCT src_id FROM edges) AS t1 LEFT JOIN
(SELECT DISTINCT dst_id FROM edges) AS t2
ON t1.src_id = t2.dst_id WHERE t2.dst_id IS NULL) AS zero_in_degree
JOIN edges ON zero_in_degree.src = edges.src_id;
SELECT COUNT(1) INTO num_growing_path FROM paths WHERE flag;
WHILE num_growing_path > 0 LOOP
-- if path keep growing, then the last iteration can not be longest path
DELETE FROM paths WHERE NOT flag;
UPDATE paths SET path=path||'-->'||tail;
UPDATE paths SET flag=FALSE;
INSERT INTO paths
SELECT paths.path, edges.dst_id AS tail, TRUE FROM
paths JOIN edges ON paths.tail = edges.src_id;
SELECT COUNT(1) INTO num_growing_path FROM paths WHERE flag;
END LOOP;
OPEN paths_return FOR SELECT path FROM paths;
RETURN paths_return;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION longest_path(
IN edge_type_column VARCHAR,
IN edge_type_value INTEGER,
IN paths_return refcursor
) RETURNS refcursor AS $$
DECLARE
num_growing_path INTEGER;
BEGIN
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE paths(path text, tail INTEGER, flag boolean) ON COMMIT DROP DISTRIBUTED BY (tail);
EXECUTE
'INSERT INTO paths
SELECT ''''||zero_in_degree.src AS path, edges.dst_id as tail, TRUE FROM
(SELECT t1.src_id AS src FROM
(SELECT DISTINCT src_id FROM edges WHERE ' || quote_ident(edge_type_column) || ' = ' || edge_type_value || ') AS t1 LEFT JOIN
(SELECT DISTINCT dst_id FROM edges WHERE ' || quote_ident(edge_type_column) || ' = ' || edge_type_value || ') AS t2
ON t1.src_id = t2.dst_id WHERE t2.dst_id IS NULL) AS zero_in_degree
JOIN edges ON zero_in_degree.src = edges.src_id AND edges.' || quote_ident(edge_type_column) || ' = ' || edge_type_value;
SELECT COUNT(1) INTO num_growing_path FROM paths WHERE flag;
WHILE num_growing_path > 0 LOOP
-- if path keep growing, then the last iteration can not be longest path
DELETE FROM paths WHERE NOT flag;
UPDATE paths SET path=path||'-->'||tail;
UPDATE paths SET flag=FALSE;
EXECUTE
'INSERT INTO paths
SELECT paths.path, edges.dst_id AS tail, TRUE FROM
paths JOIN edges ON paths.tail = edges.src_id AND edges.'
|| quote_ident(edge_type_column) || ' = ' || edge_type_value;
SELECT COUNT(1) INTO num_growing_path FROM paths WHERE flag;
END LOOP;
OPEN paths_return FOR SELECT path FROM paths;
RETURN paths_return;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION longest_weighted_path(
IN weight_column VARCHAR,
IN path_return refcursor
) RETURNS refcursor AS $$
DECLARE
num_growing_path INTEGER;
BEGIN
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE paths(path TEXT, tail INTEGER, weight NUMERIC, flag INTEGER)
WITH (appendonly=TRUE,orientation=row) ON COMMIT DROP DISTRIBUTED BY (tail);
EXECUTE
'INSERT INTO paths
SELECT ''''||zero_in_degree.src||''-->''||edges.dst_id AS path,
edges.dst_id as tail,
edges.' || quote_ident(weight_column) || ', 0 FROM
(SELECT t1.src_id AS src FROM
(SELECT DISTINCT src_id FROM edges) AS t1 LEFT JOIN
(SELECT DISTINCT dst_id FROM edges) AS t2
ON t1.src_id = t2.dst_id WHERE t2.dst_id IS NULL) AS zero_in_degree
JOIN edges ON zero_in_degree.src = edges.src_id';
SELECT COUNT(1) INTO num_growing_path FROM paths WHERE flag = 0;
WHILE num_growing_path > 0 LOOP
UPDATE paths SET flag=1 WHERE flag = 0;
-- DELETE FROM paths WHERE weight IS NULL;
EXECUTE
'INSERT INTO paths
SELECT paths.path||''-->''||edges.dst_id AS path,
edges.dst_id AS tail,
paths.weight+edges.' || quote_ident(weight_column) || ' AS weight, 0 FROM
paths JOIN edges ON paths.flag = 1 AND paths.tail = edges.src_id AND paths.weight IS NOT NULL';
UPDATE paths SET flag=2 WHERE flag = 1;
SELECT COUNT(1) INTO num_growing_path FROM paths WHERE flag = 0;
END LOOP;
OPEN path_return FOR SELECT path, weight FROM paths WHERE weight = (SELECT max(weight) FROM paths);
RETURN path_return;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION longest_weighted_path(
IN weight_column VARCHAR,
IN edge_type_column VARCHAR,
IN edge_type_value INTEGER,
IN path_return refcursor
) RETURNS refcursor AS $$
DECLARE
num_growing_path INTEGER;
BEGIN
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE paths(path TEXT, tail INTEGER, weight NUMERIC, flag INTEGER)
WITH (appendonly=TRUE,orientation=row) ON COMMIT DROP DISTRIBUTED BY (tail);
EXECUTE
'INSERT INTO paths
SELECT ''''||zero_in_degree.src||''-->''||edges.dst_id AS path,
edges.dst_id as tail,
edges.' || quote_ident(weight_column) || ', 0 FROM
(SELECT t1.src_id AS src FROM
(SELECT DISTINCT src_id FROM edges WHERE ' || quote_ident(edge_type_column) || ' = ' || edge_type_value || ') AS t1 LEFT JOIN
(SELECT DISTINCT dst_id FROM edges WHERE ' || quote_ident(edge_type_column) || ' = ' || edge_type_value || ') AS t2
ON t1.src_id = t2.dst_id WHERE t2.dst_id IS NULL) AS zero_in_degree
JOIN edges ON zero_in_degree.src = edges.src_id AND edges.' || quote_ident(edge_type_column) || ' = ' || edge_type_value;
SELECT COUNT(1) INTO num_growing_path FROM paths WHERE flag = 0;
WHILE num_growing_path > 0 LOOP
UPDATE paths SET flag=1 WHERE flag = 0;
-- DELETE FROM paths WHERE weight IS NULL;
EXECUTE
'INSERT INTO paths
SELECT paths.path||''-->''||edges.dst_id AS path,
edges.dst_id AS tail,
paths.weight+edges.' || quote_ident(weight_column) || ' AS weight, 0 FROM
paths JOIN edges ON paths.flag = 1 AND paths.tail = edges.src_id AND paths.weight IS NOT NULL AND edges.'
|| quote_ident(edge_type_column) || ' = ' || edge_type_value;
UPDATE paths SET flag=2 WHERE flag = 1;
SELECT COUNT(1) INTO num_growing_path FROM paths WHERE flag = 0;
END LOOP;
OPEN path_return FOR SELECT path, weight FROM paths WHERE weight = (SELECT max(weight) FROM paths);
RETURN path_return;
END;
$$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
|
<filename>database/select_in_chunks.sql
-- Select records from a control table by chunk pieces
select distinct account_id
from (select account_id, row_number() OVER (order by account_id) rn from ria_sg_acct_chk_del_02052020@sep ) v
--where v.rn between 101 and 200
--where v.rn between 201 and 300
--where v.rn between 301 and 400
--where v.rn between 401 and 500
--where v.rn > 500
;
SELECT account_id
FROM ( select account_id, row_number() OVER (order by account_id) rn from rion_44166@sed )
WHERE rn between 85 and 125
AND account_id not in (999,888);
|
-- Attribute privilege
insert into api_permission(uri,status,method,type,comment,create_date,last_update)
values('^/ws/rs/permission/search-users-by-perms$',0,'POST',1,'',now(),now());
|
<gh_stars>100-1000
/***********************************************************************
xplan-display.sql -- Oracle Explain Plan Display
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Purpose:
This script serves to demonstrate how to generate an explain plan for
the standard output. Allows format and display the contents of a plan
table.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
History:
<NAME> 12/01/2015 Original coding.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Versions Supported:
EGDB: All
DBMS: Oracle
DBMS Version: 11.2.0 and above
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Tags:
Explain Plan, xplan, Oracle, dbms_xplan
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Resources:
http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E11882_01/appdev.112/e40758/d_xplan.htm#ARPLS378
***********************************************************************/
--Generate an explain plan for a query
EXPLAIN PLAN FOR
SELECT '1' FROM DUAL; --Replace with desired query
--View the explain plan with default settings
SELECT * FROM TABLE(dbms_xplan.display);
--View the explain plan formatted to include all information
SELECT * FROM TABLE(dbms_xplan.display(format=>'ALL'));
--View the explain plan formatted to remove some information
SELECT * FROM TABLE(dbms_xplan.display(format=>'ALL,-ROWS'));
|
ALTER TABLE `blapps` ADD COLUMN `blplugin_id` int(11) unsigned DEFAULT NULL;
ALTER TABLE `blapps` ADD CONSTRAINT `blplugin_id_apps` FOREIGN KEY (`blplugin_id`) REFERENCES `blplugins` (`id`);
ALTER TABLE `blapps` MODIFY `blitem_id` int(11) unsigned DEFAULT NULL;
|
<filename>pgwatch2/sql/metric_store/00_schema_base.sql<gh_stars>1000+
/*
"admin" schema - stores schema type, partition templates and data cleanup functions
"public" schema - top level metric tables
"subpartitions" schema - subpartitions of "public" schema top level metric tables (if using time / dbname-time partitioning)
*/
CREATE SCHEMA IF NOT EXISTS admin AUTHORIZATION pgwatch2;
GRANT ALL ON SCHEMA public TO pgwatch2;
DO $SQL$
BEGIN
EXECUTE format($$ALTER ROLE pgwatch2 IN DATABASE %s SET statement_timeout TO '5min'$$, current_database());
RAISE WARNING 'NB! Enabling asynchronous commit for pgwatch2 role - revert if possible data loss on crash is not acceptable!';
EXECUTE format($$ALTER ROLE pgwatch2 IN DATABASE %s SET synchronous_commit TO off$$, current_database());
END
$SQL$;
SET ROLE TO pgwatch2;
-- drop table if exists public.storage_schema_type;
/* although the gather has a "--pg-storage-type" param, the WebUI might not know about it in a custom setup */
create table admin.storage_schema_type (
schema_type text not null,
initialized_on timestamptz not null default now(),
check (schema_type in ('metric', 'metric-time', 'metric-dbname-time', 'custom', 'timescale'))
);
comment on table admin.storage_schema_type is 'identifies storage schema for other pgwatch2 components';
create unique index max_one_row on admin.storage_schema_type ((1));
/* for the Grafana drop-down. managed by the gatherer */
create table admin.all_distinct_dbname_metrics (
dbname text not null,
metric text not null,
created_on timestamptz not null default now(),
primary key (dbname, metric)
);
/* currently only used to store TimescaleDB chunk interval */
create table admin.config
(
key text not null primary key,
value text not null,
created_on timestamptz not null default now(),
last_modified_on timestamptz
);
-- to later change the value call the admin.change_timescale_chunk_interval(interval) function!
-- as changing the row directly will only be effective for completely new tables (metrics).
insert into admin.config select 'timescale_chunk_interval', '2 days';
insert into admin.config select 'timescale_compress_interval', '1 day';
create or replace function trg_config_modified() returns trigger
as $$
begin
new.last_modified_on = now();
return new;
end;
$$
language plpgsql;
create trigger config_modified before update on admin.config
for each row execute function trg_config_modified();
-- DROP FUNCTION IF EXISTS admin.ensure_dummy_metrics_table(text);
-- select * from admin.ensure_dummy_metrics_table('wal');
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION admin.ensure_dummy_metrics_table(
metric text
)
RETURNS boolean AS
/*
creates a top level metric table if not already existing (non-existing tables show ugly warnings in Grafana).
expects the "metrics_template" table to exist.
*/
$SQL$
DECLARE
l_schema_type text;
l_template_table text := 'admin.metrics_template';
l_unlogged text := '';
BEGIN
SELECT schema_type INTO l_schema_type FROM admin.storage_schema_type;
IF NOT EXISTS (SELECT 1
FROM pg_tables
WHERE tablename = metric
AND schemaname = 'public')
THEN
IF metric ~ 'realtime' THEN
l_template_table := 'admin.metrics_template_realtime';
l_unlogged := 'UNLOGGED';
END IF;
IF l_schema_type = 'metric' THEN
EXECUTE format($$CREATE %s TABLE public."%s" (LIKE %s INCLUDING INDEXES)$$, l_unlogged, metric, l_template_table);
ELSIF l_schema_type = 'metric-time' THEN
EXECUTE format($$CREATE %s TABLE public."%s" (LIKE %s INCLUDING INDEXES) PARTITION BY RANGE (time)$$, l_unlogged, metric, l_template_table);
ELSIF l_schema_type = 'metric-dbname-time' THEN
EXECUTE format($$CREATE %s TABLE public."%s" (LIKE %s INCLUDING INDEXES) PARTITION BY LIST (dbname)$$, l_unlogged, metric, l_template_table);
ELSIF l_schema_type = 'timescale' THEN
IF metric ~ 'realtime' THEN
EXECUTE format($$CREATE TABLE public."%s" (LIKE %s INCLUDING INDEXES) PARTITION BY RANGE (time)$$, metric, l_template_table);
ELSE
PERFORM admin.ensure_partition_timescale(metric);
END IF;
END IF;
EXECUTE format($$COMMENT ON TABLE public."%s" IS 'pgwatch2-generated-metric-lvl'$$, metric);
RETURN true;
END IF;
RETURN false;
END;
$SQL$ LANGUAGE plpgsql;
GRANT EXECUTE ON FUNCTION admin.ensure_dummy_metrics_table(text) TO pgwatch2;
RESET ROLE;
|
<gh_stars>0
-- phpMyAdmin SQL Dump
-- version 4.9.0.1
-- https://www.phpmyadmin.net/
--
-- Host: 127.0.0.1
-- Waktu pembuatan: 20 Nov 2019 pada 03.44
-- Versi server: 10.3.16-MariaDB
-- Versi PHP: 7.1.30
SET SQL_MODE = "NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO";
SET AUTOCOMMIT = 0;
START TRANSACTION;
SET time_zone = "+00:00";
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@@CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@@CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION=@@COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
/*!40101 SET NAMES utf8mb4 */;
--
-- Database: `jpone_apps`
--
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `jpone_apps` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci;
USE `jpone_apps`;
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `mahasiswa`
--
CREATE TABLE `mahasiswa` (
`id` int(250) NOT NULL,
`nama` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`alamat` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`nohp` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`jeniskelamin` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`keperluan` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`datetime` date NOT NULL,
`waktu` time NOT NULL,
`bulan` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`tahun` year(4) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `mahasiswa`
--
INSERT INTO `mahasiswa` (`id`, `nama`, `alamat`, `nohp`, `jeniskelamin`, `keperluan`, `datetime`, `waktu`, `bulan`, `tahun`) VALUES
(1, '<NAME>', 'Jakarta Barat', '085772903522', 'Laki-Laki', 'bertemu dengan pak lili', '2019-10-29', '10:39:35', '', 0000),
(2, 'Renaldhy', 'JAK ROXY', '095757228582', 'Laki-Laki', 'NONTON THE JAK', '2019-10-29', '10:41:02', '', 0000),
(3, '<NAME>', 'Jalan Petojo', '097643121', 'Laki-Laki', 'NGOBAR', '2019-10-30', '08:34:15', '', 0000),
(4, '<NAME>', 'Jakarta Barat', '0888888888', 'Laki-Laki', 'Ingin Bertemu Rino ', '2019-10-30', '13:56:38', '', 0000),
(8, '<NAME>', 'Jakarta Tengah', '08878758', 'Laki-Laki', 'PKL', '2019-10-31', '08:19:47', '', 0000),
(11, '<NAME>', 'JL BUILD WITH ANGGA', '088232323', 'Laki-Laki', 'NGAJARIN UI UX DI JP', '2019-11-04', '01:37:02', '', 0000),
(12, 'Ryan', 'Jalan Karang Anyar', '0868483883847', 'Laki-Laki', 'Olahraga', '2019-11-12', '09:12:35', 'November', 0000),
(13, '<NAME>', 'Jalan', '09855888', 'Laki-Laki', 'Bertemu Pak Firman ingin Sidang', '2019-11-12', '09:15:42', 'November', 0000),
(14, 'Ryan', 'Jalan <NAME>', '09855888', 'Laki-Laki', 'Bertemu Pak Firman ingin Sidang', '2019-11-12', '09:16:24', 'November', 0000),
(17, '<NAME>', 'Jalan abdul muis no40', '0857237288', 'Laki-Laki', 'Bertemu kepala Sekolah', '2019-11-19', '08:21:03', 'November', 0000),
(18, '<NAME>', 'Jalan Abdul Muis No 40', '0857372736', 'Laki-Laki', 'Bertemu kepala Sekolah', '2019-11-19', '08:34:29', 'November', 0000),
(19, '<NAME>', 'Jalan Abdul Muis No. 44 Jakarta Pusat', '081383967000', 'Laki-Laki', 'Legal<NAME>', '2019-11-19', '09:56:45', 'November', 0000);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `user`
--
CREATE TABLE `user` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`name` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`email` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`image` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`password` varchar(256) NOT NULL,
`role_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`is_active` int(1) NOT NULL,
`date_created` int(11) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `user`
--
INSERT INTO `user` (`id`, `name`, `email`, `image`, `password`, `role_id`, `is_active`, `date_created`) VALUES
(18, 'Admin', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$i.neND/OvsrlEWB7p7DqcuJjOGUi0CyG4Dd47.GEei6ENkGaMyoiu', 1, 1, 1567852597),
(22, 'SMK JAKARTA PUSAT 1', '<EMAIL>', 'jp.jpg', '$2y$10$32AGgWJLfIZ0rIUh9wO1/e993fFFTLrKbP9Vu4iGwZAm/5brgQczy', 2, 1, 1568001490),
(31, 'rinosatyaputra-id', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$B24.REHjmfJy8GSM4qmOJem5TMELPokby1xTjFus3Di3SongnE3Rq', 2, 1, 1572061113),
(32, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$BuNAm5HNnRl9DOs1svMrbuUoiUaY/ctWantJU1bhc4mw.EY08eONa', 2, 1, 1572080851),
(34, 'ZIdane', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$NOt9tJFJhsbo/vBGqkcBSOvMblGhgL5ux9pTHHAjlGlLqV2McGdqi', 2, 1, 1572225306),
(37, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$2N9xuf.jUgg/ypGgH4h/juEGFFKGScZp3wRY2GJw7uAuMYqeqNEWO', 2, 1, 1572232864),
(38, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$f/hQ63HOWLqc7pZhbaSAYOGNWflE5uCAbt5v3skP43sghvE.yI.dy', 2, 0, 1572822600),
(40, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$YIcNeZ8aXkbZjhViKJ.dZ.pD8egvLdiM/0CogNZRF.QGlFUDcxzyi', 2, 0, 1572987765),
(41, 'admin2', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$OYwHHTcKyvPb1o1F1skYiuiCfLNM7.bweRtIHkf6VPR53gPZ/joWG', 2, 0, 1572987934),
(42, 'admin2', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$.CpIMeYad6BBnGsZVdxx3e3CzDeksdbTiJD0nLeScrTITBBS/9.Qa', 2, 0, 1572987961),
(43, 'admin2', 'ADMI212112<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$Pda4EcSFxeB5X5tD9Hd47eKx9d/P9ycvE.VkxRTaJ7/T5f4iQxQ/W', 2, 0, 1572987998),
(44, 'admin2', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$vCvJfeVYsFAWhIX1kO6szOsB2Cfg0uTCo0seD3a1O3QXXUAJ5gfbS', 2, 0, 1572988130),
(45, 'admin2', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$X9iZLjNdlU1ZiHdhHBozu.lW./VQNwGRDrLb3AorQrhcO8G.ybsZO', 2, 0, 1572988420),
(46, 'admin3', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$PSg6HcPcuG4hVMZUmxAHAOxcz7okvpolHq3wvUrsFRRbdpLU3rcsW', 2, 0, 1572988754),
(47, 'iyaw', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$/wqN9x19ECy10WS8wSWCG.//Jd0w/UMlWb5IJlJ6plcnzforPotMu', 2, 0, 1573526268),
(48, 'user', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$xdhSBWvvYIv0qtFJ.96eweU1IwQMW4u/EgOAXV7femxt3XHWS.RIG', 2, 0, 1573693327),
(49, 'jidan', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$5gB5m.qUHzjV54X7SRc17.VbaKj.yfjqFimvnwONJlYb7ysiVSzwq', 2, 0, 1573782412),
(50, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$eqiourZBvsbBntFexZ07KuvMDfQB7mciZs5lYBE00bbb9f1cQaWoq', 2, 0, 1574058922),
(51, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$aocLVbNK9PcIJ9q.gsWac.CcZkfLfM2EITwgI5EsgCqM8/m8C3Wr2', 2, 0, 1574059560),
(52, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$JWc1vfK3hu2o7iihAcAMQ.Ccana3qYZZwbHT/pF5r6wFxUG7BCioq', 2, 0, 1574059785),
(53, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$iKAaZOGj2aQV2Je/sqIsiO1n9xZLbC9bqpzdQJE0jlr.Tqi/l6T9q', 2, 0, 1574059876),
(54, 'adminbaru', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$HIwX1v/AaUeTvKKC6xN2QOMk1q7VsyAQbg8WejZNFmcnWeO0ZkjCW', 2, 0, 1574059972),
(55, 'adminbaru2', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$.eisuWI.QjJq.9rvYCVhTOqWrDqhUnPbHnYDIh.6EhZuekq3.UNva', 2, 0, 1574060119),
(56, 'admin', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$egnZaxQwRya7zcOVCecyguMcgNR1f3zjwTCx7E.zf7.YRjBuWO8Ke', 2, 0, 1574060262),
(57, 'Ryan', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$Pz9BAhO1AREbQWhV7v5JauY/OnefRSrRy2g7pb3BD4wO5odSP5OD2', 2, 0, 1574126317);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `user_access_menu`
--
CREATE TABLE `user_access_menu` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`role_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`menu_id` int(11) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `user_access_menu`
--
INSERT INTO `user_access_menu` (`id`, `role_id`, `menu_id`) VALUES
(1, 1, 1),
(3, 2, 2),
(8, 1, 2),
(9, 1, 3);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `user_menu`
--
CREATE TABLE `user_menu` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`menu` varchar(128) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `user_menu`
--
INSERT INTO `user_menu` (`id`, `menu`) VALUES
(1, 'Admin'),
(2, 'User');
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `user_role`
--
CREATE TABLE `user_role` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`role` varchar(128) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `user_role`
--
INSERT INTO `user_role` (`id`, `role`) VALUES
(1, 'Administrator'),
(2, 'Member');
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `user_sub_menu`
--
CREATE TABLE `user_sub_menu` (
`id` int(128) NOT NULL,
`menu_id` int(128) NOT NULL,
`title` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`url` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`icon` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`is_active` int(1) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `user_sub_menu`
--
INSERT INTO `user_sub_menu` (`id`, `menu_id`, `title`, `url`, `icon`, `is_active`) VALUES
(1, 2, 'Buku Tamu', 'user/buku', 'fas fa-fw fa-book', 1),
(2, 2, 'Profile Saya', 'user', 'fas fa-fw fa-user', 1),
(3, 2, 'Edit Profile', 'user/edit', 'fas fa-fw fa-user-edit', 1),
(7, 1, 'Donasi Admin', 'admin/role', 'fas fa-fw fa-user-tie', 1),
(8, 2, 'Ganti Password', 'user/changepassword', 'fas fa-fw fa-key', 1),
(9, 1, 'Buku Tamu Admin', 'admin/buku', 'fas fa-fw fa-book', 1);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `user_token`
--
CREATE TABLE `user_token` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`email` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`token` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`date_created` int(11) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `user_token`
--
INSERT INTO `user_token` (`id`, `email`, `token`, `date_created`) VALUES
(1, '<EMAIL>', 'D1gbqAPf9nJKSuqT3MzajL+HbysjHonKvuKQncW9JmU=', 1567990523),
(2, '<EMAIL>', 'EPfATLapzeirUIjf8OEID2H9p/iUIjvxTAit5uvpLj0=', 1568000383),
(3, '<EMAIL>', 'n6RDfg9RHEKtHKhJ/uPa2nu+gxrlLGg9f4vHEZyqq+g=', 1568001196),
(4, '<EMAIL>', 'sBa5RJW6JHA1oyoZz8FXDPWeoR/8XCdf+/FH3M7L7yI=', 1568001490),
(5, '<EMAIL>', 'xDUT3W4kL8tpZNZlWDM1+Og0ssdHXc6DVIIXzap/JDw=', 1568247608),
(6, '<EMAIL>', 'WjglPQVnc67OOZQm0NYAKN5lM8PboJRuc8G+9+2gjdc=', 1568260008),
(7, '<EMAIL>', 'L0tceLkM31fkHI1ozlNVsqV3jObI46ZGa3h1pkaCxZk=', 1568260412),
(8, '<EMAIL>', 'YLd5qIB5g962gM8Qy9XcoRTWDxYbMcJyW/nnWVIoxSs=', 1568354171),
(9, '<EMAIL>', 'kl5FKOFV5EPSXGDCGERx0+OCkdLFhlUAWWYrY7z3P64=', 1571642775),
(10, '<EMAIL>', 'osWEc2GzVhJpbHPDyqAFukUr0E+VIGqkEvt8thVKYto=', 1571642855),
(11, '<EMAIL>', 'kAwbUJylrNEvW5l89SkceAbp1UJmbI8fgv3F7wPy3xw=', 1571923279),
(12, '<EMAIL>', 'tr+Gt8LuZXabIO+ZcgBjzNxVHp9REvFkCeJKwKBoIYk=', 1572059310),
(13, '<EMAIL>', 'tse8LKvwCT+n289JPcXRpD/M3iCIZdDIQRFDEYyFVtM=', 1572059525),
(14, '<EMAIL>', 'sfn70pP/dKrQ21IumJrsMIu0C2uI1GD3GVRh006Bms8=', 1572059572),
(15, '<EMAIL>', '3/XHD1/ac8r6iVYpBpu4P/Rvwy1HrS+JeGXwo5TYDcE=', 1572059691),
(16, '<EMAIL>', 'XLxEaYivmeiPgGr2c5Quv4mcEGNOXhzSTpZaWptoR30=', 1572060306),
(17, '<EMAIL>', 'L46AaKeysmv8lusWFHNAyLfnRXwv6txmu0UxMwrf9zk=', 1572064359),
(18, '<EMAIL>', 'Z0YIvLaa9lVzdbcwUavgfmcbb3Rge2ESWrUlQjZOsUE=', 1572225166),
(20, '<EMAIL>', 'WgBUYrPMte+0m1FXj5jpnbEYMvfPUo8+vcWsvbhRig0=', 1572232615),
(21, '<EMAIL>', 'oC1MBq72n4QXqQRNdEiktWpgaLE1KYnhRGc3ubnhh7s=', 1572822600),
(22, '<EMAIL>', 'lyE6R+JdkdLoqXZWD/d/BUrnv7YzV10VFYxGp67F06s=', 1572987463),
(23, '<EMAIL>', 'rQqZUs1IGVSp5Px5WFN+lr+XoAuXMrWaE2KiTqE2UZA=', 1572987765),
(24, '<EMAIL>', '8F5IaHJcRJP3pHM4WzNPgww8I0bPUQ8Ti4c+5MiwG2w=', 1572987934),
(25, '<EMAIL>', 'bzKQRI5qugQn82oyFqLLiOvHd+xhmvdPuyNcn0XuXUA=', 1572987961),
(26, '<EMAIL>', 'sI1uQ1vhjIy7eLGdhseDpijp6bKWlFmM8B+rlZyhMfY=', 1572987998),
(27, '<EMAIL>', 'd3aQhXmsnvU0EJeRg0VoPcBRAvaOvQ0Z9/YPBwJU8h0=', 1572988130),
(28, '<EMAIL>', 'oDR5QRfEBKzqc2zPP3QYOcpYXt/oC2sRWwqU1sIEElU=', 1572988420),
(29, '<EMAIL>', '4laNVtMAeYDe9gsBAJgdHF6in8BsW3RRjhtLaO0KKlE=', 1572988754),
(30, '<EMAIL>', 'lRf9vP/8ZzF+H77nPH6gC7R2JTz7ST4oO4D1EgEuK/Q=', 1573526268),
(31, '<EMAIL>', 'UsSTwAOfgmQCYQSjO86mtc2QPdnm+bSFruPeowlDq0A=', 1573693327),
(32, '<EMAIL>', 'Sy/EJvyKCXqZE2UeojH4P03brAPJx9hiT0huBe+unPc=', 1573782412),
(33, '<EMAIL>', 'GTZAp684cd9sKGrM6kc3OijMqPwYGgJ8iZX+JVgZNdI=', 1573782701),
(34, '<EMAIL>', 'QMNcG+eGOZLMj9TLNlWgDPWIPET3917bgRqEu28jv84=', 1574058922),
(35, '<EMAIL>', 'FYPW51QjXo0Dru+2oN3TX1fC5iyRD5vCt2i8PLT8aBY=', 1574059560),
(36, '<EMAIL>', 'tnhc8p4aY8U6vaepSl8EQOFumB9FpMVSiIBmk2S9tgc=', 1574059785),
(37, '<EMAIL>', 'fCcvEnPmoh78xbXvSwfU0MjV/T75XXW8lnEC9aWG/0M=', 1574059876),
(38, '<EMAIL>', 'LVBmSw25FDaoMbjO49MZt9skcjrRTflrbQl0P0Ju7DU=', 1574059972),
(39, '<EMAIL>', 'FnHPEYRH9NOWaCq/ehwKBR5fCNg6h4z8zfDOJ8O9ce4=', 1574060119),
(40, '<EMAIL>', 'ufVtfAkT0dsw3YwfkzgZ2szFd2D5W0+Os59NjJil0ZY=', 1574060262),
(41, '<EMAIL>', 'uwSazmOCmMgociaScygrXPk1oF7ztlZI/FdEmjv6EmU=', 1574126317);
--
-- Indexes for dumped tables
--
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `mahasiswa`
--
ALTER TABLE `mahasiswa`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `user`
--
ALTER TABLE `user`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `user_access_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_access_menu`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `user_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_menu`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `user_role`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_role`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `user_sub_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_sub_menu`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `user_token`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_token`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel yang dibuang
--
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `mahasiswa`
--
ALTER TABLE `mahasiswa`
MODIFY `id` int(250) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=20;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `user`
--
ALTER TABLE `user`
MODIFY `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=58;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `user_access_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_access_menu`
MODIFY `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=10;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `user_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_menu`
MODIFY `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=3;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `user_role`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_role`
MODIFY `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=3;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `user_sub_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_sub_menu`
MODIFY `id` int(128) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=10;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `user_token`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_token`
MODIFY `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=42;
--
-- Database: `latihan_1`
--
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `latihan_1` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci;
USE `latihan_1`;
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `latihan_2`
--
CREATE TABLE `latihan_2` (
`id` varchar(15) NOT NULL,
`nama` varchar(20) DEFAULT NULL,
`hobi` varchar(30) DEFAULT NULL,
`nama_mantan` varchar(30) DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `latihan_2`
--
INSERT INTO `latihan_2` (`id`, `nama`, `hobi`, `nama_mantan`) VALUES
('1', 'RINO', 'berak', 'ayu'),
('2', 'akmal', 'colay', 'rani'),
('3', 'rifky', 'ngocok', 'ananda febiani');
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pengarang`
--
CREATE TABLE `pengarang` (
`id_pengarang` char(5) NOT NULL,
`nama_pengarang` varchar(30) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `pengarang`
--
INSERT INTO `pengarang` (`id_pengarang`, `nama_pengarang`) VALUES
('AST98', '<NAME>'),
('AYG78', '<NAME>'),
('BRM25', '<NAME>'),
('DBN01', 'Dan brown');
--
-- Indexes for dumped tables
--
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `latihan_2`
--
ALTER TABLE `latihan_2`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pengarang`
--
ALTER TABLE `pengarang`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id_pengarang`);
--
-- Database: `latihan_crud`
--
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `latihan_crud` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci;
USE `latihan_crud`;
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `crud`
--
CREATE TABLE `crud` (
`id` int(5) NOT NULL,
`nama` varchar(20) NOT NULL,
`alamat` varchar(20) NOT NULL,
`pekerjaan` varchar(20) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
--
-- Indexes for dumped tables
--
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `crud`
--
ALTER TABLE `crud`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel yang dibuang
--
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `crud`
--
ALTER TABLE `crud`
MODIFY `id` int(5) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT;
--
-- Database: `phpmyadmin`
--
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `phpmyadmin` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_bin;
USE `phpmyadmin`;
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__bookmark`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__bookmark` (
`id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`dbase` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`user` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`label` varchar(255) CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`query` text COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Bookmarks';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__central_columns`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__central_columns` (
`db_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`col_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`col_type` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`col_length` text COLLATE utf8_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`col_collation` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`col_isNull` tinyint(1) NOT NULL,
`col_extra` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8_bin DEFAULT '',
`col_default` text COLLATE utf8_bin DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Central list of columns';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__column_info`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__column_info` (
`id` int(5) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`db_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`table_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`column_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`comment` varchar(255) CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`mimetype` varchar(255) CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`transformation` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`transformation_options` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`input_transformation` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`input_transformation_options` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT ''
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Column information for phpMyAdmin';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__designer_settings`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__designer_settings` (
`username` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`settings_data` text COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Settings related to Designer';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__export_templates`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__export_templates` (
`id` int(5) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`username` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`export_type` varchar(10) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`template_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`template_data` text COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Saved export templates';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__favorite`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__favorite` (
`username` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`tables` text COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Favorite tables';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__history`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__history` (
`id` bigint(20) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`username` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`db` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`table` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`timevalue` timestamp NOT NULL DEFAULT current_timestamp(),
`sqlquery` text COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='SQL history for phpMyAdmin';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__navigationhiding`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__navigationhiding` (
`username` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`item_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`item_type` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`db_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`table_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Hidden items of navigation tree';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__pdf_pages`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__pdf_pages` (
`db_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`page_nr` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`page_descr` varchar(50) CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL DEFAULT ''
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='PDF relation pages for phpMyAdmin';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__recent`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__recent` (
`username` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`tables` text COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Recently accessed tables';
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `pma__recent`
--
INSERT INTO `pma__recent` (`username`, `tables`) VALUES
('root', '[{\"db\":\"latihan_crud\",\"table\":\"crud\"},{\"db\":\"latihan_1\",\"table\":\"pengarang\"},{\"db\":\"wpu_login\",\"table\":\"user\"},{\"db\":\"wpu_login\",\"table\":\"user_menu\"},{\"db\":\"wpu_login\",\"table\":\"user_sub_menu\"},{\"db\":\"wpu_login\",\"table\":\"user_access_menu\"},{\"db\":\"phpmyadmin\",\"table\":\"pma__users\"},{\"db\":\"wpu_login\",\"table\":\"user_role\"},{\"db\":\"latihan_1\",\"table\":\"latihan_2\"}]');
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__relation`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__relation` (
`master_db` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`master_table` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`master_field` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`foreign_db` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`foreign_table` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`foreign_field` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT ''
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Relation table';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__savedsearches`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__savedsearches` (
`id` int(5) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`username` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`db_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`search_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`search_data` text COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Saved searches';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__table_coords`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__table_coords` (
`db_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`table_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`pdf_page_number` int(11) NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
`x` float UNSIGNED NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
`y` float UNSIGNED NOT NULL DEFAULT 0
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Table coordinates for phpMyAdmin PDF output';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__table_info`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__table_info` (
`db_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`table_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
`display_field` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT ''
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Table information for phpMyAdmin';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__table_uiprefs`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__table_uiprefs` (
`username` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`db_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`table_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`prefs` text COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`last_update` timestamp NOT NULL DEFAULT current_timestamp() ON UPDATE current_timestamp()
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Tables'' UI preferences';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__tracking`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__tracking` (
`db_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`table_name` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`version` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`date_created` datetime NOT NULL,
`date_updated` datetime NOT NULL,
`schema_snapshot` text COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`schema_sql` text COLLATE utf8_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`data_sql` longtext COLLATE utf8_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`tracking` set('UPDATE','REPLACE','INSERT','DELETE','TRUNCATE','CREATE DATABASE','ALTER DATABASE','DROP DATABASE','CREATE TABLE','ALTER TABLE','RENAME TABLE','DROP TABLE','CREATE INDEX','DROP INDEX','CREATE VIEW','ALTER VIEW','DROP VIEW') COLLATE utf8_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`tracking_active` int(1) UNSIGNED NOT NULL DEFAULT 1
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Database changes tracking for phpMyAdmin';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__userconfig`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__userconfig` (
`username` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`timevalue` timestamp NOT NULL DEFAULT current_timestamp() ON UPDATE current_timestamp(),
`config_data` text COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='User preferences storage for phpMyAdmin';
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `pma__userconfig`
--
INSERT INTO `pma__userconfig` (`username`, `timevalue`, `config_data`) VALUES
('root', '2019-11-20 02:43:30', '{\"Console\\/Mode\":\"collapse\",\"lang\":\"id\"}');
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__usergroups`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__usergroups` (
`usergroup` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`tab` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`allowed` enum('Y','N') COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL DEFAULT 'N'
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='User groups with configured menu items';
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `pma__users`
--
CREATE TABLE `pma__users` (
`username` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL,
`usergroup` varchar(64) COLLATE utf8_bin NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_bin COMMENT='Users and their assignments to user groups';
--
-- Indexes for dumped tables
--
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__bookmark`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__bookmark`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__central_columns`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__central_columns`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`db_name`,`col_name`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__column_info`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__column_info`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
ADD UNIQUE KEY `db_name` (`db_name`,`table_name`,`column_name`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__designer_settings`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__designer_settings`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`username`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__export_templates`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__export_templates`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
ADD UNIQUE KEY `u_user_type_template` (`username`,`export_type`,`template_name`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__favorite`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__favorite`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`username`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__history`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__history`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
ADD KEY `username` (`username`,`db`,`table`,`timevalue`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__navigationhiding`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__navigationhiding`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`username`,`item_name`,`item_type`,`db_name`,`table_name`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__pdf_pages`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__pdf_pages`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`page_nr`),
ADD KEY `db_name` (`db_name`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__recent`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__recent`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`username`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__relation`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__relation`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`master_db`,`master_table`,`master_field`),
ADD KEY `foreign_field` (`foreign_db`,`foreign_table`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__savedsearches`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__savedsearches`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
ADD UNIQUE KEY `u_savedsearches_username_dbname` (`username`,`db_name`,`search_name`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__table_coords`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__table_coords`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`db_name`,`table_name`,`pdf_page_number`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__table_info`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__table_info`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`db_name`,`table_name`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__table_uiprefs`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__table_uiprefs`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`username`,`db_name`,`table_name`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__tracking`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__tracking`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`db_name`,`table_name`,`version`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__userconfig`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__userconfig`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`username`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__usergroups`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__usergroups`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`usergroup`,`tab`,`allowed`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `pma__users`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__users`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`username`,`usergroup`);
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel yang dibuang
--
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `pma__bookmark`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__bookmark`
MODIFY `id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `pma__column_info`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__column_info`
MODIFY `id` int(5) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `pma__export_templates`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__export_templates`
MODIFY `id` int(5) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `pma__history`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__history`
MODIFY `id` bigint(20) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `pma__pdf_pages`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__pdf_pages`
MODIFY `page_nr` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `pma__savedsearches`
--
ALTER TABLE `pma__savedsearches`
MODIFY `id` int(5) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT;
--
-- Database: `test`
--
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `test` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci;
USE `test`;
--
-- Database: `wpu_login`
--
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `wpu_login` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET latin1 COLLATE latin1_swedish_ci;
USE `wpu_login`;
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `user`
--
CREATE TABLE `user` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`name` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`email` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`image` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`password` varchar(256) NOT NULL,
`role_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`is_active` int(1) NOT NULL,
`date_created` int(11) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `user`
--
INSERT INTO `user` (`id`, `name`, `email`, `image`, `password`, `role_id`, `is_active`, `date_created`) VALUES
(3, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$gX4kydS30Do7MCWrvCTnCeJt15H7XtmFCSanefgLLGBGxF9gYkUHy', 2, 1, 1571787463),
(5, 'admin', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$8LhQQn4XTeHP0hxLeEAn.uqVxThgEpNxiK6kp8IPBAVVruA2qlOXG', 1, 1, 1571801058),
(6, 'user', '<EMAIL>', 'default.jpg', '$2y$10$4pIbS0Fwj8MElCH1plht6OBCpKBYpLlLqJeO/j.MqqRgNGXVvOOKa', 2, 1, 1572072090);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `user_access_menu`
--
CREATE TABLE `user_access_menu` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`role_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`menu_id` int(11) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `user_access_menu`
--
INSERT INTO `user_access_menu` (`id`, `role_id`, `menu_id`) VALUES
(1, 1, 1),
(2, 1, 2),
(3, 2, 2),
(4, 1, 3);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `user_menu`
--
CREATE TABLE `user_menu` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`menu` varchar(128) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `user_menu`
--
INSERT INTO `user_menu` (`id`, `menu`) VALUES
(1, 'Admin'),
(2, 'User'),
(3, 'Menu');
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `user_role`
--
CREATE TABLE `user_role` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`role` varchar(128) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `user_role`
--
INSERT INTO `user_role` (`id`, `role`) VALUES
(1, 'Administrator'),
(2, 'Member');
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `user_sub_menu`
--
CREATE TABLE `user_sub_menu` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`menu_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`title` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`url` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`icon` varchar(128) NOT NULL,
`is_active` int(1) NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `user_sub_menu`
--
INSERT INTO `user_sub_menu` (`id`, `menu_id`, `title`, `url`, `icon`, `is_active`) VALUES
(1, 1, 'Dashboard', 'admin', 'fas fa-fw fa-tachometer-alt', 1),
(2, 2, 'My Profile', 'user', 'fas fa-fw fa-user', 1),
(3, 2, 'Edit Profile', 'user/edit', 'fas fa-fw fa-user-edit', 1),
(4, 3, 'Menu Management', 'menu', 'fas fa-fw fa-folder', 1),
(5, 3, 'Submenu Management', 'menu/submenu', 'fas fa-fw fa-folder-open', 1);
--
-- Indexes for dumped tables
--
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `user`
--
ALTER TABLE `user`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `user_access_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_access_menu`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `user_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_menu`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `user_role`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_role`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `user_sub_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_sub_menu`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel yang dibuang
--
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `user`
--
ALTER TABLE `user`
MODIFY `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=7;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `user_access_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_access_menu`
MODIFY `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=5;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `user_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_menu`
MODIFY `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=5;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `user_role`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_role`
MODIFY `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=3;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `user_sub_menu`
--
ALTER TABLE `user_sub_menu`
MODIFY `id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=6;
COMMIT;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET COLLATION_CONNECTION=@OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
|
-- phpMyAdmin SQL Dump
-- version 4.9.1
-- https://www.phpmyadmin.net/
--
-- Host: localhost
-- Waktu pembuatan: 09 Jan 2020 pada 15.11
-- Versi server: 10.4.8-MariaDB
-- Versi PHP: 7.1.32
SET SQL_MODE = "NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO";
SET AUTOCOMMIT = 0;
START TRANSACTION;
SET time_zone = "+00:00";
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@@CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@@CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION=@@COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
/*!40101 SET NAMES utf8mb4 */;
--
-- Database: `ticket`
--
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `account`
--
CREATE TABLE `account` (
`account_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`nama` varchar(100) DEFAULT NULL,
`email` varchar(100) DEFAULT NULL,
`password` varchar(100) DEFAULT NULL,
`role` int(3) DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `account`
--
INSERT INTO `account` (`account_id`, `nama`, `email`, `password`, `role`) VALUES
(1, 'admin', '<EMAIL>', '<PASSWORD>', 1),
(2, 'kasir', '<EMAIL>', '<PASSWORD>', 0);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `antrian`
--
CREATE TABLE `antrian` (
`antrian_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`tiket_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `antrian`
--
INSERT INTO `antrian` (`antrian_id`, `tiket_id`) VALUES
(193, 169);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `board`
--
CREATE TABLE `board` (
`board_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`tiket_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `board`
--
INSERT INTO `board` (`board_id`, `tiket_id`) VALUES
(1, 160),
(2, 160),
(3, 160),
(4, 160),
(5, 160),
(6, 160),
(7, 160),
(8, 160),
(9, 160),
(10, 160),
(11, 160),
(12, 160),
(13, 160),
(14, 160),
(15, 168),
(16, 168),
(17, 168),
(18, 169),
(19, 169),
(20, 169);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `loket`
--
CREATE TABLE `loket` (
`loket_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`account_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`loket_no` varchar(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`status` int(3) DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `loket`
--
INSERT INTO `loket` (`loket_id`, `account_id`, `loket_no`, `status`) VALUES
(5, NULL, '1', 0),
(6, 2, '2', 1),
(7, NULL, '3', 0),
(8, 2, '4', 1);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `main`
--
CREATE TABLE `main` (
`main_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`users_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`tiket_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`start` timestamp NULL DEFAULT current_timestamp(),
`finish` datetime DEFAULT NULL,
`durasi` varchar(50) DEFAULT NULL,
`status` smallint(3) DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `main`
--
INSERT INTO `main` (`main_id`, `users_id`, `tiket_id`, `start`, `finish`, `durasi`, `status`) VALUES
(55, 15, 153, '2019-12-27 14:25:00', '2019-12-27 21:25:13', '00 Jam - 0 Menit', NULL),
(56, 16, 158, '2019-12-28 11:26:53', NULL, NULL, NULL);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `tiket`
--
CREATE TABLE `tiket` (
`tiket_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`tiket_no` int(50) DEFAULT NULL,
`loket_no` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`create_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT current_timestamp(),
`update_at` datetime DEFAULT current_timestamp(),
`date_in` date DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `tiket`
--
INSERT INTO `tiket` (`tiket_id`, `tiket_no`, `loket_no`, `create_at`, `update_at`, `date_in`) VALUES
(4, 1, 3, '2019-12-23 13:00:40', '2019-12-23 20:00:40', '2019-12-22'),
(5, 2, 2, '2019-12-23 13:00:55', '2019-12-23 20:00:55', '2019-12-22'),
(15, 1, 3, '2019-12-23 13:28:29', '2019-12-23 20:28:29', '2019-12-23'),
(16, 2, 2, '2019-12-23 13:28:30', '2019-12-23 20:28:30', '2019-12-23'),
(17, 3, 4, '2019-12-23 13:28:34', '2019-12-23 20:28:34', '2019-12-23'),
(18, 4, 2, '2019-12-23 14:44:29', '2019-12-23 21:44:29', '2019-12-23'),
(67, 1, 2, '2019-12-24 12:28:13', '2019-12-24 19:28:13', '2019-12-24'),
(68, 2, 2, '2019-12-24 12:30:38', '2019-12-24 19:30:38', '2019-12-24'),
(69, 3, 2, '2019-12-24 12:30:39', '2019-12-24 19:30:39', '2019-12-24'),
(70, 4, 3, '2019-12-24 12:39:22', '2019-12-24 19:39:22', '2019-12-24'),
(71, 5, 3, '2019-12-24 12:39:24', '2019-12-24 19:39:24', '2019-12-24'),
(72, 6, 3, '2019-12-24 12:40:25', '2019-12-24 19:40:25', '2019-12-24'),
(73, 7, NULL, '2019-12-24 12:40:28', '2019-12-24 19:40:28', '2019-12-24'),
(74, 8, NULL, '2019-12-24 12:40:29', '2019-12-24 19:40:29', '2019-12-24'),
(83, 1, 1, '2019-12-26 09:44:57', '2019-12-26 16:44:57', '2019-12-26'),
(84, 2, 1, '2019-12-26 09:59:15', '2019-12-26 16:59:15', '2019-12-26'),
(85, 3, 1, '2019-12-26 10:16:11', '2019-12-26 17:16:11', '2019-12-26'),
(86, 4, 1, '2019-12-26 10:17:28', '2019-12-26 17:17:28', '2019-12-26'),
(105, 1, 1, '2019-12-27 05:58:37', '2019-12-27 12:58:37', '2019-12-27'),
(106, 2, 1, '2019-12-27 05:58:39', '2019-12-27 12:58:39', '2019-12-27'),
(107, 3, 1, '2019-12-27 05:58:40', '2019-12-27 12:58:40', '2019-12-27'),
(123, 4, 1, '2019-12-27 06:56:01', '2019-12-27 13:56:01', '2019-12-27'),
(124, 5, 1, '2019-12-27 06:56:02', '2019-12-27 13:56:02', '2019-12-27'),
(125, 6, 1, '2019-12-27 06:56:03', '2019-12-27 13:56:03', '2019-12-27'),
(138, 7, 4, '2019-12-27 07:19:00', '2019-12-27 14:19:00', '2019-12-27'),
(139, 8, 4, '2019-12-27 07:20:07', '2019-12-27 14:20:07', '2019-12-27'),
(140, 9, 4, '2019-12-27 07:20:08', '2019-12-27 14:20:08', '2019-12-27'),
(141, 10, 4, '2019-12-27 07:23:55', '2019-12-27 14:23:55', '2019-12-27'),
(142, 11, 1, '2019-12-27 07:24:17', '2019-12-27 14:24:17', '2019-12-27'),
(143, 12, 1, '2019-12-27 07:24:18', '2019-12-27 14:24:18', '2019-12-27'),
(144, 13, 4, '2019-12-27 07:24:30', '2019-12-27 14:24:30', '2019-12-27'),
(145, 14, 4, '2019-12-27 07:24:31', '2019-12-27 14:24:31', '2019-12-27'),
(146, 15, 2, '2019-12-27 09:16:02', '2019-12-27 16:16:02', '2019-12-27'),
(147, 16, 1, '2019-12-27 09:16:03', '2019-12-27 16:16:03', '2019-12-27'),
(148, 17, 4, '2019-12-27 09:16:04', '2019-12-27 16:16:04', '2019-12-27'),
(149, 18, 4, '2019-12-27 09:16:35', '2019-12-27 16:16:35', '2019-12-27'),
(150, 19, 4, '2019-12-27 09:24:36', '2019-12-27 16:24:36', '2019-12-27'),
(151, 20, 4, '2019-12-27 09:24:36', '2019-12-27 16:24:36', '2019-12-27'),
(152, 21, 4, '2019-12-27 09:24:54', '2019-12-27 16:24:54', '2019-12-27'),
(153, 22, 4, '2019-12-27 10:50:23', '2019-12-27 17:50:23', '2019-12-27'),
(154, 23, 4, '2019-12-27 13:03:03', '2019-12-27 20:03:03', '2019-12-27'),
(155, 24, NULL, '2019-12-27 13:03:06', '2019-12-27 20:03:06', '2019-12-27'),
(156, 25, NULL, '2019-12-27 13:03:07', '2019-12-27 20:03:07', '2019-12-27'),
(157, 1, 4, '2019-12-28 11:16:53', '2019-12-28 18:16:53', '2019-12-28'),
(158, 2, 4, '2019-12-28 11:16:53', '2019-12-28 18:16:53', '2019-12-28'),
(159, 3, 2, '2019-12-28 11:16:56', '2019-12-28 18:16:56', '2019-12-28'),
(160, 4, 2, '2019-12-28 11:16:57', '2019-12-28 18:16:57', '2019-12-28'),
(161, 5, 2, '2019-12-28 12:39:05', '2019-12-28 19:39:05', '2019-12-28'),
(162, 6, 2, '2019-12-28 12:39:06', '2019-12-28 19:39:06', '2019-12-28'),
(163, 7, 2, '2019-12-28 12:45:18', '2019-12-28 19:45:18', '2019-12-28'),
(164, 8, 2, '2019-12-28 12:45:19', '2019-12-28 19:45:19', '2019-12-28'),
(165, 9, 2, '2019-12-28 12:45:24', '2019-12-28 19:45:24', '2019-12-28'),
(166, 10, 2, '2019-12-28 12:45:31', '2019-12-28 19:45:31', '2019-12-28'),
(167, 11, 2, '2019-12-28 13:55:15', '2019-12-28 20:55:15', '2019-12-28'),
(168, 12, 2, '2019-12-28 13:55:47', '2019-12-28 20:55:47', '2019-12-28'),
(169, 13, 2, '2019-12-28 13:55:48', '2019-12-28 20:55:48', '2019-12-28'),
(170, 14, NULL, '2019-12-28 14:02:43', '2019-12-28 21:02:43', '2019-12-28'),
(171, 15, NULL, '2019-12-28 14:12:42', '2019-12-28 21:12:42', '2019-12-28'),
(172, 16, NULL, '2019-12-28 14:13:06', '2019-12-28 21:13:06', '2019-12-28'),
(173, 17, NULL, '2019-12-28 14:13:07', '2019-12-28 21:13:07', '2019-12-28'),
(174, 18, NULL, '2019-12-28 14:14:27', '2019-12-28 21:14:27', '2019-12-28'),
(175, 19, NULL, '2019-12-28 14:22:54', '2019-12-28 21:22:54', '2019-12-28'),
(176, 20, NULL, '2019-12-28 14:25:43', '2019-12-28 21:25:43', '2019-12-28');
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Struktur dari tabel `users`
--
CREATE TABLE `users` (
`users_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`name` varchar(100) DEFAULT NULL,
`email` varchar(1000) DEFAULT NULL,
`telp` varchar(20) DEFAULT NULL,
`alamat` varchar(1000) DEFAULT NULL,
`create_at` datetime DEFAULT NULL ON UPDATE current_timestamp(),
`update_at` datetime DEFAULT NULL ON UPDATE current_timestamp()
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4;
--
-- Dumping data untuk tabel `users`
--
INSERT INTO `users` (`users_id`, `name`, `email`, `telp`, `alamat`, `create_at`, `update_at`) VALUES
(6, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', '083845786165', '(Offis Coworking space) Jl. Serayu Timur, RT.28/RW.08, Pandean, Taman, Kota Madiun, Jawa Timur 63133 ( sebelah thecemiland)', NULL, NULL),
(7, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', '083845786165', '(Offis Coworking space) Jl. Serayu Timur, RT.28/RW.08, Pandean, Taman, Kota Madiun, Jawa Timur 63133 ( sebelah thecemiland)', NULL, NULL),
(8, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', '083845786165', '(Offis Coworking space) Jl. Serayu Timur, RT.28/RW.08, Pandean, Taman, Kota Madiun, Jawa Timur 63133 ( sebelah thecemiland)', NULL, NULL),
(9, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', '083845786165', '(Offis Coworking space) Jl. Serayu Timur, RT.28/RW.08, Pandean, Taman, Kota Madiun, Jawa Timur 63133 ( sebelah thecemiland)', NULL, NULL),
(10, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', '083845786165', '(Offis Coworking space) Jl. Serayu Timur, RT.28/RW.08, Pandean, Taman, Kota Madiun, Jawa Timur 63133 ( sebelah thecemiland)', NULL, NULL),
(11, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', '083845786165', '(Offis Coworking space) Jl. Serayu Timur, RT.28/RW.08, Pandean, Taman, Kota Madiun, Jawa Timur 63133 ( sebelah thecemiland)', NULL, NULL),
(12, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', '083845786165', '(Offis Coworking space) Jl. Serayu Timur, RT.28/RW.08, Pandean, Taman, Kota Madiun, Jawa Timur 63133 ( sebelah thecemiland)', NULL, NULL),
(13, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', '083845786165', '(Offis Coworking space) Jl. Serayu Timur, RT.28/RW.08, Pandean, Taman, Kota Madiun, Jawa Timur 63133 ( sebelah thecemiland)', NULL, NULL),
(14, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', '083845786165', '(Offis Coworking space) Jl. Serayu Timur, RT.28/RW.08, Pandean, Taman, Kota Madiun, Jawa Timur 63133 ( sebelah thecemiland)', NULL, NULL),
(15, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', '083845786165', '(Offis Coworking space) Jl. Serayu Timur, RT.28/RW.08, Pandean, Taman, Kota Madiun, Jawa Timur 63133 ( sebelah thecemiland)', NULL, NULL),
(16, '<NAME>', '<EMAIL>', '083845786165', '(Offis Coworking space) Jl. Serayu Timur, RT.28/RW.08, Pandean, Taman, Kota Madiun, Jawa Timur 63133 ( sebelah thecemiland)', NULL, NULL);
--
-- Indexes for dumped tables
--
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `account`
--
ALTER TABLE `account`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`account_id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `antrian`
--
ALTER TABLE `antrian`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`antrian_id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `board`
--
ALTER TABLE `board`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`board_id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `loket`
--
ALTER TABLE `loket`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`loket_id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `main`
--
ALTER TABLE `main`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`main_id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `tiket`
--
ALTER TABLE `tiket`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`tiket_id`);
--
-- Indeks untuk tabel `users`
--
ALTER TABLE `users`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`users_id`);
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel yang dibuang
--
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `account`
--
ALTER TABLE `account`
MODIFY `account_id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=7;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `antrian`
--
ALTER TABLE `antrian`
MODIFY `antrian_id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=194;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `board`
--
ALTER TABLE `board`
MODIFY `board_id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=21;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `loket`
--
ALTER TABLE `loket`
MODIFY `loket_id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=9;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `main`
--
ALTER TABLE `main`
MODIFY `main_id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=57;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `tiket`
--
ALTER TABLE `tiket`
MODIFY `tiket_id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=177;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT untuk tabel `users`
--
ALTER TABLE `users`
MODIFY `users_id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=17;
COMMIT;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET COLLATION_CONNECTION=@OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
|
<filename>api/prisma/migrations/20211115212834_initial/migration.sql
-- CreateTable
CREATE TABLE "User" (
"id" TEXT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
"authId" TEXT NOT NULL,
"createdAt" DATETIME NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
"updatedAt" DATETIME NOT NULL,
"name" TEXT NOT NULL,
"email" TEXT NOT NULL
);
-- CreateTable
CREATE TABLE "Wallet" (
"id" TEXT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
"createdAt" DATETIME NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
"updatedAt" DATETIME NOT NULL,
"name" TEXT NOT NULL,
"address" TEXT NOT NULL,
"userId" TEXT NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT "Wallet_userId_fkey" FOREIGN KEY ("userId") REFERENCES "User" ("id") ON DELETE RESTRICT ON UPDATE CASCADE
);
-- CreateIndex
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "User_authId_key" ON "User"("authId");
-- CreateIndex
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "User_email_key" ON "User"("email");
-- CreateIndex
CREATE INDEX "User_authId_idx" ON "User"("authId");
|
<reponame>zsvoboda/olympics
with distinct_medals as (
select distinct
coalesce("Medal"::varchar(10), 'None') as medal_name
from "olympics_stage"."athlete_events"
)
select
row_number() over (order by "medal_name" asc) as medal_id,
medal_name
from distinct_medals
|
-- MySQL Script handcrafted
SET @OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS=@@UNIQUE_CHECKS, UNIQUE_CHECKS=0;
SET @OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=@@FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS, FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
SET @OLD_SQL_MODE=@@SQL_MODE, SQL_MODE='TRADITIONAL,ALLOW_INVALID_DATES';
-- -----------------------------------------------------
-- Schema CodyMaze
-- -----------------------------------------------------
USE `CodyMaze`;
DROP TABLE `CodyMaze`.`Moves`;
SET SQL_MODE=@OLD_SQL_MODE;
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=@OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS;
SET UNIQUE_CHECKS=@OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS;
|
<reponame>Soumya-Dey/PL-SQL-programs<filename>syntax-loop/1-continue.sql
set serveroutput on
DECLARE
no NUMBER := 0;
BEGIN
FOR i IN 1 .. 5 LOOP
IF i = 4 THEN
CONTINUE;
END IF;
DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE('Iteration : ' || i);
END LOOP;
END;
/
|
<filename>sql_queries/insert_groupMembership.sql
INSERT INTO public."usersGroupsMembership" ("userId", "groupId")
VALUES ('Rwh6pbBFCZYWTud0C2GqUDppV7m1' , 1)
|
<gh_stars>1-10
SET DEFINE OFF;
ALTER TABLE AFW_12_LIEN_GROUP_UTILS ADD (
CONSTRAINT AFW_12_LIEN_GROUP_UTILS_FK2
FOREIGN KEY (REF_UTILS)
REFERENCES AFW_12_UTILS (SEQNC)
ON DELETE CASCADE
ENABLE VALIDATE)
/
|
CREATE PROCEDURE [dbo].[dnn_CoreMessaging_GetSubscriptionsByUser]
@PortalId int,
@UserId int,
@SubscriptionTypeID int
AS
BEGIN
SELECT *
FROM dbo.[dnn_CoreMessaging_Subscriptions]
WHERE
(( @PortalId is null and PortalId is null) or (PortalId = @PortalId))
AND UserId = @UserId
AND (@SubscriptionTypeID IS NULL OR SubscriptionTypeID = @SubscriptionTypeID)
END
|
<reponame>mode/blog
# Deal Count and Round Size
SELECT DATE_TRUNC('quarter',c.first_funding_at) AS quarter,
COUNT(DISTINCT c.permalink) AS companies,
COUNT(DISTINCT CASE WHEN i.vc_company = 1 THEN c.permalink ELSE NULL END) AS vc_companies,
COUNT(DISTINCT CASE WHEN i.vc_company = 0 THEN c.permalink ELSE NULL END) AS non_vc_companies,
SUM(i.round_size) AS total_round,
SUM(CASE WHEN i.vc_company = 1 THEN i.round_size ELSE 0 END) AS vc_total_round,
SUM(CASE WHEN i.vc_company = 0 THEN i.round_size ELSE 0 END) AS non_vc_total_round
FROM crunchbase_companies_oct_2013 c
JOIN (
SELECT i.company_permalink,
i.funded_at,
i.funding_round_type,
COUNT(DISTINCT i.investor_permalink) AS investors,
SUM(i.raised_amount_usd) AS round_size,
MAX(CASE WHEN i.investor_permalink LIKE '%financial-organization%' THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) AS vc_company
FROM crunchbase_investments_oct_2013 i
WHERE i.funded_at >= '2008-01-01'
GROUP BY 1,2,3
) i
ON i.company_permalink = c.permalink
AND i.funded_at = c.first_funding_at
AND i.round_size <= 4000000
GROUP BY 1
ORDER BY 1
# Follow-on Rounds
SELECT DATE_TRUNC('quarter',c.first_funding_at) AS quarter,
COUNT(DISTINCT CASE WHEN i.round_size > 4000000 THEN c.permalink ELSE NULL END) AS no_seed,
COUNT(DISTINCT CASE WHEN i.round_size <= 4000000 AND i.vc_company = 1 THEN c.permalink ELSE NULL END) AS raised_vc_seed,
COUNT(DISTINCT CASE WHEN i.round_size <= 4000000 AND i.vc_company = 0 THEN c.permalink ELSE NULL END) AS raised_non_vc_seed,
COUNT(DISTINCT CASE WHEN i.round_size > 4000000 AND c.funding_rounds > 1 THEN c.permalink ELSE NULL END) AS no_seed_f,
COUNT(DISTINCT CASE WHEN i.round_size <= 4000000 AND i.vc_company = 1 AND c.funding_rounds > 1 THEN c.permalink ELSE NULL END) AS raised_vc_seed_f,
COUNT(DISTINCT CASE WHEN i.round_size <= 4000000 AND i.vc_company = 0 AND c.funding_rounds > 1 THEN c.permalink ELSE NULL END) AS raised_non_vc_seed_f
FROM crunchbase_companies_oct_2013 c
JOIN (
SELECT i.company_permalink,
i.funded_at,
i.funding_round_type,
COUNT(DISTINCT i.investor_permalink) AS investors,
SUM(i.raised_amount_usd) AS round_size,
MAX(CASE WHEN i.investor_permalink LIKE '%financial-organization%' THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) AS vc_company
FROM crunchbase_investments_oct_2013 i
WHERE i.funded_at >= '2008-01-01'
GROUP BY 1,2,3
) i
ON i.company_permalink = c.permalink
AND i.funded_at = c.first_funding_at
AND i.round_size IS NOT NULL
GROUP BY 1
ORDER BY 1
# Size of rounds by company
SELECT a.name,
CASE WHEN a.raised_amount_usd > 4000000 AND a.round = 1 THEN 'no seed'
WHEN a.raised_amount_usd <= 4000000 AND a.round = 1 AND a.vc_company = 1 THEN 'vc seed'
WHEN a.raised_amount_usd <= 4000000 AND a.round = 1 AND a.vc_company = 0 THEN 'no vc'
ELSE 'WTF LOL' END AS type,
MAX(CASE WHEN a.round = 1 THEN a.raised_amount_usd ELSE NULL END) AS round_1,
MAX(CASE WHEN a.round = 2 THEN a.raised_amount_usd ELSE NULL END) AS round_2
FROM (
SELECT c.permalink,
c.name,
i.vc_company,
c.funding_rounds,
r.raised_amount_usd,
r.funded_at,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY c.permalink ORDER BY r.funded_at) AS round
FROM crunchbase_companies_oct_2013 c
JOIN (
SELECT i.company_permalink,
i.funded_at,
SUM(i.raised_amount_usd) AS round_size,
MAX(CASE WHEN i.investor_permalink LIKE '%financial-organization%' THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) AS vc_company
FROM crunchbase_investments_oct_2013 i
WHERE i.funded_at >= '2008-01-01'
GROUP BY 1,2
) i
ON i.company_permalink = c.permalink
AND i.funded_at = c.first_funding_at
AND i.round_size IS NOT NULL
JOIN crunchbase_rounds_oct_2013 r
ON r.company_permalink = c.permalink
WHERE c.first_funding_at >= '2009-01-01'
AND c.funding_rounds > 1
) a
GROUP BY 1,2
# Round growth rate
SELECT ROUND(z.round_1,-6) AS bucket,
AVG(z.round_2/z.round_1) AS avg_growth
FROM (
SELECT a.name,
a.type,
MAX(CASE WHEN a.round = 1 THEN a.raised_amount_usd ELSE NULL END) AS round_1,
MAX(CASE WHEN a.round = 2 THEN a.raised_amount_usd ELSE NULL END) AS round_2
FROM (
SELECT c.permalink,
c.name,
CASE WHEN i.round_size > 4000000 THEN 'no seed'
WHEN i.round_size <= 4000000 AND i.vc_company = 1 THEN 'vc seed'
WHEN i.round_size <= 4000000 AND i.vc_company = 0 THEN 'no vc'
ELSE 'WTF LOL' END AS type,
c.funding_rounds,
r.raised_amount_usd,
r.funded_at,
ROW_NUMBER() OVER (PARTITION BY c.permalink ORDER BY r.funded_at) AS round
FROM crunchbase_companies_oct_2013 c
JOIN (
SELECT i.company_permalink,
i.funded_at,
SUM(i.raised_amount_usd) AS round_size,
MAX(CASE WHEN i.investor_permalink LIKE '%financial-organization%' THEN 1 ELSE 0 END) AS vc_company
FROM crunchbase_investments_oct_2013 i
WHERE i.funded_at >= '2008-01-01'
GROUP BY 1,2
) i
ON i.company_permalink = c.permalink
AND i.funded_at = c.first_funding_at
AND i.round_size IS NOT NULL
JOIN crunchbase_rounds_oct_2013 r
ON r.company_permalink = c.permalink
WHERE c.first_funding_at >= '2009-01-01'
AND c.funding_rounds > 1
) a
GROUP BY 1,2,3,4
) z
GROUP BY 1
|
<reponame>colearendt/tidyblocks
create table colors(name text, red integer, green integer, blue integer);
insert into colors values('black', 0, 0, 0);
insert into colors values('red', 255, 0, 0);
insert into colors values('maroon', 128, 0, 0);
insert into colors values('lime', 0, 255, 0);
insert into colors values('green', 0, 128, 0);
insert into colors values('blue', 0, 0, 255);
insert into colors values('navy', 0, 0, 128);
insert into colors values('yellow', 255, 255, 0);
insert into colors values('fuchsia', 255, 0, 255);
insert into colors values('aqua', 0, 255, 255);
insert into colors values('white', 255, 255, 255);
.mode column
.headers off
select '## full table';
.headers on
select name, red, green, blue
from colors;
-- ## full table
-- name red green blue
-- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
-- black 0 0 0
-- red 255 0 0
-- maroon 128 0 0
-- lime 0 255 0
-- green 0 128 0
-- blue 0 0 255
-- navy 0 0 128
-- yellow 255 255 0
-- fuchsia 255 0 255
-- aqua 0 255 255
-- white 255 255 255
.headers off
select '';
select '## left after filtering';
.headers on
select left.red as _join_,
left.name as left_name,
left.red as left_red,
left.green as left_green,
left.blue as left_blue
from colors as left
where (left.red != 0);
-- ## left after filtering
-- _join_ left_name left_red left_green left_blue
-- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
-- 255 red 255 0 0
-- 128 maroon 128 0 0
-- 255 yellow 255 255 0
-- 255 fuchsia 255 0 255
-- 255 white 255 255 255
.headers off
select '';
select '## right after filtering';
.headers on
select right.green as _join_,
right.name as right_name,
right.red as right_red,
right.green as right_green,
right.blue as right_blue
from colors as right
where (right.green != 0);
-- ## right after filtering
-- _join_ right_name right_red right_green right_blue
-- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------- ----------
-- 255 lime 0 255 0
-- 128 green 0 128 0
-- 255 yellow 255 255 0
-- 255 aqua 0 255 255
-- 255 white 255 255 255
.headers off
select '';
select '## full inner join before filtering';
.headers on
select left.red as _join_,
left.name as left_name,
left.green as left_green,
left.blue as left_blue,
right.name as right_name,
right.red as right_red,
right.blue as right_blue
from colors as left inner join colors as right
on (left.red = right.green)
where (left.red != 0) and (right.green != 0);
-- ## full inner join before filtering
-- _join_ left_name left_green left_blue right_name right_red right_blue
-- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
-- 255 red 0 0 aqua 0 255
-- 255 red 0 0 lime 0 0
-- 255 red 0 0 white 255 255
-- 255 red 0 0 yellow 255 0
-- 128 maroon 0 0 green 0 0
-- 255 yellow 255 0 aqua 0 255
-- 255 yellow 255 0 lime 0 0
-- 255 yellow 255 0 white 255 255
-- 255 yellow 255 0 yellow 255 0
-- 255 fuchsia 0 255 aqua 0 255
-- 255 fuchsia 0 255 lime 0 0
-- 255 fuchsia 0 255 white 255 255
-- 255 fuchsia 0 255 yellow 255 0
-- 255 white 255 255 aqua 0 255
-- 255 white 255 255 lime 0 0
-- 255 white 255 255 white 255 255
-- 255 white 255 255 yellow 255 0
.headers off
select '';
select '## inner join after filtering';
.headers on
select left.red as _join_,
left.name as left_name,
left.green as left_green,
left.blue as left_blue,
right.name as right_name,
right.red as right_red,
right.blue as right_blue
from colors as left inner join colors as right
on (left.red = right.green)
where (left.red != 0) and (right.green != 0) and (left.blue != 0) and (right.blue != 0);
-- ## inner join after filtering
-- _join_ left_name left_green left_blue right_name right_red right_blue
-- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
-- 255 fuchsia 0 255 aqua 0 255
-- 255 fuchsia 0 255 white 255 255
-- 255 white 255 255 aqua 0 255
-- 255 white 255 255 white 255 255
|
<filename>src/test/sql/mysql/example/dml/insert-salgrade-table.sql
INSERT INTO test.SALGRADE (GRADE,LOSAL,HISAL) VALUES
(1.0,700.0,1200.0)
,(2.0,1201.0,1400.0)
,(3.0,1401.0,2000.0)
,(4.0,2001.0,3000.0)
,(5.0,3001.0,9999.0)
;
|
<gh_stars>0
/*Factura de Credito*/
EXEC dbo.Interfaz_VentasInsertar @Empresa = 'TUN', -- char(5)
@Mov = 'CFDI SIN VIAJE GRAV', -- char(20)
@FechaEmision = '2018-11-13T16:07:00', -- smalldatetime
@Concepto = 'VIAJE ESPECIAL GRAVADO', -- varchar(50)
@Moneda = 'Pesos', -- char(10)
@TipoCambio = 1.0, -- float
@Usuario = 'SITTI', -- char(10)
@Referencia = ' - ', -- varchar(50)
@Codigo = 'Prueba-00019-CRED', -- varchar(30)
@Cliente = '8365', -- char(10)
@Sucursal = 1, -- int
@Vencimiento = '2018-12-29T16:07:00', -- smalldatetime
@Importe = 862.0689, -- money
@Impuestos = 137.9310, -- money
@CentroDeCostos = 'P1012', -- varchar(20)
@TipoPago = 'NO IDENTIFICADO', -- varchar(50)
@Observaciones = '', -- varchar(100)
@Comentarios = ' - ', -- varchar(max)
@PartidasVtas = '', -- varchar(max)
@MovRelacionados = ''; -- varchar(max)
--Resultado
/*============================================*/
--ID MovID Estatus CFDFlexEstatus UUID FechaTimbrado
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--913127 TVE138555 CONCLUIDO CONCLUIDO BFEEDC84-24AA-4FB8-82BF-15912FF5B98A 2018-10-31 09:06:49.000
--913153 TVE138582 CONCLUIDO CONCLUIDO 5E2396ED-1FB8-4546-8C67-134969060248 2018-11-06 08:46:05.000
--913155 TVE138586 CONCLUIDO CONCLUIDO 99CFA5FD-BB7C-43B7-BA76-1CF5B41D67DC 2018-11-06 11:59:58.000
--913156 TVE138587 CONCLUIDO CONCLUIDO 4198207E-40A3-4C2B-AE33-DCC0044CF75F 2018-11-06 12:20:21.000
--913158 TVE138590 CONCLUIDO CONCLUIDO 7CCAB00F-5D1D-4E1A-AE5A-9A888E30977C 2018-11-08 09:10:19.000
--913168 TVE138602 CONCLUIDO CONCLUIDO 592BCEDF-6C4B-4ABE-99F1-21F1A434C844 2018-11-13 17:56:27.000
/*============================================*/
GO
/*204 - El comprobante no se puede cancelar*/
UPDATE dbo.CFD
SET UUID = 'E329DD15-7D0B-44E9-A204-51A7443D1FBE'
WHERE MovID = 'TVE138582';
/*211 - La cancelación está en proceso*/
UPDATE dbo.CFD
SET UUID = 'C5E58106-6C1E-41C9-A211-FB8BAD1CABB0'
WHERE MovID = 'TVE138590';
/*OK*/
UPDATE dbo.CFD
SET UUID = '4198207E-40A3-4C2B-AE33-DCC0044CF75F'
WHERE MovID = 'TVE138587';
GO
/*Aplicando Nota de Cargo para disminuir el saldo REALIZANDO la cancelacion del cfdi*/
EXEC dbo.Interfaz_CxcInsertar @Empresa = 'TUN', -- char(5)
@Mov = 'CANCELACION TURISMO', -- char(20)
@FechaEmision = '2018-11-13T00:00:00', -- smalldatetime
@Concepto = 'CANCELACION VE GRAVADO', -- varchar(50)
@Moneda = 'Pesos', -- char(10)
@TipoCambio = 1.0, -- float
@Usuario = 'SITTI', -- char(10)
@Codigo = 'Prueba-00010-NOTAR', -- varchar(30)
@Referencia = 'BONIFICACIÓN A CONVENIO 000877G-R', -- varchar(50)
@Cliente = '8365', -- char(10)
@Sucursal = 1, -- int
@Vencimiento = '2018-11-13T00:00:00', -- smalldatetime
@Importe = 862.0689, -- money
@Impuestos = 137.9310, -- money
@CentroDeCostos = 'P1101', -- varchar(20)
@TipoPago = 'NO IDENTIFICADO', -- varchar(50)
@CtaDinero = '', -- char(10)
@Observaciones = '', -- varchar(100)
@Comentarios = '', -- varchar(max)
@Partidas = '<row><fila Aplica="CFDI SIN VIAJE GRAV" AplicaID="TVE138602" Importe="999.9999" /></row>'; -- varchar(max)
--Resultado
/*============================================*/
--ID MovID Estatus CFDFlexEstatus
---------------------------------------------------
--427923 180 CONCLUIDO NULL
--427933 NULL SINAFECTAR <Cancelacion><Fila CodigoError="211" DescrError="La cancelación está en proceso."/></Cancelacion>
--427933 182 CONCLUIDO NULL
--427950 NULL SINAFECTAR <Cancelacion><Fila CodigoError="211" DescError="La cancelación está en proceso."/></Cancelacion>
--427950 NULL SINAFECTAR <Cancelacion><Fila CodigoError="213" DescError="La solicitud de cancelación fue rechazada por el receptor."/></Cancelacion>
--427984 186 CONCLUIDO
/*============================================*/
|
-- +migrate Up
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS "stripe_customers" (
"id" integer primary key autoincrement,
"user_id" integer unsigned NOT NULL,
"customer_id" varchar(191) NOT NULL,
"created_at" datetime NOT NULL,
"updated_at" datetime NOT NULL,
foreign key ("user_id") references users("id")
);
-- +migrate Down
DROP TABLE "stripe_customers";
|
-- Sep 21, 2016
-- Adding active column to the software and software command table to be able
-- to disallow plugins and/or individual software commands
ALTER TABLE qiita.software ADD active bool DEFAULT 'False' NOT NULL;
ALTER TABLE qiita.software_command ADD active bool DEFAULT 'True' NOT NULL;
-- Add function to set a key in a JSON value
-- Adapted from http://stackoverflow.com/a/23500670/3746629
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION qiita.json_object_set_key(
"json" json,
"key_to_set" TEXT,
"value_to_set" anyelement
)
RETURNS json
LANGUAGE sql
IMMUTABLE
STRICT
AS $function$
SELECT concat('{', string_agg(to_json("key") || ':' || "value", ','), '}')::json
FROM (SELECT *
FROM json_each("json")
WHERE "key" <> "key_to_set"
UNION ALL
SELECT "key_to_set", to_json("value_to_set")) AS "fields"
$function$;
-- Change the phred_offset from string to choice
DO $do$
DECLARE
cmd_id bigint;
dflt_p RECORD;
a_vals RECORD;
j_vals RECORD;
BEGIN
-- select command id of interest
SELECT command_id FROM qiita.software_command WHERE name = 'Split libraries FASTQ' INTO cmd_id;
-- Update the phred_offset parameter type
UPDATE qiita.command_parameter SET parameter_type = 'choice:["auto", "33", "64"]', default_value = 'auto'
WHERE parameter_name = 'phred_offset' AND command_id = cmd_id;
-- Update all the default parameter sets to use "auto" instead of ""
FOR dflt_p IN
SELECT *
FROM qiita.default_parameter_set
WHERE command_id = cmd_id AND parameter_set->>'phred_offset' = ''
LOOP
UPDATE qiita.default_parameter_set
SET parameter_set = qiita.json_object_set_key(dflt_p.parameter_set, 'phred_offset', 'auto'::varchar)
WHERE default_parameter_set_id = dflt_p.default_parameter_set_id;
END LOOP;
-- Update all current artifacts that have been generated with this command
FOR a_vals IN
SELECT *
FROM qiita.artifact
WHERE command_id = cmd_id AND command_parameters->>'phred_offset' = ''
LOOP
UPDATE qiita.artifact
SET command_parameters = qiita.json_object_set_key(a_vals.command_parameters, 'phred_offset', 'auto'::varchar)
WHERE artifact_id = a_vals.artifact_id;
END LOOP;
-- Update all the jobs that have been using this parameter set
FOR j_vals IN
SELECT *
FROM qiita.processing_job
WHERE command_id = cmd_id AND command_parameters->>'phred_offset' = ''
LOOP
UPDATE qiita.processing_job
SET command_parameters = qiita.json_object_set_key(j_vals.command_parameters, 'phred_offset', 'auto'::varchar)
WHERE processing_job_id = j_vals.processing_job_id;
END LOOP;
END $do$;
|
-- @testpoint:opengauss关键字than非保留),作为序列名
--关键字不带引号-成功
drop sequence if exists than;
create sequence than start 100 cache 50;
drop sequence than;
--关键字带双引号-成功
drop sequence if exists "than";
create sequence "than" start 100 cache 50;
drop sequence "than";
--关键字带单引号-合理报错
drop sequence if exists 'than';
create sequence 'than' start 100 cache 50;
--关键字带反引号-合理报错
drop sequence if exists `than`;
create sequence `than` start 100 cache 50;
|
INSERT INTO "testdrive" VALUES
(default,37,40),
(default,13,28),
(default,26,27),
(default,29,5),
(default,43,38),
(default,39,60),
(default,21,5),
(default,11,34),
(default,54,29),
(default,59,26),
(default,26,17),
(default,38,41),
(default,12,10),
(default,45,40),
(default,20,2),
(default,42,11),
(default,45,27),
(default,35,51),
(default,18,28),
(default,28,24),
(default,18,59),
(default,38,41),
(default,53,42),
(default,10,33),
(default,13,7),
(default,60,14),
(default,6,8),
(default,51,1),
(default,48,27),
(default,59,22),
(default,29,46),
(default,12,4),
(default,27,26),
(default,22,27),
(default,33,11),
(default,37,33),
(default,36,14),
(default,35,23),
(default,19,21),
(default,52,23),
(default,23,30),
(default,64,24),
(default,62,21),
(default,2,36),
(default,37,49),
(default,49,57),
(default,51,51),
(default,28,42),
(default,49,5),
(default,20,11),
(default,49,7),
(default,25,48),
(default,16,45),
(default,63,3),
(default,6,51),
(default,10,6),
(default,33,6),
(default,19,15),
(default,16,44),
(default,59,12),
(default,1,7),
(default,18,38),
(default,22,21),
(default,22,26),
(default,29,30),
(default,4,32),
(default,65,2),
(default,63,30),
(default,12,32),
(default,26,32),
(default,16,12),
(default,1,48),
(default,18,13),
(default,13,60),
(default,34,36),
(default,58,17),
(default,31,16),
(default,12,26),
(default,3,3),
(default,14,27),
(default,36,45),
(default,21,8),
(default,9,36),
(default,63,2),
(default,37,22),
(default,40,10),
(default,61,51),
(default,37,60),
(default,30,34),
(default,22,54),
(default,58,28),
(default,39,49);
|
/*
SQLyog Ultimate v9.50
MySQL - 5.5.5-10.4.14-MariaDB : Database - ahp_crisp_laravel
*********************************************************************
*/
/*!40101 SET NAMES utf8 */;
/*!40101 SET SQL_MODE=''*/;
/*!40014 SET @OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS=@@UNIQUE_CHECKS, UNIQUE_CHECKS=0 */;
/*!40014 SET @OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=@@FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS, FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0 */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_SQL_MODE=@@SQL_MODE, SQL_MODE='NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO' */;
/*!40111 SET @OLD_SQL_NOTES=@@SQL_NOTES, SQL_NOTES=0 */;
CREATE DATABASE /*!32312 IF NOT EXISTS*/`ahp_crisp_laravel` /*!40100 DEFAULT CHARACTER SET utf8mb4 */;
USE `ahp_crisp_laravel`;
/*Table structure for table `tb_alternatif` */
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tb_alternatif`;
CREATE TABLE `tb_alternatif` (
`kode_alternatif` varchar(16) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`nama_alternatif` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`keterangan` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`total` double DEFAULT NULL,
`rank` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`created_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`kode_alternatif`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
/*Data for the table `tb_alternatif` */
insert into `tb_alternatif`(`kode_alternatif`,`nama_alternatif`,`keterangan`,`total`,`rank`,`created_at`,`updated_at`) values ('A01','<NAME>','-',0.3377405019264,24,'2021-02-20 03:45:31','2021-06-21 05:58:31'),('A02','BUKHARI MUSLIM',NULL,0.3377405019264,25,'2021-02-20 03:47:08','2021-06-21 05:58:41'),('A03','IKHSAN KAMAL',NULL,0.3377405019264,26,'2021-02-20 03:47:12','2021-06-21 05:58:50'),('A04','YULIYATI',NULL,0.23716112771271,71,'2021-03-05 11:34:21','2021-06-21 05:59:02'),('A05','UNING WAHYUNI',NULL,0.43236610497111,4,'2021-03-05 11:34:26','2021-06-21 06:00:11'),('A06','AGUS UJANG SUTARIP',NULL,0.43768359357708,3,'2021-06-19 11:42:10','2021-06-21 06:00:31'),('A07','SULAEMAN',NULL,0.44311870231419,2,'2021-06-19 11:42:21','2021-06-21 06:00:45'),('A08','FARIDA',NULL,0.18903276928901,79,'2021-06-19 11:42:32','2021-06-21 06:00:59'),('A09','<NAME>',NULL,0.36552747214764,10,'2021-06-19 11:42:37','2021-06-21 06:01:11'),('A10','RUDI',NULL,0.18248046211002,81,'2021-06-19 11:42:42','2021-06-21 06:01:21'),('A11','MARKUS',NULL,0.25234686927355,64,'2021-06-19 11:51:29','2021-06-30 08:18:20'),('A12','<NAME>',NULL,0.30288248774104,48,'2021-06-19 11:51:34','2021-06-30 08:19:14'),('A13','<NAME>',NULL,0.25785292137664,62,'2021-06-19 11:51:39','2021-06-30 08:19:27'),('A14','ADE IRAWAN',NULL,0.20126250842058,77,'2021-06-19 11:51:45','2021-06-30 08:19:39'),('A15','KALIRI',NULL,0.1863952563527,80,'2021-06-19 11:51:50','2021-06-30 08:19:51'),('A16','<NAME>',NULL,0.37982960503928,8,'2021-06-30 08:20:03','2021-06-30 08:20:03'),('A17','<NAME>',NULL,0.30987731272321,42,'2021-06-30 08:20:12','2021-06-30 08:20:12'),('A18','TORID',NULL,0.15117507006411,86,'2021-06-30 08:20:20','2021-06-30 08:20:20'),('A19','SUYATMO',NULL,0.27898551552978,58,'2021-06-30 08:20:28','2021-06-30 08:20:28'),('A20','KUSWANTO',NULL,0.29037414852547,53,'2021-06-30 08:20:38','2021-06-30 08:20:38'),('A21','<NAME>',NULL,0.29037414852547,54,'2021-06-30 08:20:47','2021-06-30 08:20:47'),('A22','<NAME>',NULL,0.31661052417857,31,'2021-06-30 08:20:54','2021-06-30 08:20:54'),('A23','RR <NAME>',NULL,0.31661052417857,32,'2021-06-30 08:21:04','2021-06-30 08:21:04'),('A24','GUNAWAN',NULL,0.19441827550667,78,'2021-06-30 08:21:13','2021-06-30 08:21:13'),('A25','<NAME>',NULL,0.15694740234965,83,'2021-06-30 08:21:21','2021-06-30 08:21:21'),('A26','<NAME>',NULL,0.1407496353464,89,'2021-06-30 08:21:35','2021-06-30 08:21:35'),('A27','SUDIONO',NULL,0.21061604250993,76,'2021-06-30 08:21:50','2021-06-30 08:21:50'),('A28','HARIYANTO',NULL,0.29607660498608,51,'2021-06-30 08:22:05','2021-06-30 08:22:05'),('A29','MULYADI',NULL,0.24373843760133,66,'2021-06-30 08:22:14','2021-06-30 08:22:14'),('A30','<NAME>',NULL,0.24373843760133,67,'2021-06-30 08:23:10','2021-06-30 08:23:10'),('A31','<NAME>',NULL,0.31661052417857,33,'2021-06-30 08:23:24','2021-06-30 08:23:24'),('A32','<NAME>',NULL,0.30618508946085,44,'2021-06-30 08:23:38','2021-06-30 08:23:38'),('A33','NUROCHMAD',NULL,0.3065020397038,43,'2021-06-30 08:23:47','2021-06-30 08:23:47'),('A34','<NAME>',NULL,0.2899873224576,55,'2021-06-30 08:23:56','2021-06-30 08:23:56'),('A35','<NAME>',NULL,0.30618508946085,45,'2021-06-30 08:24:10','2021-06-30 08:24:10'),('A36','<NAME>',NULL,0.32235476716358,29,'2021-06-30 08:24:22','2021-06-30 08:24:22'),('A37','<NAME>',NULL,0.29069109876842,52,'2021-06-30 08:24:37','2021-06-30 08:24:37'),('A38','<NAME>',NULL,0.31661052417857,34,'2021-06-30 08:25:31','2021-06-30 08:25:31'),('A39','<NAME>',NULL,0.14106658558934,88,'2021-06-30 08:25:41','2021-06-30 08:25:41'),('A40','NGADIMAN',NULL,0.33930748455225,19,'2021-06-30 08:25:49','2021-06-30 08:25:49'),('A41','<NAME>',NULL,0.38656281649464,7,'2021-06-30 08:26:02','2021-06-30 08:26:02'),('A42','EFENDI',NULL,0.33930748455225,20,'2021-06-30 08:26:13','2021-06-30 08:26:13'),('A43','<NAME>',NULL,0.33930748455225,21,'2021-06-30 08:26:26','2021-06-30 08:26:26'),('A44','JAINURI',NULL,0.35547716225498,12,'2021-06-30 08:26:37','2021-06-30 08:26:37'),('A45','<NAME>',NULL,0.35547716225498,13,'2021-06-30 08:27:05','2021-06-30 08:27:05'),('A46','SARINO',NULL,0.35547716225498,14,'2021-06-30 08:27:13','2021-06-30 08:27:13'),('A47','<NAME>',NULL,0.33930748455225,22,'2021-06-30 08:27:23','2021-06-30 08:27:23'),('A48','MAMIN',NULL,0.24373843760133,68,'2021-06-30 08:27:31','2021-06-30 08:27:31'),('A49','<NAME>',NULL,0.21442224022535,75,'2021-06-30 08:27:41','2021-06-30 08:27:41'),('A50','MUNAROH',NULL,0.24962485229968,65,'2021-06-30 08:27:50','2021-06-30 08:27:50'),('A51','<NAME>',NULL,0.37982960503928,9,'2021-06-30 08:29:12','2021-06-30 08:29:12'),('A52','BASRI',NULL,0.22083554844324,72,'2021-06-30 08:29:20','2021-06-30 08:29:20'),('A53','PURWADI',NULL,0.33257427309689,27,'2021-06-30 08:29:28','2021-06-30 08:29:28'),('A54','MASALIH',NULL,0.15694740234965,84,'2021-06-30 08:29:35','2021-06-30 08:29:35'),('A55','SOMA',NULL,0.31661052417857,35,'2021-06-30 08:29:43','2021-06-30 08:29:43'),('A56','MUSLIH',NULL,0.36372685715985,11,'2021-06-30 08:29:49','2021-06-30 08:29:49'),('A57','<NAME>',NULL,0.27894104967566,59,'2021-06-30 08:29:58','2021-06-30 08:29:58'),('A58','<NAME>',NULL,0.26274328267241,61,'2021-06-30 08:30:34','2021-06-30 08:30:34'),('A59','YULIANTO',NULL,0.24373843760133,69,'2021-06-30 08:30:41','2021-06-30 08:30:41'),('A60','AFRIYANSYAH',NULL,0.323109717549,28,'2021-06-30 08:30:50','2021-06-30 08:30:50'),('A61','MUDILI',NULL,0.34100180748564,18,'2021-06-30 08:31:00','2021-06-30 08:31:00'),('A62','RISKIYATI',NULL,0.39478442209898,6,'2021-06-30 08:31:08','2021-06-30 08:31:08'),('A63','NURHASAN',NULL,0.21883764811427,73,'2021-06-30 08:31:17','2021-06-30 08:31:17'),('A64','<NAME>',NULL,0.18136677495725,82,'2021-06-30 08:31:25','2021-06-30 08:31:25'),('A65','MAMAN',NULL,0.31812700762808,30,'2021-06-30 08:31:33','2021-06-30 08:31:33'),('A66','SUMARNO',NULL,0.31640459539417,39,'2021-06-30 08:31:41','2021-06-30 08:31:41'),('A67','<NAME>',NULL,0.31640459539417,40,'2021-06-30 08:32:16','2021-06-30 08:32:16'),('A68','SARJONO',NULL,0.27317371582799,60,'2021-06-30 08:32:36','2021-06-30 08:32:36'),('A69','<NAME>',NULL,0.34536867778021,17,'2021-06-30 08:32:43','2021-06-30 08:32:43'),('A70','<NAME>',NULL,0.24373843760133,70,'2021-06-30 08:32:53','2021-06-30 08:32:53'),('A71','SUSANTO',NULL,0.21753025920851,74,'2021-06-30 08:33:02','2021-06-30 08:33:02'),('A72','<NAME>',NULL,0.31658243487804,38,'2021-06-30 08:33:10','2021-06-30 08:33:10'),('A73','SOETARDJO',NULL,0.40273249419736,5,'2021-06-30 08:33:18','2021-06-30 08:33:18'),('A74','RICKY.S',NULL,0.35547716225498,15,'2021-06-30 08:33:34','2021-06-30 08:33:34'),('A75','<NAME>',NULL,0.35547716225498,16,'2021-06-30 08:33:46','2021-06-30 08:33:46'),('A76','SUHARDIAN',NULL,0.3136243940707,41,'2021-06-30 08:33:54','2021-06-30 08:33:54'),('A77','ASSURI',NULL,0.28050199897929,57,'2021-06-30 08:34:03','2021-06-30 08:34:03'),('A78','<NAME>',NULL,0.29945187800549,50,'2021-06-30 08:34:12','2021-06-30 08:34:12'),('A79','IRISANTI',NULL,0.2560826263717,63,'2021-06-30 08:34:22','2021-06-30 08:34:22'),('A80','KORMAN',NULL,0.14562405023896,87,'2021-06-30 08:34:35','2021-06-30 08:34:35'),('A81','SAAMIN',NULL,0.44917715877759,1,'2021-06-30 08:34:44','2021-06-30 08:34:44'),('A82','ARIFIN',NULL,0.28364093707011,56,'2021-06-30 08:34:52','2021-06-30 08:34:52'),('A83','<NAME>',NULL,0.30079958324319,49,'2021-06-30 08:35:00','2021-06-30 08:35:00'),('A84','<NAME>.',NULL,0.33930748455225,23,'2021-06-30 08:35:07','2021-06-30 08:35:07'),('A85','KAMADANU',NULL,0.31661052417857,36,'2021-06-30 08:35:15','2021-06-30 08:35:15'),('A86','<NAME>',NULL,0.30618508946085,46,'2021-06-30 08:35:22','2021-06-30 08:35:22'),('A87','EUIS',NULL,0.15573253471374,85,'2021-06-30 08:35:29','2021-06-30 08:35:29'),('A88','<NAME>',NULL,0.30618508946085,47,'2021-06-30 08:35:37','2021-06-30 08:35:37'),('A89','<NAME>',NULL,0.31661052417857,37,'2021-06-30 08:35:44','2021-06-30 08:35:44');
/*Table structure for table `tb_crips` */
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tb_crips`;
CREATE TABLE `tb_crips` (
`kode_crips` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`nama_crips` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`kode_kriteria` varchar(16) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`bobot_crips` double DEFAULT NULL,
`created_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`kode_crips`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
/*Data for the table `tb_crips` */
insert into `tb_crips`(`kode_crips`,`nama_crips`,`kode_kriteria`,`bobot_crips`,`created_at`,`updated_at`) values ('KD1','Tidak Punya','C05',0.63334572030224,'2021-06-15 14:41:23','2021-06-15 14:44:38'),('KD2','Motor','C05',0.26049795615013,'2021-06-15 14:41:30','2021-06-15 14:44:38'),('KD3','Mobil','C05',0.10615632354763,'2021-06-15 14:41:37','2021-06-15 14:44:38'),('KR1','Sewa','C06',0.63334572030224,'2021-06-15 14:42:07','2021-06-15 14:44:55'),('KR2','Menumpang','C06',0.26049795615013,'2021-06-15 14:42:15','2021-06-15 14:44:55'),('KR3','Milik Sendiri','C06',0.10615632354763,'2021-06-15 14:42:25','2021-06-15 14:44:55'),('PH1','<500.000','C02',0.55789247517189,'2021-06-15 14:38:32','2021-06-15 14:43:30'),('PH2','<2.000.000','C02',0.26334511077158,'2021-06-15 14:39:20','2021-06-15 14:43:30'),('PH3','<=3.500.000','C02',0.12187261268144,'2021-06-15 14:39:39','2021-06-15 14:43:30'),('PH4','>3.500.000','C02',0.056889801375095,'2021-06-15 14:39:48','2021-06-15 14:43:30'),('PK1','Karyawan','C01',0.55789247517189,'2021-06-15 14:36:02','2021-06-30 08:15:54'),('PK2','Buruh','C01',0.26334511077158,'2021-06-15 14:36:29','2021-06-30 08:15:55'),('PK3','Pedagang','C01',0.12187261268144,'2021-06-15 14:36:19','2021-06-30 08:15:55'),('PK4','IRT','C01',0.056889801375095,'2021-06-15 14:36:38','2021-06-30 08:15:55'),('SP1','Cerai','C04',0.63334572030224,'2021-06-15 14:40:42','2021-06-15 14:44:22'),('SP2','Menikah','C04',0.26049795615013,'2021-06-15 14:40:50','2021-06-15 14:44:22'),('SP3','Belum Menikah','C04',0.10615632354763,'2021-06-15 14:40:57','2021-06-15 14:44:22'),('TG1','>3','C03',0.55789247517189,'2021-06-15 14:40:03','2021-06-15 14:44:05'),('TG2','3','C03',0.26334511077158,'2021-06-15 14:40:10','2021-06-15 14:44:05'),('TG3','2','C03',0.12187261268144,'2021-06-15 14:40:19','2021-06-15 14:44:05'),('TG4','<=1','C03',0.056889801375095,'2021-06-15 14:40:28','2021-06-15 14:44:05');
/*Table structure for table `tb_kriteria` */
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tb_kriteria`;
CREATE TABLE `tb_kriteria` (
`kode_kriteria` varchar(16) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`nama_kriteria` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`bobot` double DEFAULT NULL,
`created_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`kode_kriteria`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
/*Data for the table `tb_kriteria` */
insert into `tb_kriteria`(`kode_kriteria`,`nama_kriteria`,`bobot`,`created_at`,`updated_at`) values ('C01','Pekerjaan',0.37935740786935,'2021-02-19 16:41:21','2021-06-29 12:43:20'),('C02','Penghasilan',0.24883007333272,'2021-02-20 03:46:49','2021-06-29 12:43:20'),('C03','Tanggungan',0.16043372867584,'2021-02-20 03:47:25','2021-06-29 12:43:20'),('C04','Status Pernikahan',0.10244119275386,'2021-02-20 03:47:34','2021-06-29 12:43:20'),('C05','Kendaraan',0.065494217628283,'2021-06-15 14:32:13','2021-06-29 12:43:20'),('C06','Status Rumah',0.043443379739952,'2021-06-15 14:32:20','2021-06-29 12:43:20');
/*Table structure for table `tb_rel_alternatif` */
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tb_rel_alternatif`;
CREATE TABLE `tb_rel_alternatif` (
`ID` bigint(20) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`kode_alternatif` varchar(16) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`kode_kriteria` varchar(16) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`kode_crips` varchar(16) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`created_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`ID`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=797 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
/*Data for the table `tb_rel_alternatif` */
insert into `tb_rel_alternatif`(`ID`,`kode_alternatif`,`kode_kriteria`,`kode_crips`,`created_at`,`updated_at`) values (1,'A01','C01','PK1',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:00'),(2,'A01','C02','PH4',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:00'),(3,'A02','C01','PK1',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:15'),(4,'A02','C02','PH4',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:15'),(6,'A03','C01','PK1',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:28'),(7,'A03','C02','PH4',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:28'),(9,'A01','C03','TG1',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:00'),(10,'A02','C03','TG1',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:15'),(11,'A03','C03','TG1',NULL,'2021-06-19 11:53:05'),(12,'A01','C04','SP3',NULL,'2021-06-19 11:52:48'),(13,'A02','C04','SP3',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:15'),(14,'A03','C04','SP3',NULL,'2021-06-19 11:53:05'),(48,'A04','C01','PK3',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:47'),(49,'A04','C02','PH2',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:47'),(50,'A04','C03','TG2',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:47'),(51,'A04','C04','SP1',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:47'),(55,'A05','C01','PK1',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:48:00'),(56,'A05','C02','PH1',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:48:00'),(57,'A05','C03','TG4',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:48:00'),(58,'A05','C04','SP2',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:48:00'),(59,'A01','C05','KD3',NULL,'2021-06-19 11:52:48'),(60,'A02','C05','KD3',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:15'),(61,'A03','C05','KD3',NULL,'2021-06-19 11:53:05'),(62,'A04','C05','KD3',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:47'),(63,'A05','C05','KD1',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:48:00'),(66,'A01','C06','KR3',NULL,'2021-06-19 11:52:48'),(67,'A02','C06','KR3',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:15'),(68,'A03','C06','KR3',NULL,'2021-06-19 11:53:05'),(69,'A04','C06','KR2',NULL,'2021-06-15 14:47:47'),(70,'A05','C06','KR3',NULL,'2021-06-15 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/*Table structure for table `tb_rel_crips` */
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tb_rel_crips`;
CREATE TABLE `tb_rel_crips` (
`ID` bigint(20) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`ID1` varchar(16) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`ID2` varchar(16) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`nilai` double NOT NULL,
`created_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`ID`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=844 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
/*Data for the table `tb_rel_crips` */
insert into `tb_rel_crips`(`ID`,`ID1`,`ID2`,`nilai`,`created_at`,`updated_at`) values (1,'PK1','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(6,'PK3','PK1',0.2,NULL,NULL),(7,'PK3','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(9,'PK1','PK3',5,NULL,NULL),(12,'PK2','PK1',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(13,'PK2','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(14,'PK2','PK3',3,NULL,NULL),(15,'PK1','PK2',3,NULL,NULL),(16,'PK3','PK2',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(18,'PK4','PK1',0.14285714285714,NULL,NULL),(19,'PK4','PK2',0.2,NULL,NULL),(20,'PK4','PK3',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(21,'PK4','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(25,'PK1','PK4',7,NULL,NULL),(26,'PK2','PK4',5,NULL,NULL),(27,'PK3','PK4',3,NULL,NULL),(28,'PH1','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(29,'PH1','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(30,'PH1','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(31,'PH1','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(32,'PH1','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(35,'PK1','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(36,'PK2','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(37,'PK3','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(38,'PK4','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(42,'PH2','PH1',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(43,'PH2','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(44,'PH2','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(45,'PH2','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(46,'PH2','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(47,'PH2','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(49,'PH1','PH2',3,NULL,NULL),(50,'PK1','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(51,'PK2','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(52,'PK3','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(53,'PK4','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(56,'PH3','PH1',0.2,NULL,NULL),(57,'PH3','PH2',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(58,'PH3','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(59,'PH3','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(60,'PH3','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(61,'PH3','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(62,'PH3','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(63,'PH1','PH3',5,NULL,NULL),(64,'PH2','PH3',3,NULL,NULL),(65,'PK1','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(66,'PK2','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(67,'PK3','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(68,'PK4','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(70,'PH4','PH1',0.14285714285714,NULL,NULL),(71,'PH4','PH2',0.2,NULL,NULL),(72,'PH4','PH3',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(73,'PH4','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(74,'PH4','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(75,'PH4','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(76,'PH4','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(77,'PH4','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(85,'PH1','PH4',7,NULL,NULL),(86,'PH2','PH4',5,NULL,NULL),(87,'PH3','PH4',3,NULL,NULL),(88,'PK1','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(89,'PK2','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(90,'PK3','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(91,'PK4','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(92,'TG1','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(93,'TG1','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(94,'TG1','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(95,'TG1','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(96,'TG1','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(97,'TG1','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(98,'TG1','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(99,'TG1','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(100,'TG1','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(107,'PH1','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(108,'PH2','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(109,'PH3','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(110,'PH4','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(111,'PK1','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(112,'PK2','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(113,'PK3','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(114,'PK4','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(122,'TG2','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(123,'TG2','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(124,'TG2','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(125,'TG2','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(126,'TG2','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(127,'TG2','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(128,'TG2','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(129,'TG2','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(130,'TG2','TG1',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(131,'TG2','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(137,'PH1','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(138,'PH2','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(139,'PH3','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(140,'PH4','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(141,'PK1','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(142,'PK2','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(143,'PK3','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(144,'PK4','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(145,'TG1','TG2',3,NULL,NULL),(152,'TG3','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(153,'TG3','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(154,'TG3','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(155,'TG3','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(156,'TG3','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(157,'TG3','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(158,'TG3','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(159,'TG3','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(160,'TG3','TG1',0.2,NULL,NULL),(161,'TG3','TG2',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(162,'TG3','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(167,'PH1','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(168,'PH2','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(169,'PH3','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(170,'PH4','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(171,'PK1','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(172,'PK2','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(173,'PK3','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(174,'PK4','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(175,'TG1','TG3',5,NULL,NULL),(176,'TG2','TG3',3,NULL,NULL),(182,'TG4','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(183,'TG4','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(184,'TG4','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(185,'TG4','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(186,'TG4','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(187,'TG4','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(188,'TG4','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(189,'TG4','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(190,'TG4','TG1',0.14285714285714,NULL,NULL),(191,'TG4','TG2',0.2,NULL,NULL),(192,'TG4','TG3',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(193,'TG4','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(197,'PH1','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(198,'PH2','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(199,'PH3','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(200,'PH4','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(201,'PK1','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(202,'PK2','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(203,'PK3','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(204,'PK4','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(205,'TG1','TG4',7,NULL,NULL),(206,'TG2','TG4',5,NULL,NULL),(207,'TG3','TG4',3,NULL,NULL),(212,'SP1','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(213,'SP1','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(214,'SP1','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(215,'SP1','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(216,'SP1','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(217,'SP1','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(218,'SP1','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(219,'SP1','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(220,'SP1','SP1',1,NULL,NULL),(221,'SP1','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(222,'SP1','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(223,'SP1','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(224,'SP1','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(227,'PH1','SP1',1,NULL,NULL),(228,'PH2','SP1',1,NULL,NULL),(229,'PH3','SP1',1,NULL,NULL),(230,'PH4','SP1',1,NULL,NULL),(231,'PK1','SP1',1,NULL,NULL),(232,'PK2','SP1',1,NULL,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,'KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(538,'KR1','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(539,'KR1','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(540,'KR1','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(541,'KR1','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(542,'KR1','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(543,'KR1','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(544,'KR1','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(545,'KR1','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(546,'KR1','SP1',1,NULL,NULL),(547,'KR1','SP2',1,NULL,NULL),(548,'KR1','SP3',1,NULL,NULL),(549,'KR1','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(550,'KR1','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(551,'KR1','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(552,'KR1','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(565,'KD1','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(566,'KD2','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(567,'KD3','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(568,'PH1','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(569,'PH2','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(570,'PH3','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(571,'PH4','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(572,'PK1','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(573,'PK2','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(574,'PK3','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(575,'PK4','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(576,'SP1','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(577,'SP2','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(578,'SP3','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(579,'TG1','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(580,'TG2','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(581,'TG3','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(582,'TG4','KR1',1,NULL,NULL),(596,'KR2','KD1',1,NULL,NULL),(597,'KR2','KD2',1,NULL,NULL),(598,'KR2','KD3',1,NULL,NULL),(599,'KR2','KR1',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(600,'KR2','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(601,'KR2','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(602,'KR2','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(603,'KR2','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(604,'KR2','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(605,'KR2','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(606,'KR2','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(607,'KR2','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(608,'KR2','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(609,'KR2','SP1',1,NULL,NULL),(610,'KR2','SP2',1,NULL,NULL),(611,'KR2','SP3',1,NULL,NULL),(612,'KR2','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(613,'KR2','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(614,'KR2','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(615,'KR2','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(627,'KD1','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(628,'KD2','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(629,'KD3','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(630,'KR1','KR2',3,NULL,NULL),(631,'PH1','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(632,'PH2','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(633,'PH3','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(634,'PH4','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(635,'PK1','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(636,'PK2','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(637,'PK3','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(638,'PK4','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(639,'SP1','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(640,'SP2','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(641,'SP3','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(642,'TG1','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(643,'TG2','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(644,'TG3','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(645,'TG4','KR2',1,NULL,NULL),(658,'KR3','KD1',1,NULL,NULL),(659,'KR3','KD2',1,NULL,NULL),(660,'KR3','KD3',1,NULL,NULL),(661,'KR3','KR1',0.2,NULL,NULL),(662,'KR3','KR2',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(663,'KR3','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(664,'KR3','PH1',1,NULL,NULL),(665,'KR3','PH2',1,NULL,NULL),(666,'KR3','PH3',1,NULL,NULL),(667,'KR3','PH4',1,NULL,NULL),(668,'KR3','PK1',1,NULL,NULL),(669,'KR3','PK2',1,NULL,NULL),(670,'KR3','PK3',1,NULL,NULL),(671,'KR3','PK4',1,NULL,NULL),(672,'KR3','SP1',1,NULL,NULL),(673,'KR3','SP2',1,NULL,NULL),(674,'KR3','SP3',1,NULL,NULL),(675,'KR3','TG1',1,NULL,NULL),(676,'KR3','TG2',1,NULL,NULL),(677,'KR3','TG3',1,NULL,NULL),(678,'KR3','TG4',1,NULL,NULL),(689,'KD1','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(690,'KD2','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(691,'KD3','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(692,'KR1','KR3',5,NULL,NULL),(693,'KR2','KR3',3,NULL,NULL),(694,'PH1','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(695,'PH2','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(696,'PH3','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(697,'PH4','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(698,'PK1','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(699,'PK2','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(700,'PK3','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(701,'PK4','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(702,'SP1','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(703,'SP2','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(704,'SP3','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(705,'TG1','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(706,'TG2','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(707,'TG3','KR3',1,NULL,NULL),(708,'TG4','KR3',1,NULL,NULL);
/*Table structure for table `tb_rel_kriteria` */
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tb_rel_kriteria`;
CREATE TABLE `tb_rel_kriteria` (
`ID` bigint(20) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`ID1` varchar(16) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`ID2` varchar(16) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`nilai` double NOT NULL,
`created_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`ID`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=169 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
/*Data for the table `tb_rel_kriteria` */
insert into `tb_rel_kriteria`(`ID`,`ID1`,`ID2`,`nilai`,`created_at`,`updated_at`) values (1,'C01','C01',1,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(2,'C02','C01',0.5,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(3,'C03','C01',0.33333333333333,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(4,'C04','C01',0.25,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(5,'C01','C02',2,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(6,'C02','C02',1,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(7,'C03','C02',0.5,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(8,'C04','C02',0.33333333333333,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(9,'C01','C03',3,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(10,'C02','C03',2,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(11,'C03','C03',1,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(12,'C04','C03',0.5,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(13,'C01','C04',4,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(14,'C02','C04',3,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(15,'C03','C04',2,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(16,'C04','C04',1,'2021-03-05 12:41:39','2021-03-05 12:41:39'),(71,'C05','C01',0.2,NULL,NULL),(72,'C05','C02',0.25,NULL,NULL),(73,'C05','C03',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(74,'C05','C04',0.5,NULL,NULL),(75,'C05','C05',1,NULL,NULL),(78,'C01','C05',5,NULL,NULL),(79,'C02','C05',4,NULL,NULL),(80,'C03','C05',3,NULL,NULL),(81,'C04','C05',2,NULL,NULL),(85,'C06','C01',0.16666666666667,NULL,NULL),(86,'C06','C02',0.2,NULL,NULL),(87,'C06','C03',0.25,NULL,NULL),(88,'C06','C04',0.33333333333333,NULL,NULL),(89,'C06','C05',0.5,NULL,NULL),(90,'C06','C06',1,NULL,NULL),(92,'C01','C06',6,NULL,NULL),(93,'C02','C06',5,NULL,NULL),(94,'C03','C06',4,NULL,NULL),(95,'C04','C06',3,NULL,NULL),(96,'C05','C06',2,NULL,NULL);
/*Table structure for table `tb_user` */
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tb_user`;
CREATE TABLE `tb_user` (
`id_user` bigint(20) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`nama_user` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`username` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`password` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`level` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`status_user` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`created_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id_user`),
UNIQUE KEY `tb_user_username_unique` (`username`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=27 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
/*Data for the table `tb_user` */
insert into `tb_user`(`id_user`,`nama_user`,`username`,`password`,`level`,`status_user`,`created_at`,`updated_at`) values (1,'Administrator','admin','$2y$10$Xgxge/tsSEV4X8Uz5rCqh.WR7sOiMuZEuBC5fysB0DxIKyp0sdcWO','admin',1,'2021-02-19 16:04:18','2021-06-28 20:26:36'),(2,'Lisa','user','$2y$10$EUBW7t5.d/.XIQGnJE3XO.4i2Qw9gbpBIPpbeh780q/zrjVwoLbLe','user',1,'2021-02-19 16:04:18','2021-06-24 09:34:51'),(7,'ind<NAME>','indah','$2y$10$PfT6..ziqwGppPY179NLz.sMYm442cMgO92AN/Z18.gYrZDLsKAl6','admin',1,'2021-06-19 16:20:43','2021-06-19 16:20:43'),(8,'Ari','ari','$2y$10$Cxtv5J1d3RAFfGUCevO.RuVN4VD6scM5853aVTJUxnKBrzTQAVsaG','user',1,'2021-06-19 16:21:38','2021-06-28 09:22:22'),(12,'<NAME>','heri','$2y$10$jEr2l3Z30JDjzv0zlelG1ORrwpFaMp.22XyWw63ScjSulwQ85waHK','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:31:00','2021-06-30 07:31:00'),(13,'<NAME>','bukhari','$2y$10$LE.Q3uROFCojL3IwIOZbEORvl/3GXl/Hkuh/YYGXsSdFQAMohdRLC','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:31:26','2021-06-30 07:31:39'),(14,'<NAME>','ikhsan','$2y$10$Zl3ccFD.V/qeWw3KXI0./Ocaxf4Z6sVU4Ex4Lr0vNWkASHTmaCPGe','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:32:13','2021-06-30 07:32:13'),(15,'YULIYATI','yulianti','$2y$10$CvTPXmP1Bxz5/XXuU0L4mu1eH5NZL3qchDsC3tDGmslgJxBFvVt2e','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:32:37','2021-06-30 07:32:37'),(16,'<NAME>','uning','$2y$10$l/AeNcgaXoWL/jayYXuKX.vGOQVqj8dnjRnYIHbdTeLcmgXnbI1oq','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:33:01','2021-06-30 07:33:01'),(17,'AGUS UJANG SUTARIP','agus','$2y$10$GCxcpB19.Na3d16hJJE5zeU/BoMsHc.s/I7n3MrwvZ484ilTz7jf6','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:36:47','2021-06-30 07:36:47'),(18,'SULAEMAN','sulaeman','$2y$10$6nXjRrM1xe9bcCwJKk3nz.0B7QOepx0.RlC/suG2SXeaErpMwA8i2','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:37:17','2021-06-30 07:37:17'),(19,'FARIDA','farida','$2y$10$tWy.4Exnh5Jb72.6E.igFORXMwPkBsPdHdictrpeH95XZBSsuPg1q','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:37:49','2021-06-30 07:37:49'),(20,'<NAME>','yusup','$2y$10$5JGnh5djCds80.aSn1WF3uH1KR67AMw03yrWNhTgTOJHM7X4T5VVe','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:38:17','2021-06-30 07:38:17'),(21,'RUDI','rudi','$2y$10$1z.cwHyJST7M4GdWwi7CjeAZ4yNNpFt40I/vBO2B4d79u1YQcDZh2','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:39:02','2021-06-30 07:39:02'),(22,'MARKUS','markus','$2y$10$FmTnFnftrY3OE2R5dZU77OJU6ZpK7wgX0gCRw65fXlvabYlcnQyAi','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:39:26','2021-06-30 07:39:26'),(23,'<NAME>','attur','$2y$10$npBx3R.qzEPzo1XB7XNG4..TXVClN4fxXjB4xFk8L3l.XId9XPk32','user',1,'2021-06-30 07:39:58','2021-06-30 07:39:58'),(24,'<NAME>','endah','$2y$10$vBxB38I6/MWq.jRPuAuZWeou4uvqqejyV//Mi3snUY9hHzl0Zqu6C','user',1,'2021-06-30 14:40:40','2021-06-30 14:40:40'),(25,'<NAME>','fadhel','$2y$10$KTPakkexv0UumsF2.iD6R./oyxRmVhAsTeN1DZUFvFTwVGhzB5ePG','user',1,'2021-06-30 14:41:17','2021-06-30 14:41:17'),(26,'Staff Kelurahan','staff','$2y$10$cSNBzap5f82fLrGoFcoaouk1eK8FX6d1ccX.WUeM9CLl.e0stLQwO','staff',1,'2021-07-05 04:37:55','2021-07-05 04:37:55');
/*!40101 SET SQL_MODE=@OLD_SQL_MODE */;
/*!40014 SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=@OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS */;
/*!40014 SET UNIQUE_CHECKS=@OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS */;
/*!40111 SET SQL_NOTES=@OLD_SQL_NOTES */;
|
<filename>surgas-server/sql/proc_pedidoxproducto_eliminar.sql
DELIMITER $$
CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE proc_pedidoxproducto_eliminar (
IN producto_codigo TYPE OF pedidoxproducto.producto,
IN pedido_fecha TYPE OF pedidoxproducto.fecha_pedido,
IN pedido_numero TYPE OF pedidoxproducto.numero_pedido
)
MODIFIES SQL DATA
BEGIN
DECLARE pedidoxproducto_precio_venta TYPE OF pedidoxproducto.precio_venta;
DECLARE pedidoxproducto_valor_iva TYPE OF pedidoxproducto.valor_iva;
DECLARE pedidoxproducto_descuento TYPE OF pedidoxproducto.descuento;
DECLARE pedidoxproducto_unidades TYPE OF pedidoxproducto.unidades;
DECLARE precio_bruto TYPE OF pedido.precio_bruto;
DECLARE precio_final TYPE OF pedido.precio_final;
SELECT precio_venta, valor_iva, descuento, unidades INTO pedidoxproducto_precio_venta, pedidoxproducto_valor_iva, pedidoxproducto_descuento, pedidoxproducto_unidades
FROM pedidoxproducto
WHERE producto = producto_codigo AND fecha_pedido = pedido_fecha AND numero_pedido = pedido_numero;
SET precio_bruto := pedidoxproducto_precio_venta * pedidoxproducto_unidades;
SET precio_final := (pedidoxproducto_precio_venta + pedidoxproducto_valor_iva) * ((100 - pedidoxproducto_descuento) / 100) * pedidoxproducto_unidades;
SELECT precio_bruto, precio_final;
END; $$
DELIMITER ;
|
-- Generated: 2018-01-14 23:55
-- Model: New Model
-- Version: 1.0
-- Project: Name of the project
-- Author: <NAME>
SET @OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS=@@UNIQUE_CHECKS, UNIQUE_CHECKS=0;
SET @OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=@@FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS, FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0;
SET @OLD_SQL_MODE=@@SQL_MODE, SQL_MODE='TRADITIONAL,ALLOW_INVALID_DATES';
CREATE SCHEMA IF NOT EXISTS `mydb` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET utf8 ;
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `mydb`.`Usuario` (
`idUsuarios` INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`Nombre` VARCHAR(45) CHARACTER SET 'utf8' NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`Contrasena` VARCHAR(45) CHARACTER SET 'utf8' NULL DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`idUsuarios`))
ENGINE = InnoDB
DEFAULT CHARACTER SET = utf8;
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `mydb`.`Conversacion` (
`Mensaje` VARCHAR(45) NULL DEFAULT NULL,
`user` INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
INDEX `idUsuario1_idx` (`user` ASC),
CONSTRAINT `idUsuario1`
FOREIGN KEY (`user`)
REFERENCES `mydb`.`Usuario` (`idUsuarios`)
ON DELETE CASCADE
ON UPDATE CASCADE)
ENGINE = InnoDB
DEFAULT CHARACTER SET = utf8;
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `mydb`.`Sesion` (
`idSesion` INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`idUsuario` INT(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`idSesion`),
INDEX `IdUsuario_idx` (`idUsuario` ASC),
CONSTRAINT `IdUsuario`
FOREIGN KEY (`idUsuario`)
REFERENCES `mydb`.`Usuario` (`idUsuarios`)
ON DELETE CASCADE
ON UPDATE CASCADE)
ENGINE = InnoDB
DEFAULT CHARACTER SET = utf8;
SET SQL_MODE=@OLD_SQL_MODE;
SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=@OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS;
SET UNIQUE_CHECKS=@OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS;
|
<reponame>samhay2u/EMP<gh_stars>0
--
use EMPLOYEES;
drop table if exists `employees`;
drop table if exists `users`;
----------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Table structure for table `patients`
--
CREATE TABLE `employees` (
`emp_no` varchar(10) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
`birth_date` DATE NOT NULL,
`first_name` varchar(225) NOT NULL,
`last_name` varchar(225) NOT NULL,
`gender` varchar(7) DEFAULT 'Unknown' NOT NULL,
`hire_date` DATETIME DEFAULT NOW() NOT NULL,
`salary` DECIMAL(13, 4) NOT NULL
CHECK(salary > 12000 and salary < 120000 )
);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (1, '1931-04-02', 'Edgard', 'Cheyne', 'Male', '2003-08-04', 34186.57);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (2, '1960-09-18', 'Hewett', 'Tookey', 'Male', '2002-08-21', 28048.44);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (3, '1910-07-05', 'Hugibert', 'Melton', 'Male', '2011-05-23', 92292.86);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (4, '1993-04-30', 'Martyn', 'Normandale', 'Male', '2014-03-21', 70778.76);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (5, '1967-11-07', 'Welbie', 'Kenna', 'Male', '2015-12-14', 34939.32);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (6, '1993-12-11', 'Bobby', 'Jerred', 'Female', '2017-09-18', 39424.83);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (7, '1931-12-23', 'Lora', 'Ireson', 'Female', '2007-04-22', 67921.19);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (8, '2000-06-07', 'Silvan', 'Brozek', 'Male', '2018-05-01', 71852.28);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (9, '1932-08-12', 'Elnore', 'Exrol', 'Female', '2009-08-22', 49840.11);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (10, '1916-10-18', 'Tymon', 'Siehard', 'Male', '2017-01-29', 66645.41);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (11, '1963-05-30', 'Dick', 'Verbrugge', 'Male', '2009-03-13', 53939.5);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (12, '1913-02-03', 'Gabriel', 'Wolfers', 'Female', '2007-02-10', 77594.23);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (13, '1986-07-17', 'Chrissy', 'Tennick', 'Female', '2009-09-21', 36000.8);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (14, '1909-03-20', 'Kermit', 'Griffin', 'Male', '2010-12-05', 92279.08);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (15, '1990-08-22', 'Jamison', 'Dennett', 'Male', '2002-08-10', 29590.14);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (16, '1992-06-05', 'Cele', 'Heads', 'Female', '2004-03-10', 54224.69);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (17, '1969-08-02', 'Stafani', 'Garbutt', 'Female', '2016-11-12', 33431.31);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (18, '1989-04-17', 'Keelia', 'Sealey', 'Female', '2007-01-26', 33811.24);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (19, '1949-02-07', 'Reider', 'Crack', 'Male', '2017-12-06', 25299.21);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (20, '1935-02-22', 'Pace', 'MacKeague', 'Male', '2017-09-17', 78907.1);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (21, '1936-07-23', 'Marni', 'Southam', 'Female', '2005-11-22', 54234.35);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (22, '2000-07-02', 'Gayle', 'Sillis', 'Female', '2012-01-30', 48455.28);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (23, '1952-11-21', 'Petrina', 'MacCook', 'Female', '2005-06-15', 90538.89);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (24, '1977-12-15', 'Brien', 'Wharrier', 'Male', '2012-04-05', 96901.51);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (25, '1939-08-26', 'Hatti', 'Leadston', 'Female', '2016-09-29', 72199.7);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (26, '1999-09-20', 'Luise', 'Tighe', 'Female', '2010-09-29', 46508.64);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (27, '1940-12-07', 'Padriac', 'Brahm', 'Male', '2014-08-02', 88742.69);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (28, '1961-02-24', 'Paulette', 'Perfitt', 'Female', '2010-12-03', 95139.35);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (29, '1917-08-02', 'Manya', 'Stoodale', 'Female', '2012-10-17', 33252.12);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (30, '1910-05-19', 'Margret', 'Winslow', 'Female', '2013-04-18', 65832.37);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (31, '1944-07-08', 'Holt', 'Fridd', 'Male', '2006-01-25', 65875.84);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (32, '1936-11-23', 'Kristoffer', 'Dable', 'Male', '2008-09-12', 76156.3);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (33, '1922-08-03', 'Maren', 'Jenken', 'Female', '2008-06-27', 32867.5);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (34, '1937-09-17', 'Timmie', 'Bolle', 'Female', '2013-03-31', 96949.65);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (35, '1959-07-22', 'Misti', 'Teresi', 'Female', '2005-06-13', 89685.51);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (36, '1979-05-18', 'Dev', 'Brammar', 'Male', '2003-06-06', 81342.02);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (37, '1913-05-12', 'Shannon', 'Birkmyre', 'Female', '2018-04-10', 23314.3);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (38, '2000-12-13', 'Alaster', 'Mattioli', 'Male', '2005-01-16', 39170.33);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (39, '1998-12-19', 'Dacey', 'Eastop', 'Female', '2009-08-12', 33542.09);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (40, '1928-02-10', 'Caresa', 'Seale', 'Female', '2009-01-16', 81596.83);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (41, '1930-07-07', 'Wandie', 'Truder', 'Female', '2006-08-19', 68426.89);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (42, '1980-06-27', 'Branden', 'Hubberstey', 'Male', '2003-12-12', 68399.17);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (43, '1992-01-28', 'Ivy', '<NAME>', 'Female', '2015-11-06', 59361.96);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (44, '1952-02-28', 'Byrann', 'Byforth', 'Male', '2004-06-13', 51269.0);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (45, '1900-10-04', 'Ardyce', 'Braunstein', 'Female', '2016-09-20', 75358.87);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (46, '1970-09-21', 'Lettie', 'Harold', 'Female', '2003-11-26', 68830.5);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (47, '1995-11-16', 'Andrea', 'Blowes', 'Female', '2002-08-10', 97954.2);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (48, '1905-04-25', 'Waldon', 'Fidelli', 'Male', '2015-10-28', 33851.44);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (49, '1953-12-07', 'Putnam', 'Geggie', 'Male', '2016-07-01', 36101.24);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (50, '1965-07-14', 'Auberta', 'Lafrentz', 'Female', '2011-09-15', 81540.68);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (51, '1926-04-18', 'Immanuel', 'Tyrone', 'Male', '2003-11-16', 98753.83);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (52, '1914-10-09', 'Aileen', 'Simo', 'Female', '2008-07-11', 42991.18);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (53, '1951-10-31', 'Irwinn', 'Broske', 'Male', '2008-04-10', 88558.17);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (54, '1903-12-20', 'Earle', 'Berkely', 'Male', '2017-10-18', 63294.0);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (55, '1960-02-20', 'Wileen', 'Clearley', 'Female', '2003-09-21', 22996.96);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (56, '1970-03-26', 'Peri', 'Heardman', 'Female', '2014-01-27', 22019.38);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (57, '1972-03-05', 'Ferdinande', 'Spalding', 'Female', '2005-04-13', 98810.99);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (58, '1999-01-24', 'Neddie', 'Smiley', 'Male', '2015-04-06', 81163.14);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (59, '1936-08-19', 'Allis', 'Balmann', 'Female', '2015-03-24', 86198.55);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (60, '1909-12-12', 'Belinda', 'Pettyfer', 'Female', '2005-12-10', 63874.82);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (61, '1967-09-21', 'Melva', 'Springer', 'Female', '2016-06-29', 87994.69);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (62, '1951-02-12', 'Jacquenetta', 'Clipsham', 'Female', '2011-11-09', 79183.29);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (63, '1912-10-22', 'Suzann', 'Arnholz', 'Female', '2010-03-31', 42711.82);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (64, '1911-11-25', 'Patrice', 'Wattingham', 'Male', '2014-03-15', 77605.65);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (65, '1950-11-27', 'Germayne', 'Knifton', 'Male', '2011-10-29', 89996.38);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (66, '1902-01-17', 'Caddric', 'Hyde-Chambers', 'Male', '2009-07-16', 68038.21);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (67, '1960-09-18', 'Chip', 'Cholmondeley', 'Male', '2015-10-27', 50556.62);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (68, '1957-02-13', 'Gherardo', 'Sealeaf', 'Male', '2012-07-22', 55374.9);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (69, '1948-10-21', 'Timothee', 'Gardener', 'Male', '2006-10-16', 91095.02);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (70, '1987-09-03', 'Doreen', 'Tofts', 'Female', '2017-06-25', 98295.45);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (71, '1914-04-05', 'Archibold', 'O''Carney', 'Male', '2014-11-05', 49312.33);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (72, '1934-07-24', 'Barbra', 'Vanne', 'Female', '2006-12-07', 36722.48);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (73, '1930-07-08', 'Melony', 'Bradford', 'Female', '2013-06-03', 21917.14);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (74, '1940-06-03', 'Eadith', 'Weymont', 'Female', '2003-11-22', 31933.23);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (75, '1906-04-29', 'Merrie', 'Urch', 'Female', '2007-12-09', 37512.89);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (76, '1979-09-07', 'Jameson', 'Perillio', 'Male', '2016-07-28', 92386.24);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (77, '1923-03-02', 'John', 'Rawlins', 'Male', '2015-01-13', 96303.31);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (78, '1941-02-07', 'Fleming', '<NAME>', 'Male', '2004-11-03', 62299.81);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (79, '1972-04-04', 'Aube', 'Mableson', 'Male', '2015-05-02', 68001.72);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (80, '1937-06-07', 'Delmer', 'Rudledge', 'Male', '2018-07-11', 67506.39);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (81, '1993-09-23', 'Morgan', 'Peto', 'Female', '2011-03-27', 43042.23);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (82, '1992-10-30', 'Burty', 'Quarlis', 'Male', '2013-08-01', 96620.79);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (83, '1941-04-19', 'Hulda', 'Chidzoy', 'Female', '2008-03-06', 94459.95);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (84, '1915-04-23', 'Cirilo', 'Peppard', 'Male', '2010-12-13', 20520.39);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (85, '1951-01-12', 'Ingamar', 'Collcutt', 'Male', '2009-12-17', 50475.43);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (86, '1988-02-11', 'Carny', 'Birchall', 'Male', '2014-11-04', 98224.75);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (87, '1999-01-12', 'Doyle', 'McAvey', 'Male', '2015-10-17', 77419.77);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (88, '1987-01-13', 'Jacklin', 'Wink', 'Female', '2012-11-28', 79262.78);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (89, '1910-06-16', 'Carola', 'Kienle', 'Female', '2008-02-04', 52871.61);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (90, '1947-07-24', 'Giorgio', 'Derrington', 'Male', '2009-04-01', 79785.94);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (91, '1982-02-24', 'Orbadiah', 'Yendall', 'Male', '2018-02-11', 64286.03);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (92, '1933-10-14', 'Conn', 'Caughte', 'Male', '2003-07-25', 59940.71);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (93, '1941-09-08', 'Delila', 'Childes', 'Female', '2009-08-02', 34792.03);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (94, '1980-08-31', 'Bastien', 'Swayland', 'Male', '2007-02-24', 30263.99);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (95, '1970-10-03', 'Vanya', 'Shenley', 'Female', '2004-09-12', 49607.63);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (96, '1998-08-19', 'Sherwood', 'Tackley', 'Male', '2011-12-06', 26634.33);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (97, '1966-08-12', 'Correy', 'Farney', 'Male', '2011-08-31', 95938.17);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (98, '1948-11-10', 'Camila', 'Snoden', 'Female', '2017-07-03', 33970.89);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (99, '1904-05-26', 'Harriette', 'Bowshire', 'Female', '2018-02-16', 36244.84);
insert into employees (emp_no, birth_date, first_name, last_name, gender, hire_date, salary) values (100, '1907-09-02', 'Monty', 'Filppetti', 'Male', '2013-04-17', 25038.17);
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (202, 'Syseland', 'Catharina', '1977-09-28', 'F', '1972-06-17', '40064.11');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (203, 'Habble', 'Cindelyn', '1976-04-23', 'F', '1988-05-19', '38761.32');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (204, 'Angrick', 'Wallache', '1963-04-05', 'M', '2020-05-24', '62048.95');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (205, 'Caze', 'Lindsey', '1971-05-07', 'M', '1976-03-20', '73670.10');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (206, 'Neillans', 'Devin', '1981-08-14', 'F', '1993-03-29', '45070.07');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (207, 'Leile', 'Kira', '1976-08-03', 'F', '1976-03-21', '40076.11');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (208, 'Tumasian', 'Obie', '1970-06-26', 'M', '2015-06-02', '105489.38');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (209, 'Reames', 'Essy', '1981-01-05', 'F', '1982-05-12', '94675.66');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (210, 'Hallgarth', 'Alano', '1959-02-04', 'M', '1981-06-17', '37813.83');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (211, 'Mulholland', 'Garold', '1972-02-27', 'M', '2007-08-28', '74596.63');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (212, 'Dumberell', 'Yvon', '1968-07-08', 'M', '1980-09-27', '38559.07');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (213, 'Rajchert', 'Devon', '1989-09-08', 'F', '1972-10-16', '90608.03');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (214, 'Blackborow', 'Hestia', '1966-11-01', 'F', '1984-07-05', '27714.19');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (215, 'Tillett', 'Christan', '1984-10-10', 'F', '1975-03-07', '45773.30');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (216, 'MacCarroll', 'Cathee', '1985-07-15', 'F', '1991-11-18', '14336.06');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (217, 'Bruty', 'Andriette', '1962-02-22', 'F', '2017-12-30', '22930.98');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (218, 'Comberbach', 'Lev', '1988-05-08', 'M', '2007-05-12', '13230.10');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (219, 'Firbank', 'Darb', '1985-11-23', 'F', '1998-09-29', '119583.64');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (220, 'O''Cooney', 'Yank', '1960-11-29', 'M', '2017-06-21', '86960.24');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (221, 'Branscomb', 'Brocky', '1963-01-14', 'M', '1999-03-16', '76029.76');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (222, 'Constable', 'Adella', '1970-10-27', 'F', '2013-09-21', '95082.10');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (223, 'Dautry', 'Davis', '1976-03-11', 'M', '2001-07-03', '91640.21');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (224, 'Scollan', 'Hadrian', '1977-11-29', 'M', '2017-04-21', '59033.17');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (225, 'Coghlin', 'Damaris', '1976-07-02', 'F', '1978-07-26', '71098.59');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (226, 'Guyton', 'Fraze', '1969-07-01', 'M', '1977-02-08', '40719.68');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (227, 'Bonnett', 'Mozelle', '1988-06-30', 'F', '2002-06-25', '63559.68');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (228, 'Yashunin', 'Ermin', '1973-09-29', 'M', '2018-03-18', '86580.66');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (229, 'Ketton', 'Brandice', '1981-09-15', 'F', '2015-09-24', '44362.58');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (230, 'Dyball', 'Emera', '1987-12-27', 'F', '1976-01-02', '90920.32');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (231, 'Bradmore', 'Harrison', '1960-10-30', 'M', '1991-11-28', '58366.15');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (232, 'McGiffie', 'Leontyne', '1974-03-03', 'F', '2001-09-22', '55075.01');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (233, 'Heugel', 'Ruthie', '1975-10-20', 'F', '1992-07-14', '95292.28');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (234, 'Message', 'Sabina', '1958-10-25', 'F', '1979-09-26', '28440.59');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (235, 'Sabates', 'Ashbey', '1988-12-02', 'M', '2003-02-21', '89654.93');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (236, 'Clitsome', 'Fidelio', '1971-03-25', 'M', '1980-04-14', '111917.50');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (237, 'Mozzini', 'Mendy', '1979-01-12', 'M', '1982-10-01', '54237.37');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (238, 'Coot', 'Rudy', '1979-04-16', 'M', '2013-05-11', '63983.17');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (239, 'Keaveny', 'Edgardo', '1976-11-05', 'M', '2010-08-18', '99751.00');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (240, 'Hay', 'Welbie', '1987-03-23', 'M', '1967-08-04', '110489.86');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (241, 'Ivatt', 'Cosimo', '1974-03-13', 'M', '2011-01-21', '118459.09');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (242, 'Peggram', 'Willa', '1975-05-21', 'F', '1988-03-08', '117604.50');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (243, 'Roussell', 'Adelaida', '1971-12-22', 'F', '2013-09-10', '29322.22');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (244, 'Brodeur', 'Jacquetta', '1980-08-05', 'F', '1986-06-19', '53558.12');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (245, 'D''orsay', 'Robbie', '1958-03-19', 'F', '2009-06-18', '41088.55');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (246, 'Adney', 'Avram', '1963-03-14', 'M', '2001-09-21', '50988.22');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (247, 'Dagnall', 'Tedd', '1960-09-04', 'M', '1994-10-12', '52088.42');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (248, 'Dickinson', 'Cleveland', '1962-02-05', 'M', '1992-02-11', '75868.81');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (249, 'Stallworth', 'Orson', '1976-07-30', 'M', '2006-02-16', '44471.85');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (250, 'Tigner', 'Linn', '1973-05-17', 'M', '1994-08-24', '97363.26');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (251, 'Braine', 'Michal', '1974-07-09', 'M', '2003-07-03', '110698.46');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (252, 'Darrigoe', 'Shelia', '1979-08-14', 'F', '2017-12-21', '52732.40');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (253, 'Adiscot', 'Sibbie', '1959-08-02', 'F', '1988-05-23', '87484.15');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (254, 'Saile', 'Mirabella', '1988-12-10', 'F', '1999-03-17', '95639.56');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (255, 'Calam', 'Gayler', '1988-12-06', 'M', '2019-08-17', '60586.84');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (256, 'Arnopp', 'Ab', '1962-06-08', 'M', '1973-08-13', '99040.32');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (257, 'Veschi', 'Aundrea', '1967-10-13', 'F', '1982-07-24', '118831.56');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (258, 'Storek', 'Lois', '1983-02-14', 'F', '1973-06-03', '34258.24');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (259, 'Labes', 'Adan', '1960-11-20', 'M', '1983-11-14', '59975.08');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (260, 'Drivers', 'Tabatha', '1968-07-20', 'F', '1972-03-29', '76685.34');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (261, 'Shoppee', 'Tadeas', '1958-06-12', 'M', '1969-11-24', '15813.97');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (262, 'Ruslin', 'Boycey', '1958-05-06', 'M', '1977-06-23', '104906.05');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (263, 'Mewett', 'Cassaundra', '1978-10-27', 'F', '1970-07-12', '65013.76');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (264, 'Chittie', 'Urbanus', '1985-06-18', 'M', '1993-03-25', '83944.45');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (265, 'Rodman', 'Constantine', '1983-09-30', 'M', '2017-01-30', '112270.63');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (266, 'Tidbury', 'Emmanuel', '1984-07-16', 'M', '1989-01-17', '94036.74');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (267, 'Pippard', 'Min', '1974-03-13', 'F', '1988-11-23', '117188.52');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (268, 'Crich', 'Alyssa', '1978-09-27', 'F', '1991-11-04', '103184.15');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (269, 'Valentinuzzi', 'Calley', '1981-11-27', 'F', '2008-04-07', '47347.46');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (270, 'Haugg', 'Rose', '1973-05-17', 'F', '1979-10-31', '44588.63');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (271, 'McAndie', 'Edd', '1977-05-01', 'M', '2011-05-01', '112529.51');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (272, 'Mutter', 'Elliot', '1975-10-10', 'M', '1999-03-09', '30128.79');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (273, 'Lurcock', 'Dario', '1984-03-10', 'M', '1968-05-30', '118926.59');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (274, 'Cisar', 'Inna', '1965-07-30', 'F', '2016-05-24', '80372.99');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (275, 'Remington', 'Sidoney', '1972-10-18', 'F', '1996-09-25', '66432.16');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (276, 'Rothman', 'Rutherford', '1988-08-11', 'M', '2003-09-17', '63472.73');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (277, 'Bertl', 'Israel', '1968-01-24', 'M', '1968-04-30', '48209.07');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (278, 'Cowie', 'Binny', '1973-12-30', 'F', '1993-05-10', '27766.66');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (279, 'Hayman', 'Glendon', '1960-05-10', 'M', '1981-11-20', '33075.42');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (280, 'Srawley', 'Debra', '1975-04-01', 'F', '2012-12-05', '104357.17');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (281, 'Grewer', 'Carolus', '1988-11-22', 'M', '2019-02-21', '31679.08');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (282, 'Valentin', 'Yelena', '1980-03-09', 'F', '1969-08-01', '15884.26');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (283, 'McColley', 'Keary', '1963-08-25', 'M', '2001-09-30', '72907.74');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (284, 'Males', 'Thaddeus', '1979-03-12', 'M', '1997-09-24', '81556.38');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (285, 'Brute', 'Nathanil', '1962-06-04', 'M', '1988-01-11', '118000.85');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (286, 'Jesty', 'Hilarius', '1984-08-18', 'M', '2017-10-16', '116009.94');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (287, 'Cecely', 'Lezley', '1982-04-09', 'M', '2002-10-24', '69916.46');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (288, 'Karpf', 'Steffie', '1968-06-25', 'F', '1969-02-12', '15479.89');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (289, 'Evitt', 'Beryl', '1971-01-14', 'F', '1968-11-29', '103382.13');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (290, 'Bridgwater', 'Berk', '1979-02-02', 'M', '2010-10-28', '12092.09');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (291, 'Blazic', 'Lewes', '1978-02-19', 'M', '2004-02-21', '53714.17');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (292, 'Fochs', 'Warner', '1986-01-16', 'M', '2000-01-14', '21057.23');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (293, 'Chung', 'Erica', '1984-10-20', 'F', '1968-01-13', '14344.76');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (294, 'Brion', 'Maudie', '1973-06-09', 'F', '2000-07-21', '94497.50');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (295, 'Chilcott', 'Lebbie', '1965-06-18', 'F', '1979-03-12', '25958.96');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (296, 'Kob', 'Christie', '1971-08-12', 'M', '2010-02-22', '72934.65');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (297, 'Waud', 'Cleon', '1985-12-16', 'M', '2012-11-30', '83429.42');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (298, 'Denziloe', 'Shanda', '1964-06-05', 'F', '1999-09-24', '115353.78');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (299, 'Stuke', 'Wilfred', '1979-11-02', 'M', '1990-11-14', '50590.69');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (300, 'Rock', 'Townie', '1981-02-08', 'M', '2018-01-15', '90394.17');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (301, 'Bannerman', 'Elladine', '1980-11-27', 'F', '2018-08-23', '59307.08');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (302, 'Jurzyk', 'Aundrea', '1965-03-23', 'F', '1986-10-10', '58134.14');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (303, 'Klich', 'Reg', '1975-01-04', 'M', '1977-04-06', '15305.86');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (304, 'Rantoul', 'Kary', '1977-11-13', 'F', '2008-12-18', '80818.71');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (305, 'Lamar', 'Berta', '1975-03-22', 'F', '1978-09-03', '94893.22');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (306, 'Mickelwright', 'Lewes', '1958-02-06', 'M', '2014-02-05', '18493.49');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (307, 'Oldland', 'Hallie', '1982-10-14', 'F', '1984-01-27', '90003.33');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (308, 'Kettle', 'Read', '1970-11-19', 'M', '2020-03-22', '56004.39');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (309, 'Basini-Gazzi', 'Stephen', '1981-04-09', 'M', '1998-01-25', '14773.27');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (310, 'Hugenin', 'Quincy', '1983-11-20', 'M', '1975-05-02', '117105.80');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (311, 'McKleod', 'Lind', '1984-12-13', 'M', '1981-03-25', '68784.42');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (312, 'Adamovich', 'Tatiana', '1985-08-20', 'F', '2013-09-12', '16386.54');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (313, 'Cakebread', 'Eugine', '1964-01-31', 'F', '1978-01-13', '84364.62');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (314, 'Darracott', 'Hendrika', '1967-06-10', 'F', '1970-04-03', '12520.40');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (315, 'Gisburn', 'Berenice', '1972-11-21', 'F', '2015-11-25', '49483.74');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (316, 'Rivel', 'Dominica', '1963-08-01', 'F', '1980-06-20', '21003.11');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (317, 'Bohman', 'Fin', '1973-09-04', 'M', '1998-05-23', '92938.87');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (318, 'Warbrick', 'Morgan', '1985-05-20', 'M', '1999-06-20', '102483.66');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (319, 'Birtwistle', 'Frances', '1985-10-23', 'F', '1976-06-02', '39599.85');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (320, 'Braybrooks', 'Maire', '1978-07-31', 'F', '1977-09-27', '103979.16');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (321, 'Stede', 'Thekla', '1979-01-05', 'F', '2004-08-07', '49352.58');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (322, 'Mackerel', 'Codi', '1962-12-21', 'M', '1986-04-11', '50568.82');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (323, 'Lathwell', 'Lydon', '1989-12-14', 'M', '1983-11-16', '71755.43');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (324, 'Tabner', 'Renate', '1983-05-20', 'F', '2013-06-07', '78420.85');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (325, 'Wieprecht', 'Giacinta', '1986-03-10', 'F', '1979-10-20', '61001.58');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (326, 'Haversum', 'Saxe', '1961-01-14', 'M', '1989-12-12', '93044.33');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (327, 'Doog', 'Michail', '1976-02-15', 'M', '1991-05-08', '85530.60');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (328, 'Beel', 'Shelton', '1984-03-11', 'M', '1987-12-14', '61215.19');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (329, 'Parades', 'Sullivan', '1979-03-05', 'M', '1982-06-21', '65286.72');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (330, 'Rickard', 'Angelina', '1990-05-28', 'F', '1983-09-25', '24179.67');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (331, 'Flory', 'Jena', '1983-10-21', 'F', '1971-08-15', '100614.16');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (332, 'Nutting', 'Shae', '1980-12-17', 'M', '1981-01-10', '80729.07');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (333, 'Dowell', 'Rhody', '1987-11-07', 'F', '1967-09-14', '19041.87');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (334, 'Hasell', 'Gawen', '1979-12-20', 'M', '2018-05-09', '56687.38');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (335, 'Venny', 'Tonye', '1958-02-20', 'F', '2007-09-12', '14517.78');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (336, 'Vasovic', 'Paddy', '1958-07-25', 'M', '2002-10-11', '17433.48');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (337, 'Cristea', 'Webb', '1982-08-09', 'M', '1975-07-29', '56794.74');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (338, 'Blindt', 'Margaret', '1975-08-29', 'F', '1982-06-02', '34712.54');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (339, 'Hourigan', 'Clayborn', '1972-12-12', 'M', '2014-07-05', '54194.85');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (340, 'McColm', 'Aluin', '1983-01-26', 'M', '1979-08-30', '17224.46');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (341, 'Traill', 'Merry', '1957-11-23', 'F', '1995-01-02', '14463.48');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (342, 'Denyer', 'Claiborn', '1964-10-12', 'M', '1986-02-21', '41600.12');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (343, 'Pinchin', 'Selena', '1963-01-08', 'F', '2011-10-06', '14645.83');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (344, 'Bangiard', 'Patrizia', '1988-06-27', 'F', '2015-05-19', '107742.98');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (345, 'Blinerman', 'Gal', '1977-12-28', 'M', '1968-12-07', '40796.40');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (346, 'Ornelas', 'Shirley', '1970-06-25', 'F', '2017-07-28', '27066.40');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (347, 'Berendsen', 'Dall', '1990-07-23', 'M', '1979-06-09', '18174.61');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (348, 'Pulteneye', 'Pierre', '1968-06-08', 'M', '2009-03-26', '88817.53');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (349, 'Aspinall', 'Nikolai', '1966-01-06', 'M', '1974-04-19', '64471.92');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (350, 'Rosenfelder', 'Cleveland', '1968-01-26', 'M', '2013-04-12', '77286.21');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (351, 'Hove', 'Megan', '1981-05-20', 'F', '1992-01-22', '89770.48');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (352, 'Plume', 'Fanny', '1989-06-28', 'F', '1982-06-06', '45043.46');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (353, 'Gillions', 'Adelina', '1963-06-20', 'F', '1970-06-24', '54275.02');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (354, 'Murison', 'Vin', '1962-06-16', 'M', '1981-09-27', '42463.35');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (355, 'Witherbed', 'Arni', '1987-04-07', 'M', '1994-04-10', '76326.01');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (356, 'Ferrelli', 'Stuart', '1965-04-13', 'M', '1994-12-02', '72646.39');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (357, 'Haselup', 'Sean', '1970-05-23', 'M', '1968-12-05', '71832.03');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (358, 'Staggs', 'Bertie', '1974-04-03', 'F', '1971-06-02', '18019.70');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (359, 'Summerside', 'Petr', '1989-12-11', 'M', '1977-02-03', '31582.84');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (360, 'Balducci', 'Jennifer', '1978-01-25', 'F', '2017-12-15', '72566.45');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (361, 'Swinn', 'Merridie', '1977-12-02', 'F', '1993-11-14', '44333.31');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (362, 'Elton', 'Marlow', '1981-04-14', 'M', '1984-10-08', '15031.49');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (363, 'Sloan', 'Lemuel', '1959-10-28', 'M', '2016-01-07', '29475.60');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (364, 'Perrigo', 'Nita', '1985-08-04', 'F', '1992-07-28', '67724.08');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (365, 'Setford', 'Cobb', '1977-03-07', 'M', '1980-03-23', '20586.86');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (366, 'Jarvis', 'Ede', '1964-08-20', 'F', '1984-08-19', '12727.85');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (367, 'Randle', 'Dacie', '1981-09-03', 'F', '2004-02-23', '95135.91');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (368, 'Lammie', 'Gabie', '1987-03-27', 'F', '1998-06-02', '51051.77');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (369, 'Mongain', 'Miguelita', '1988-03-29', 'F', '2009-02-12', '21354.37');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (370, 'Creegan', 'Lucilia', '1966-11-08', 'F', '2019-10-01', '26670.58');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (371, 'Messham', 'Brigham', '1962-10-28', 'M', '2013-02-15', '118200.62');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (372, 'McGraith', 'Zedekiah', '1980-03-20', 'M', '2017-04-14', '111983.13');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (373, 'Duchatel', 'Emmye', '1972-08-09', 'F', '1992-10-15', '74162.97');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (374, 'Lorente', 'Sterne', '1978-02-28', 'M', '1980-02-01', '111095.14');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (375, '<NAME>', 'Zed', '1985-06-06', 'M', '2001-12-21', '97680.21');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (376, 'Chattey', 'Anne-corinne', '1970-01-27', 'F', '1982-06-28', '46395.72');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (377, 'Antonov', 'Nara', '1988-05-20', 'F', '1994-02-06', '18922.25');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (378, 'Lindley', 'Kayne', '1967-06-10', 'M', '1976-07-05', '93405.96');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (379, 'Musterd', 'Jacqui', '1982-01-13', 'F', '1967-11-26', '91086.57');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (380, 'Vickars', 'Ame', '1965-03-20', 'F', '1989-05-23', '64490.95');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (381, 'Fieldstone', 'Winni', '1970-07-13', 'F', '1990-09-30', '104359.83');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (382, 'Duchesne', 'Phyllys', '1964-07-02', 'F', '1986-08-07', '63403.49');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (383, 'Frossell', 'Sherwynd', '1967-10-20', 'M', '2018-11-15', '78686.39');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (384, 'MacDonald', 'Irvin', '1987-10-12', 'M', '2004-12-13', '22996.35');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (385, 'Berston', 'Martynne', '1957-10-01', 'F', '1982-05-01', '14345.64');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (386, 'Lampke', 'Flore', '1961-05-27', 'F', '2007-11-14', '22787.16');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (387, 'Nusche', 'Adelaida', '1960-08-31', 'F', '1998-06-30', '22931.07');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (388, 'Manthorpe', 'Ernesta', '1988-10-13', 'F', '2009-06-11', '18066.00');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (389, 'Lempenny', 'Paige', '1988-04-11', 'F', '1987-08-08', '108128.18');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (390, 'Tomsa', 'Benito', '1970-12-15', 'M', '2016-08-17', '90360.37');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (391, 'Neles', 'Jennifer', '1972-09-06', 'F', '1995-05-13', '31110.45');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (392, 'Sarfati', 'Glynnis', '1963-03-02', 'F', '2012-05-22', '29246.20');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (393, 'Daysh', 'Ki', '1964-10-27', 'F', '2009-11-12', '13525.18');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (394, 'Aitkin', 'Cameron', '1979-01-04', 'M', '2017-06-22', '20708.11');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (395, 'Gerritzen', 'Farrell', '1960-07-25', 'M', '1978-07-11', '16834.43');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (396, 'Ebbrell', 'Gene', '1980-12-11', 'M', '1969-02-27', '31396.35');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (397, 'Danniel', 'Xylia', '1984-09-26', 'F', '2015-05-09', '81163.25');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (398, 'McCarly', 'Huntington', '1987-07-16', 'M', '1994-04-22', '100380.17');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (399, 'Nealand', 'Chickie', '1990-03-25', 'F', '2017-03-21', '72044.21');
insert into employees (emp_no, last_name, first_name, birth_date, gender, hire_date, salary) values (400, 'Leavold', 'Beulah', '1989-07-12', 'F', '2014-01-21', '53631.80');
--
-- Dumping data for table `patienthx`
--
CREATE TABLE `users`(
`user_id` varchar(225) NOT NULL,
`user_password` varchar(225) NOT NULL,
`first_name` varchar(225) NOT NULL,
`middle_name` varchar(225) NOT NULL,
`last_name` varchar(225) NOT NULL,
`user_email` varchar(225) NOT NULL,
`created` TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NOW(),
PRIMARY KEY (`user_id`)
);
INSERT INTO `users`
(`user_id`,
`user_password`,
`first_name`,
`middle_name`,
`last_name`,
`user_email`)
VALUES
('Mcsammer',
'tset',
'Sam',
'Hutson',
'Hay',
'<EMAIL>');
COMMIT;
|
create table hardware(
hardware_id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
created_time TIMESTAMP DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
cpu_temp INT,
cpu_usage INT,
memory INT
);
|
<gh_stars>1-10
# Time: O(n * mlogm)
# Space: O(n * m)
SELECT post_id,
IFNULL(GROUP_CONCAT(DISTINCT topic_id ORDER BY topic_id ASC SEPARATOR ','), "Ambiguous!") AS topic
FROM posts a
LEFT JOIN keywords b
ON CONCAT(' ', LOWER(a.content), ' ') LIKE CONCAT('% ', LOWER(b.word), ' %')
GROUP BY post_id
ORDER BY NULL;
|
<filename>data/open-source/extracted_sql/oharaandrew314_TinkerTime.sql
CREATE TABLE `mods` (`id` INTEGER AUTO_INCREMENT , `updatedOn` TIMESTAMP , `name` VARCHAR(255) , `creator` VARCHAR(255) , `modVersion` VARCHAR(255) , `kspVersion` VARCHAR(255) , `url` VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL , `updateAvailable` TINYINT(1) , `builtIn` TINYINT(1) , `installation_id` INTEGER NOT NULL , `imageBytes` BLOB , `readmeText` TEXT , PRIMARY KEY (`id`) )
CREATE TABLE `config` (`id` INTEGER , `checkForAppUpdatesOnStartup` TINYINT(1) NOT NULL , `checkForModUpdatesOnStartup` TINYINT(1) NOT NULL , `selectedInstallation_id` INTEGER , `launchArguments` VARCHAR(255) , PRIMARY KEY (`id`) )
CREATE TABLE `modFiles` (`id` INTEGER AUTO_INCREMENT , `mod_id` INTEGER NOT NULL , `entryName` VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL , `relDestPath` VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL , PRIMARY KEY (`id`) )
CREATE TABLE `installations` (`id` INTEGER AUTO_INCREMENT , `name` VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL , `path` VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL , PRIMARY KEY (`id`) )
|
<reponame>PhilippeBinggeli/Hands-On-Data-Science-with-SQL-Server-2017
select count(*)
from SourceData.Contracts
where PhoneId is null
select count(*)
from SourceData.Actions
where RecordId is null
select count(*)
from SourceData.Actions
where Units is null
|
<reponame>PacktPublishing/An-18-Hour-SQL-SQL-Server-2014-Visual-Studio-2017-Course<filename>lesson52nestingfunctionsanpivotingrecors/lesson52code.sql
--1. pivoting tables
--2. taking a column and turning it into a row
--3. 1
--4. 2
--5. 3
--6. 1 2 3
use AdventureWorks2014
go
select 'TitleCount' as 'Title Count', [Mr.],[Ms.]
from
(select Title from Person.Person) as SourceTable
Pivot
(
Count(Title) for Title in ([Mr.],[Ms.])
) As PivotTable
|
<reponame>geophile/sql-layer
SELECT * FROM customers
|
<gh_stars>1-10
DROP TABLE `type_categories`
|
/*
.PURPOSE
Get list of dependencies found during discovery scanning that are not managed
*/
SELECT
comp.ComputerId
,cd.AccountName
,cd.DependencyName
,comp.ComputerName
,comp.ComputerId
,comp.LastErrorMessage
,comp.DistinguishedName
FROM tbComputer comp
JOIN tbComputerDependency cd ON comp.ComputerId = cd.ComputerId
WHERE comp.LastErrorMessage is NULL AND cd.SecretId is NULL
|
-- file:errors.sql ln:209 expect:true
drop operator === (int4, int4)
|
-- file:arrays.sql ln:56 expect:true
SELECT array_ndims(a) AS a,array_ndims(b) AS b,array_ndims(c) AS c
FROM arrtest
|
<filename>src/test/resources/sql/select/f7b4a7b9.sql
-- file:horology.sql ln:373 expect:true
SELECT '' AS "65", d1 AS european_iso FROM TIMESTAMP_TBL
|
<reponame>developma/sql-study
CREATE TABLE Address (
name VARCHAR(32) NOT NULL,
phone VARCHAR(32),
address VARCHAR(32) NOT NULL,
sex CHAR(4) NOT NULL,
age INTEGER NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (name)
);
INSERT INTO Address VALUES ('田中', '090-1111-XXXX', '東京都', '男', 30);
INSERT INTO Address VALUES ('斎藤', '090-0000-XXXX', '神奈川県', '女', 32);
INSERT INTO Address VALUES ('鈴木', '080-3333-XXXX', '東京都', '男', 55);
INSERT INTO Address VALUES ('佐藤', '090-2842-XXXX', '青森県', '男', 19);
INSERT INTO Address VALUES ('太田', NULL, '大分県', '男', 20);
INSERT INTO Address VALUES ('木村', '080-9876-XXXX', '三重県', '女', 25);
INSERT INTO Address VALUES ('上田', NULL, '徳島県', '女', 83);
INSERT INTO Address VALUES ('小林', NULL, '沖縄県', '女', 43);
INSERT INTO Address VALUES ('吉田', '090-1922-XXXX', '広島県', '男', 60);
INSERT INTO Address VALUES ('前田', '090-0001-XXXX', '高知県', '男', 9);
commit;
-- Get all data from the table.
SELECT name, phone, address, sex, age FROM Address;
-- search specify data from the table using WHERE.
SELECT name, phone, address, sex, age
FROM Address
WHERE address = '東京都';
SELECT name, phone, address, sex, age
FROM Address
WHERE age >= 30;
SELECT name, phone, address, sex, age
FROM Address
WHERE address <> '東京都';
SELECT name, phone, address, sex, age
FROM Address
WHERE address = '東京都'
AND
age >= 30;
SELECT name, phone, address, sex, age
FROM Address
WHERE address = '東京都'
OR
age >= 30;
SELECT name, phone, address, sex, age
FROM Address
WHERE address IN ('東京都', '神奈川県');
SELECT name, phone, address, sex, age
FROM Address
WHERE phone IS NULL;
SELECT sex, COUNT(*)
FROM Address
GROUP BY sex;
SELECT address, COUNT(*)
FROM Address
GROUP BY address;
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM Address
GROUP BY ( );
SELECT address, COUNT(*)
FROM Address
GROUP BY address
HAVING COUNT(*) = 1;
SELECT name, phone, address, sex, age
FROM Address
ORDER BY age DESC;
CREATE VIEW CountAddress (
v_address,
cnt
) AS
SELECT address, COUNT(*)
FROM Address
GROUP BY address;
SELECT v_address, cnt FROM CountAddress;
SELECT v_address, cnt
FROM (SELECT address AS v_address, COUNT(*) AS cnt
FROM Address
GROUP BY address);
CREATE TABLE Address2 (
name VARCHAR(32) NOT NULL,
phone VARCHAR(32),
address VARCHAR(32) NOT NULL,
sex CHAR(4) NOT NULL,
age INTEGER NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (name)
);
INSERT INTO Address2 VALUES ('田中', '090-1111-XXXX', '東京都', '男', 30);
INSERT INTO Address2 VALUES ('上野', '080-7777-XXXX', '千葉県', '女', 20);
INSERT INTO Address2 VALUES ('太田', NULL, '大分県', '男', 20);
INSERT INTO Address2 VALUES ('武田', '080-0207-XXXX', '福島県', '男', 34);
INSERT INTO Address2 VALUES ('吉田', '090-1983-XXXX', '福島県', '男', 7);
commit;
SELECT name
FROM Address
WHERE name IN (SELECT name FROM Address2);
SELECT name, address,
CASE
WHEN address = '東京都' THEN '関東'
WHEN address = '千葉県' THEN '関東'
WHEN address = '神奈川県' THEN '関東'
WHEN address = '三重県' THEN '中部'
WHEN address = '大分県' THEN '九州'
WHEN address = '徳島県' THEN '四国'
ELSE NULL
END AS district
FROM Address;
SELECT * FROM Address
UNION
SELECT * FROM Address2;
SELECT * FROM Address
UNION ALL
SELECT * FROM Address2;
SELECT * FROM Address
INTERSECT
SELECT * FROM Address2;
SELECT * FROM Address
MINUS
SELECT * FROM Address2;
SELECT address, COUNT(*) OVER(PARTITION BY address)
FROM Address;
SELECT name,
age,
RANK() OVER(ORDER BY age DESC) AS rnk
FROM Address;
DELETE FROM Address;
DELETE From Address where address = '大分県';
UPDATE Address SET phone = '090-XXXX-0000'
WHERE name = '小林';
UPDATE Address SET phone = 'XXX-XXXX-XXXX'
age = 11
WHERE name = '前田';
|
<reponame>mbruty/COMP2003-2020-O<gh_stars>0
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `Review`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `Visit`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `RestaurantOpinion`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `LinkMenuFood`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `FoodItemTags`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `SwipeData`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `LinkCategoryFood`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `FoodItem`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `MenuTimes`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `LinkMenuRestaurant`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `Menu`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `OpeningHours`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `Days`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `FoodOpinion`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `FoodTags`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `RestaurantVerification`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `Restaurant`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `CommunityTagResponse`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `RAdminSession`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `Category`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `TagSuggestions`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `RestaurantAdmin`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `Session`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `User`;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `FoodChecks`;
CREATE TABLE `FoodChecks` (
FoodCheckID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
IsVegetarian BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
IsVegan BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
IsHalal BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
IsKosher BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
HasLactose BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 1,
HasNuts BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 1,
HasGluten BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 1,
HasEgg BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 1,
HasSoy BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 1,
PRIMARY KEY (FoodCheckID),
CONSTRAINT CHK_KosherHalalConflict CHECK (((IsHalal = 1) AND (IsKosher = 1)) != 1),
CONSTRAINT CK_VeganVegetarianConflict CHECK (((IsVegan = 1) AND (IsVegetarian = 0)) != 1)
);
CREATE TABLE `User` (
UserID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
Email VARCHAR(60) NOT NULL,
FoodCheckID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`Password` VARCHAR(110) NOT NULL,
Nickname VARCHAR(10) DEFAULT 'User',
DateOfBirth DATE NOT NULL,
IsDeleted BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
IsVerified BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
pushToken CHAR(22),
PRIMARY KEY (UserID),
CONSTRAINT UNQ_UserEmail UNIQUE (Email),
CONSTRAINT FK_FoodCheckInUser FOREIGN KEY (FoodCheckID)
REFERENCES FoodChecks(FoodCheckID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT,
CONSTRAINT CHK_Email CHECK ((Email LIKE '%@%.%') OR (Email = '-1')),
CONSTRAINT CHK_Nickname CHECK ((Nickname REGEXP '[a-zA-Z]{1,}') OR (Nickname = '-1')),
CONSTRAINT CHK_DateOfBirth CHECK (DateOfBirth >= '1900-01-01')
);
CREATE TABLE `Session` (
UserID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
SignedIn DATETIME NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW(),
AuthToken VARCHAR(110) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (UserID),
CONSTRAINT FK_UserInSession FOREIGN KEY (UserID)
REFERENCES User(UserID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE
);
CREATE TABLE `RestaurantAdmin` (
RAdminID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
Email VARCHAR(60) NOT NULL,
`Password` VARCHAR(110) NOT NULL,
IsVerified BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
DashLayout VARCHAR(64),
PRIMARY KEY (RAdminID),
CONSTRAINT UNQ_UserEmail UNIQUE (Email),
CONSTRAINT CHK_AdminEmail CHECK ((Email LIKE '%@%.%') OR (Email = '-1'))
);
CREATE TABLE `TagSuggestions` (
SuggestionID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
Tag VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,
DateAdded DATE,
OwnerID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (SuggestionID),
CONSTRAINT UNQ_FoodTag UNIQUE (Tag),
CONSTRAINT CHK_SuggestedTag CHECK (Tag REGEXP '[a-z]{3,}'),
CONSTRAINT FK_AdminInSuggestions FOREIGN KEY (OwnerID)
REFERENCES RestaurantAdmin(RAdminID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT
);
CREATE TABLE `Category` (
CategoryID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
CatName VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
OwnerID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (CategoryID),
CONSTRAINT FK_AdminInCategory FOREIGN KEY (CategoryID)
REFERENCES RestaurantAdmin(RAdminID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT
);
CREATE TABLE `RAdminSession` (
RAdminID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
SignedIn DATETIME NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW(),
AuthToken VARCHAR(110) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (RAdminID),
CONSTRAINT FK_AdminInSession FOREIGN KEY (RAdminID)
REFERENCES RestaurantAdmin(RAdminID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE
);
CREATE TABLE `CommunityTagResponse` (
RAdminID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
SuggestionID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
Upvote BIT NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (RAdminID, SuggestionID),
CONSTRAINT FK_AdminInTagResponse FOREIGN KEY (RAdminID)
REFERENCES RestaurantAdmin(RAdminID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT FK_TagInTagResponse FOREIGN KEY (SuggestionID)
REFERENCES TagSuggestions(SuggestionID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE
);
CREATE TABLE `Restaurant` (
RestaurantID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
OwnerID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
RestaurantName CHAR(60) CHARACTER SET UTF8MB4 NOT NULL, -- Prev. NVARCHAR(60)
RestaurantDescription CHAR(120) CHARACTER SET UTF8MB4 NOT NULL, -- Prev. NVARCHAR(120)
Longitude FLOAT NOT NULL,
Latitude FLOAT NOT NULL,
Phone VARCHAR(11),
Email VARCHAR(60),
`Site` VARCHAR(60),
IsVerified BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
Street1 VARCHAR(45),
Street2 VARCHAR(45),
Town VARCHAR(30),
County VARCHAR(30),
Postcode VARCHAR(8),
PRIMARY KEY (RestaurantID),
CONSTRAINT FK_OwnerInRestaurant FOREIGN KEY (OwnerID)
REFERENCES RestaurantAdmin(RAdminID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT,
CONSTRAINT CHK_RestaurantLongitude CHECK (Longitude BETWEEN -180 AND 180),
CONSTRAINT CHK_RestaurantLatitude CHECK (Latitude BETWEEN -90 AND 90),
CONSTRAINT CHK_RestaurantPhone CHECK (Phone REGEXP '[0-9]{11}'),
CONSTRAINT CHK_RestaurantEmail CHECK (Email LIKE '%@%.%'),
CONSTRAINT CHK_RestaurantSite CHECK (`Site` LIKE '%.%')
);
CREATE TABLE `RestaurantVerification` (
RestaurantID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
QRCode VARCHAR(200) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (RestaurantID),
CONSTRAINT FK_RestaurantInVerification FOREIGN KEY (RestaurantID)
REFERENCES Restaurant(RestaurantID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE
);
CREATE TABLE `FoodTags` (
FoodTagID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
Tag VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,
DateAdded DATE,
PRIMARY KEY (FoodTagID),
CONSTRAINT UNQ_FoodTag UNIQUE (Tag),
CONSTRAINT CHK_Tag CHECK (Tag REGEXP '[a-z]{3,}')
);
CREATE TABLE `FoodOpinion` (
UserID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
FoodTagID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
SwipeRight INT UNSIGNED DEFAULT 0,
SwipeLeft INT UNSIGNED DEFAULT 0,
Favourite BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
NeverShow BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
PRIMARY KEY (UserID, FoodTagID),
CONSTRAINT FK_UserInFoodOpinion FOREIGN KEY (UserID)
REFERENCES User(UserID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT FK_TagInFoodOpinion FOREIGN KEY (FoodTagID)
REFERENCES FoodTags(FoodTagID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT
);
CREATE TABLE `Days` (
DayRef VARCHAR(5) NOT NULL,
DayName VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (DayRef),
CONSTRAINT UNQ_Days UNIQUE (DayName)
);
CREATE TABLE `OpeningHours` (
RestaurantTimeID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
RestaurantID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
DayRef VARCHAR(5) NOT NULL,
OpenTime TIME NOT NULL DEFAULT '08:00:00',
Duration TIME NOT NULL DEFAULT '14:00:00',
PRIMARY KEY (RestaurantTimeID),
CONSTRAINT FK_RestaurantInOpeningHours FOREIGN KEY (RestaurantID)
REFERENCES Restaurant(RestaurantID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT FK_DayInOpeningHours FOREIGN KEY (DayRef)
REFERENCES `Days`(DayRef) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT,
CONSTRAINT CHK_OpenTime CHECK (OpenTime BETWEEN '00:00:00' AND '24:00:00'),
CONSTRAINT CHK_Duration CHECK (Duration > '00:00:00')
);
CREATE TABLE `Menu` (
MenuID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
MenuName VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL DEFAULT 'Menu',
IsChildMenu BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
PRIMARY KEY (MenuID)
);
CREATE TABLE `LinkMenuRestaurant` (
MenuRestID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
MenuID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
RestaurantID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
AlwaysServe BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 1,
IsActive BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
PRIMARY KEY (MenuRestID),
CONSTRAINT UNQ_LinkMenuRestaurant UNIQUE (MenuID, RestaurantID),
CONSTRAINT FK_MenuInMenuRestaurantLink FOREIGN KEY (MenuID)
REFERENCES Menu(MenuID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT FK_RestaurantInMenuRestaurantLink FOREIGN KEY (RestaurantID)
REFERENCES Restaurant(RestaurantID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE
);
CREATE TABLE `MenuTimes` (
MenuTimeID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
MenuRestID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
DayRef VARCHAR(5) NOT NULL,
StartServing TIME NOT NULL,
ServingFor TIME NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (MenuTimeID),
CONSTRAINT FK_MenuRestLinkInTimes FOREIGN KEY (MenuRestID)
REFERENCES LinkMenuRestaurant(MenuRestID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT FK_DaysInMenuTimes FOREIGN KEY (DayRef)
REFERENCES `Days`(DayRef) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT,
CONSTRAINT CHK_ServingFor CHECK (ServingFor > '00:00:00')
);
CREATE TABLE `FoodItem` (
FoodID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
FoodCheckID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
Creator INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
FoodName VARCHAR(60) NOT NULL,
FoodNameShort VARCHAR(20),
FoodDescription VARCHAR(120) NOT NULL,
Price DECIMAL(6,2) NOT NULL DEFAULT 1.00,
PRIMARY KEY (FoodID),
CONSTRAINT FK_FoodCheckInFoodItem FOREIGN KEY (FoodCheckID)
REFERENCES FoodChecks(FoodCheckID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT,
CONSTRAINT FK_AdminInFoodItem FOREIGN KEY (Creator)
REFERENCES RestaurantAdmin(RAdminID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT,
CONSTRAINT CHK_FoodPrice CHECK (Price > 0.00)
);
CREATE TABLE `LinkCategoryFood` (
CategoryID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
FoodID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (CategoryID, FoodID),
CONSTRAINT FK_CategoryInCategoryFoodLink FOREIGN KEY (CategoryID)
REFERENCES Category(CategoryID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT FK_FoodInCategoryFoodLink FOREIGN KEY (FoodID)
REFERENCES FoodItem(FoodID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE
);
CREATE TABLE `SwipeData` (
FoodID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
SwipeDate DATE NOT NULL,
RightSwipes INT,
LeftSwipes INT,
PRIMARY KEY (FoodID, SwipeDate),
CONSTRAINT FK_FoodInSwipeData FOREIGN KEY (FoodID)
REFERENCES FoodItem(FoodID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE
);
CREATE TABLE `FoodItemTags` (
FoodID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
TagID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (FoodID, TagID),
CONSTRAINT FK_FoodInFoodItemTags FOREIGN KEY (FoodID)
REFERENCES FoodItem(FoodID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT FK_TagInFoodItemTags FOREIGN KEY (TagID)
REFERENCES FoodTags(FoodTagID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT
);
CREATE TABLE `LinkMenuFood` (
MenuID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
FoodID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (MenuID, FoodID),
CONSTRAINT FK_MenuInMenuFoodLink FOREIGN KEY (MenuID)
REFERENCES Menu(MenuID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT FK_FoodInMenuFoodLink FOREIGN KEY (FoodID)
REFERENCES FoodItem(FoodID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE
);
CREATE TABLE `RestaurantOpinion` (
UserID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
RestaurantID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
SwipeRight INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
SwipeLeft INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
NeverShow BIT NOT NULL DEFAULT 0,
PRIMARY KEY (UserID, RestaurantID),
CONSTRAINT FK_UserInRestaurantOpinion FOREIGN KEY (UserID)
REFERENCES User(UserID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT FK_RestaurantInRestaurantOpinion FOREIGN KEY (RestaurantID)
REFERENCES Restaurant(RestaurantID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE
);
CREATE TABLE `Visit` (
VisitRef INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
RestaurantID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
UserID INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
DateOfVisit DATETIME NOT NULL DEFAULT NOW(),
GroupSize TINYINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL DEFAULT 1,
PRIMARY KEY (VisitRef),
CONSTRAINT FK_UserInVisit FOREIGN KEY (UserID)
REFERENCES User(UserID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT FK_RestaurantInVisit FOREIGN KEY (RestaurantID)
REFERENCES Restaurant(RestaurantID) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT,
CONSTRAINT CHK_GroupSize CHECK (GroupSize > 0)
);
CREATE TABLE `Review` (
VisitRef INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
Rating TINYINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (VisitRef),
CONSTRAINT FK_VisitInReview FOREIGN KEY (VisitRef)
REFERENCES Visit(VisitRef) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT CHK_Rating CHECK (Rating BETWEEN 0 AND 10)
);
/*
SQL Trigger Setup:
The following script should create the necessary triggers associated with our project.
It will delete triggers if they currently exist in the database.
The triggers are explained within this comment bracket of the script.
TGR_DeleteUser removes the FoodCheck associated with the user to be removed.
- Please read documentation for details on removing users.
TGR_DeleteFoodItem removes the FoodCheck associated with the menu item to be removed.
TRG_InsertUser automatically assigns a default FoodCheck to a newly created user.
TGR_InsertFoodItem responds similarly to its InsertUser counterpart by creating a default FoodCheck.
*/
DROP TRIGGER IF EXISTS TGR_DeleteUser;
DROP TRIGGER IF EXISTS TGR_DeleteFoodItem;
DROP TRIGGER IF EXISTS TGR_InsertUser;
DROP TRIGGER IF EXISTS TGR_InsertFoodItem;
CREATE TRIGGER TGR_DeleteUser
AFTER DELETE ON `User`
FOR EACH ROW
DELETE FROM `FoodChecks` WHERE FoodChecks.FoodCheckID = OLD.FoodCheckID;
CREATE TRIGGER TGR_DeleteFoodItem
AFTER DELETE ON `FoodItem`
FOR EACH ROW
DELETE FROM `FoodChecks` WHERE FoodChecks.FoodCheckID = OLD.FoodCheckID;
DELIMITER //
CREATE TRIGGER TGR_InsertUser
BEFORE INSERT ON `User`
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
INSERT INTO FoodChecks (FoodCheckID)
VALUES (DEFAULT);
SET NEW.FoodCheckID = LAST_INSERT_ID();
END //
CREATE TRIGGER TGR_InsertFoodItem
BEFORE INSERT ON `FoodItem`
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
INSERT INTO FoodChecks (FoodCheckID)
VALUES (DEFAULT);
SET NEW.FoodCheckID = LAST_INSERT_ID();
END //
DELIMITER ;
|
-- database: presto; groups: insert; mutable_tables: datatype|created
-- delimiter: |; ignoreOrder: true;
--!
insert into ${mutableTables.hive.datatype} values(1,2.34567,'a',cast('2014-01-01' as date), cast ('2015-01-01 03:15:16 UTC' as timestamp), TRUE);
select * from ${mutableTables.hive.datatype}
--!
1|2.34567|a|2014-01-01|2015-01-01 03:15:16|true|
|
<reponame>nmbazima/SQL-Scripts
/*
SELECT * FROM SQLINDICESUNUSED
WHERE TABLENAME NOT LIKE '%_CT'
AND DBNAME NOT IN ('DX_PA', 'DXPRD')
ORDER BY TABLENAME, INDEXNAME, DBNAME
*/
--USE Status
--GO
--SET NOCOUNT ON
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DECLARE @DBList NVARCHAR(MAX)
DECLARE @DBList2 NVARCHAR(MAX)
DECLARE @DropIndexStatement NVARCHAR(MAX)
DECLARE @DynamicPivotQuery NVARCHAR(MAX)
DECLARE @DBS TABLE (
DBName NVARCHAR(128)
)
INSERT INTO @DBS
SELECT DISTINCT DBName FROM SQLIndicesUnused
WHERE DBName NOT LIKE '%_rpt'
AND DBName NOT LIKE 'DMart%'
AND DBName NOT LIKE '%Management'
AND DBName NOT LIKE '%Workflow'
AND DBName NOT IN ('DX_PA', 'DXPRD', 'CMS', 'Journyx', 'RightFax', 'RightFax', 'SQLDataCollection', 'Performance')
ORDER BY 1
SELECT @DBList = COALESCE(@DBList + ', ', '') + DBName
FROM @DBS
SELECT @DBList2 = REPLACE(@DBList, ', ', ''', ''')
SELECT @DynamicPivotQuery =
N'SELECT DropIndexStatement
, TableName
, IndexName
, '''' AS TotalDrops
, ' + @DBList + '
FROM (
SELECT DISTINCT DropIndexStatement
, DBName
, TableName
, IndexName
, COUNT(DBName) AS [RowCount]
FROM SQLIndicesUnused
WHERE DBName IN (''' + @DBList2 + ''')
AND TableName NOT LIKE (''dbo%_CT'')
GROUP BY DropIndexStatement, DBName, TableName, IndexName
) AS SourceTable
PIVOT
(COUNT(DBName)
FOR DBName IN
(' + @DBList + ')) AS PivotTable
ORDER BY 1,2,3;'
PRINT @DynamicPivotQuery
EXEC sp_executesql @DynamicPivotQuery
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
--SELECT DISTINCT DropIndexStatement
-- , siu.DBName
-- , TableName
-- , IndexName
-- , SUM(Rows) AS SummedRows
--FROM SQLIndicesUnused siu
-- INNER JOIN @DBS dbs ON siu.DBName = dbs.DBName
--WHERE DropIndexStatement = @DropIndexStatement
--GROUP BY DropIndexStatement, siu.DBName, TableName, IndexName
--ORDER BY siu.DBName
|
<reponame>Arda1/brisk
--
-- HIVE-417 Implement Indexing in Hive
--
CREATE TABLE "IDXS" (
"INDEX_ID" BIGINT NOT NULL,
"CREATE_TIME" INTEGER NOT NULL,
"DEFERRED_REBUILD" CHAR(1) NOT NULL,
"INDEX_HANDLER_CLASS" VARCHAR(256),
"INDEX_NAME" VARCHAR(128),
"INDEX_TBL_ID" BIGINT,
"LAST_ACCESS_TIME" INTEGER NOT NULL,
"ORIG_TBL_ID" BIGINT,
"SD_ID" BIGINT);
ALTER TABLE "IDXS" ADD CONSTRAINT "IDXS_FK1"
FOREIGN KEY ("SD_ID") REFERENCES "SDS" ("SD_ID")
ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
ALTER TABLE "IDXS" ADD CONSTRAINT "IDXS_FK2"
FOREIGN KEY ("INDEX_TBL_ID") REFERENCES "TBLS" ("TBL_ID")
ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
ALTER TABLE "IDXS" ADD CONSTRAINT "IDXS_FK3"
FOREIGN KEY ("ORIG_TBL_ID") REFERENCES "TBLS" ("TBL_ID")
ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
ALTER TABLE "IDXS" ADD CONSTRAINT "IDXS_PK"
PRIMARY KEY ("INDEX_ID");
ALTER TABLE "IDXS" ADD CONSTRAINT "DEFERRED_REBUILD_CHECK"
CHECK (DEFERRED_REBUILD IN ('Y','N'));
CREATE TABLE "INDEX_PARAMS" (
"INDEX_ID" BIGINT NOT NULL,
"PARAM_KEY" VARCHAR(256) NOT NULL,
"PARAM_VALUE" VARCHAR(767));
ALTER TABLE "INDEX_PARAMS" ADD CONSTRAINT "INDEX_PARAMS_FK1"
FOREIGN KEY ("INDEX_ID") REFERENCES "IDXS" ("INDEX_ID")
ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
ALTER TABLE "INDEX_PARAMS" ADD CONSTRAINT "INDEX_PARAMS_PK"
PRIMARY KEY ("INDEX_ID", "PARAM_KEY");
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "UNIQUEINDEX" ON "IDXS" ("INDEX_NAME", "ORIG_TBL_ID");
--
-- HIVE-1823 Upgrade the database thrift interface to allow parameters key-value pairs
--
CREATE TABLE "DATABASE_PARAMS" (
"DB_ID" BIGINT NOT NULL,
"PARAM_KEY" VARCHAR(180) NOT NULL,
"PARAM_VALUE" VARCHAR(4000));
ALTER TABLE "DATABASE_PARAMS" ADD CONSTRAINT "DATABASE_PARAMS_FK1"
FOREIGN KEY ("DB_ID") REFERENCES "DBS" ("DB_ID")
ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
ALTER TABLE "DATABASE_PARAMS" ADD CONSTRAINT "DATABASE_PARAMS_PK"
PRIMARY KEY ("DB_ID", "PARAM_KEY");
ALTER TABLE "DBS" DROP COLUMN "PARAMETERS";
--
-- HIVE-78 Authorization model for Hive
--
CREATE TABLE "DB_PRIVS" (
"DB_GRANT_ID" BIGINT NOT NULL,
"CREATE_TIME" INTEGER NOT NULL,
"DB_ID" BIGINT,
"GRANT_OPTION" SMALLINT NOT NULL,
"GRANTOR" VARCHAR(128),
"GRANTOR_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_NAME" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"DB_PRIV" VARCHAR(128));
ALTER TABLE "DB_PRIVS" ADD CONSTRAINT "DB_PRIVS_FK1"
FOREIGN KEY ("DB_ID") REFERENCES "DBS" ("DB_ID")
ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
ALTER TABLE "DB_PRIVS" ADD CONSTRAINT "DB_PRIVS_PK"
PRIMARY KEY ("DB_GRANT_ID");
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "DBPRIVILEGEINDEX" ON "DB_PRIVS" (
"DB_ID", "PRINCIPAL_NAME", "PRINCIPAL_TYPE",
"DB_PRIV", "GRANTOR", "GRANTOR_TYPE");
CREATE TABLE "PART_COL_PRIVS" (
"PART_COLUMN_GRANT_ID" BIGINT NOT NULL,
"COLUMN_NAME" VARCHAR(128),
"CREATE_TIME" INTEGER NOT NULL,
"GRANT_OPTION" SMALLINT NOT NULL,
"GRANTOR" VARCHAR(128),
"GRANTOR_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"PART_ID" BIGINT,
"PRINCIPAL_NAME" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"PART_COL_PRIV" VARCHAR(128));
ALTER TABLE "PART_COL_PRIVS" ADD CONSTRAINT "PART_COL_PRIVS_FK1"
FOREIGN KEY ("PART_ID") REFERENCES "PARTITIONS" ("PART_ID")
ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
ALTER TABLE "PART_COL_PRIVS" ADD CONSTRAINT "PART_COL_PRIVS_PK"
PRIMARY KEY ("PART_COLUMN_GRANT_ID");
CREATE INDEX "PARTITIONCOLUMNPRIVILEGEINDEX" ON "PART_COL_PRIVS" (
"PART_ID", "COLUMN_NAME", "PRINCIPAL_NAME", "PRINCIPAL_TYPE",
"PART_COL_PRIV", "GRANTOR", "GRANTOR_TYPE");
CREATE TABLE "PART_PRIVS" (
"PART_GRANT_ID" BIGINT NOT NULL,
"CREATE_TIME" INTEGER NOT NULL,
"GRANT_OPTION" SMALLINT NOT NULL,
"GRANTOR" VARCHAR(128),
"GRANTOR_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"PART_ID" BIGINT,
"PRINCIPAL_NAME" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"PART_PRIV" VARCHAR(128));
ALTER TABLE "PART_PRIVS" ADD CONSTRAINT "PART_PRIVS_FK1"
FOREIGN KEY ("PART_ID") REFERENCES "PARTITIONS" ("PART_ID")
ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
ALTER TABLE "PART_PRIVS" ADD CONSTRAINT "PART_PRIVS_PK"
PRIMARY KEY ("PART_GRANT_ID");
CREATE INDEX "PARTPRIVILEGEINDEX" ON "PART_PRIVS" (
"PART_ID", "PRINCIPAL_NAME", "PRINCIPAL_TYPE",
"PART_PRIV", "GRANTOR", "GRANTOR_TYPE");
CREATE TABLE "ROLES" (
"ROLE_ID" BIGINT NOT NULL,
"CREATE_TIME" INTEGER NOT NULL,
"OWNER_NAME" VARCHAR(128),
"ROLE_NAME" VARCHAR(128));
ALTER TABLE "ROLES" ADD CONSTRAINT "ROLES_PK"
PRIMARY KEY ("ROLE_ID");
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "ROLEENTITYINDEX" ON "ROLES" ("ROLE_NAME");
CREATE TABLE "ROLE_MAP" (
"ROLE_GRANT_ID" BIGINT NOT NULL,
"ADD_TIME" INTEGER NOT NULL,
"GRANT_OPTION" SMALLINT NOT NULL,
"GRANTOR" VARCHAR(128),
"GRANTOR_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_NAME" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"ROLE_ID" BIGINT);
ALTER TABLE "ROLE_MAP" ADD CONSTRAINT "ROLE_MAP_FK1"
FOREIGN KEY ("ROLE_ID") REFERENCES "ROLES" ("ROLE_ID")
ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
ALTER TABLE "ROLE_MAP" ADD CONSTRAINT "ROLE_MAP_PK"
PRIMARY KEY ("ROLE_GRANT_ID");
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "USERROLEMAPINDEX" ON "ROLE_MAP" (
"PRINCIPAL_NAME", "ROLE_ID", "GRANTOR", "GRANTOR_TYPE");
CREATE TABLE "TBL_COL_PRIVS" (
"TBL_COLUMN_GRANT_ID" BIGINT NOT NULL,
"COLUMN_NAME" VARCHAR(128),
"CREATE_TIME" INTEGER NOT NULL,
"GRANT_OPTION" SMALLINT NOT NULL,
"GRANTOR" VARCHAR(128),
"GRANTOR_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_NAME" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"TBL_COL_PRIV" VARCHAR(128),
"TBL_ID" BIGINT);
ALTER TABLE "TBL_COL_PRIVS" ADD CONSTRAINT "TBL_COL_PRIVS_FK1"
FOREIGN KEY ("TBL_ID") REFERENCES "TBLS" ("TBL_ID")
ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
ALTER TABLE "TBL_COL_PRIVS" ADD CONSTRAINT "TBL_COL_PRIVS_PK"
PRIMARY KEY ("TBL_COLUMN_GRANT_ID");
CREATE INDEX "TABLECOLUMNPRIVILEGEINDEX" ON "TBL_COL_PRIVS" (
"TBL_ID", "COLUMN_NAME", "PRINCIPAL_NAME", "PRINCIPAL_TYPE",
"TBL_COL_PRIV", "GRANTOR", "GRANTOR_TYPE");
CREATE TABLE "TBL_PRIVS" (
"TBL_GRANT_ID" BIGINT NOT NULL,
"CREATE_TIME" INTEGER NOT NULL,
"GRANT_OPTION" SMALLINT NOT NULL,
"GRANTOR" VARCHAR(128),
"GRANTOR_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_NAME" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"TBL_PRIV" VARCHAR(128),
"TBL_ID" BIGINT);
ALTER TABLE "TBL_PRIVS" ADD CONSTRAINT "TBL_PRIVS_FK1"
FOREIGN KEY ("TBL_ID") REFERENCES "TBLS" ("TBL_ID")
ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION;
ALTER TABLE "TBL_PRIVS" ADD CONSTRAINT "TBL_PRIVS_PK"
PRIMARY KEY ("TBL_GRANT_ID");
CREATE INDEX "TABLEPRIVILEGEINDEX" ON "TBL_PRIVS" (
"TBL_ID", "PRINCIPAL_NAME", "PRINCIPAL_TYPE",
"TBL_PRIV", "GRANTOR", "GRANTOR_TYPE");
CREATE TABLE "GLOBAL_PRIVS" (
"USER_GRANT_ID" BIGINT NOT NULL,
"CREATE_TIME" INTEGER NOT NULL,
"GRANT_OPTION" SMALLINT NOT NULL,
"GRANTOR" VARCHAR(128),
"GRANTOR_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_NAME" VARCHAR(128),
"PRINCIPAL_TYPE" VARCHAR(128),
"USER_PRIV" VARCHAR(128));
ALTER TABLE "GLOBAL_PRIVS" ADD CONSTRAINT "GLOBAL_PRIVS_PK"
PRIMARY KEY ("USER_GRANT_ID");
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "GLOBALPRIVILEGEINDEX" ON "GLOBAL_PRIVS" (
"PRINCIPAL_NAME", "PRINCIPAL_TYPE", "USER_PRIV",
"GRANTOR", "GRANTOR_TYPE");
|
CREATE VIEW VIEW4 (C1) AS SELECT 1 FROM TABLE50 UNION SELECT 1 FROM TABLE114 UNION SELECT 1 FROM TABLE402 UNION SELECT 1 FROM VIEW48 UNION SELECT 1 FROM VIEW66 UNION SELECT 1 FROM VIEW85
GO
|
SELECT `acct_id`, `alloc_yr`, `alloc_mo`, `memo`, `target_amnt_inc_vat`, `date_begin`, `date_end`, `closed`
FROM `budget`
WHERE `id` = %s AND `brand_id` = %s
|
-- @testpoint:opengauss关键字login非保留),作为序列名
--关键字不带引号-成功
drop sequence if exists login;
create sequence login start 100 cache 50;
drop sequence login;
--关键字带双引号-成功
drop sequence if exists "login";
create sequence "login" start 100 cache 50;
drop sequence "login";
--关键字带单引号-合理报错
drop sequence if exists 'login';
create sequence 'login' start 100 cache 50;
--关键字带反引号-合理报错
drop sequence if exists `login`;
create sequence `login` start 100 cache 50;
|
-- @testpoint: md5函数入参给bool类型,合理报错
SELECT md5(TRUE);
|
<reponame>opengauss-mirror/Yat
-- @testpoint:opengauss关键字bit(非保留),作为表空间名
--关键字不带引号,创建成功
drop tablespace if exists bit;
CREATE TABLESPACE bit RELATIVE LOCATION 'hdfs_tablespace/hdfs_tablespace_1';
--清理环境
drop tablespace bit;
--关键字带双引号,创建成功
drop tablespace if exists "bit";
CREATE TABLESPACE "bit" RELATIVE LOCATION 'hdfs_tablespace/hdfs_tablespace_1';
--清理环境
drop tablespace "bit";
--关键字带单引号,合理报错
drop tablespace if exists 'bit';
--关键字带反引号,合理报错
drop tablespace if exists `bit`;
|
/*
---------------------------------------------------------------------
@author <NAME> <<EMAIL>>
*/
SELECT mb.nome,
mb.cognome,
mb.sesso,
utente.avatar_filename,
a.denominazione as ambulatorio,
a.indirizzo,
c.nome as citta,
p.nome as provincia,
a.contatto_telefonico,
mb.email
FROM paziente_medico AS pm
JOIN medico_base mb ON pm.id_medico_base = mb.id
JOIN utente ON mb.email = utente.email
JOIN ambulatorio AS a ON mb.ambulatorio = a.id
JOIN citta AS c ON a.citta = c.id
JOIN provincia AS p ON c.provincia = p.id
WHERE pm.id_paziente = ? AND pm.al is NULL
|
-- new field get added to allow for Image_Text pairs in the DB
ALTER TABLE data_tuple
MODIFY COLUMN type
ENUM ('TEXT_TEXT','AUDIO_AUDIO','TEXT_AUDIO','AUDIO_TEXT','IMAGE_AUDIO','RECORDING','IMAGE_TEXT');
|
-- phpMyAdmin SQL Dump
-- version 4.2.11
-- http://www.phpmyadmin.net
--
-- Värd: 127.0.0.1
-- Tid vid skapande: 11 jan 2016 kl 18:19
-- Serverversion: 5.6.21
-- PHP-version: 5.6.3
SET SQL_MODE = "NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO";
SET time_zone = "+00:00";
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@@CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@@CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION=@@COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
/*!40101 SET NAMES utf8 */;
--
-- Databas: `mesidan`
--
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Tabellstruktur `janax_tag`
--
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `janax_tag` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`name` varchar(80) NOT NULL,
`slug` varchar(80) NOT NULL,
`questions` int(20) NOT NULL DEFAULT '0'
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
--
-- Dumpning av Data i tabell `janax_tag`
--
INSERT INTO `janax_tag` (`id`, `name`, `slug`, `questions`) VALUES
(1, 'News', 'news', 0),
(2, 'Technology', 'technology', 0),
(3, 'Purchase', 'purchase', 0),
(4, 'Design', 'design', 0),
(5, 'Performance', 'performance', 0),
(6, 'Accessories', 'accessories', 0),
(7, 'General', 'general', 0),
(8, 'Economy', 'economy', 0),
(9, 'Maintenance', 'maintenance', 0);
--
-- Index för dumpade tabeller
--
--
-- Index för tabell `janax_tag`
--
ALTER TABLE `janax_tag`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET COLLATION_CONNECTION=@OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
|
INSERT INTO `Airline` VALUES (1,'SkyTeam'),(2,'oneworld'),(3,'Star Alliance');
INSERT INTO `Airplane` VALUES (1,519,'A380','12345'),(2,416,'747','54321'),(3,519,'A380','23451'),(4,416,'747','43215'),(5,519,'A380','34512'),(6,416,'747','32154');
INSERT INTO `Airport` VALUES (1,'AMS','Amsterdam','The Netherlands','Schiphol'),(2,'DTW','Detroid','USA','Detroid City'),(3,'NRT','Tokyo','Japan','Narita International Airport'),(4,'SYD','Sydney','Australia','Kingsford Smith'),(5,'LAX','Los Angeles','USA','Los Angeles International'),(6,'FRA','Frankfurt','Germany','Frankfurt International Airport'),(7,'ORD','Chicago','USA','Chicago O\'hare International'),(8,'LHR','London','UK','London Heathrow'),(9,'JFK','New York','USA','<NAME>. Kennedy International'),(10,'SIN','Singapore','Singapore','Changi Airport');
INSERT INTO `Flight` VALUES (1,'2009-08-07','09:00:00','2009-08-06','19:10:00','NW 36',1,1,1,2),(2,'2009-08-07','13:45:00','2009-08-06','15:05:00','NW 96',1,2,2,3),(3,'2009-08-07','06:15:00','2009-08-05','22:30:00','QF 12',2,3,4,5),(4,'2009-08-07','06:55:00','2009-08-06','21:55:00','QF 21',2,4,3,4),(5,'2009-08-07','05:45:00','2009-08-06','14:30:00','UA 944',3,5,6,7),(6,'2009-08-07','07:30:00','2009-08-06','12:59:00','UA 934',3,6,8,5),(7,'2009-08-07','07:40:00','2009-08-07','07:15:00','NW 8445',1,1,8,1),(8,'2009-08-07','12:21:00','2009-08-07','12:05:00','NW 1689',1,2,7,2),(9,'2009-08-07','23:39:00','2009-08-07','15:00:00','QF 3101',2,3,9,5),(10,'2009-08-07','17:15:00','2009-08-07','11:05:00','QF 4022',2,4,10,3),(11,'2009-08-07','14:53:00','2009-08-07','12:45:00','UA 941',3,5,7,6),(12,'2009-08-07','10:38:00','2009-08-07','08:10:00','UA 4842',3,6,1,8);
|
<reponame>hnwarid/DQLabAcademy
SELECT * FROM tabel_A
WHERE kode_pelanggan = 'dqlabcust03'
UNION
SELECT * FROM tabel_B
WHERE kode_pelanggan = 'dqlabcust03';
|
<reponame>lambdamusic/wittgensteiniana
# ************************************************************
# Sequel Ace SQL dump
# Version 20016
#
# https://sequel-ace.com/
# https://github.com/Sequel-Ace/Sequel-Ace
#
# Host: 127.0.0.1 (MySQL 8.0.27)
# Database: hacks-legacy
# Generation Time: 2021-12-23 12:54:05 +0000
# ************************************************************
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@@CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@@CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION=@@COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
SET NAMES utf8mb4;
/*!40014 SET @OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=@@FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS, FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0 */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_SQL_MODE='NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO', SQL_MODE='NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO' */;
/*!40111 SET @OLD_SQL_NOTES=@@SQL_NOTES, SQL_NOTES=0 */;
# Dump of table tractatusapp_language
# ------------------------------------------------------------
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tractatusapp_language`;
CREATE TABLE `tractatusapp_language` (
`id` int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`created_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`updated_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`editedrecord` tinyint(1) NOT NULL,
`review` tinyint(1) NOT NULL,
`internal_notes` longtext NOT NULL,
`created_by_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_by_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`name` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`description` longtext NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_language_4a21cf42` (`created_by_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_language_6f403c1` (`updated_by_id`),
CONSTRAINT `created_by_id_refs_id_75e3a0a2` FOREIGN KEY (`created_by_id`) REFERENCES `auth_user` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `updated_by_id_refs_id_75e3a0a2` FOREIGN KEY (`updated_by_id`) REFERENCES `auth_user` (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3;
LOCK TABLES `tractatusapp_language` WRITE;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `tractatusapp_language` DISABLE KEYS */;
INSERT INTO `tractatusapp_language` (`id`, `created_at`, `updated_at`, `editedrecord`, `review`, `internal_notes`, `created_by_id`, `updated_by_id`, `name`, `description`)
VALUES
(1,'2011-10-03 01:48:04','2011-10-03 01:48:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'english',''),
(2,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'german','');
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `tractatusapp_language` ENABLE KEYS */;
UNLOCK TABLES;
# Dump of table tractatusapp_textexpression
# ------------------------------------------------------------
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tractatusapp_textexpression`;
CREATE TABLE `tractatusapp_textexpression` (
`id` int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`created_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`updated_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`editedrecord` tinyint(1) NOT NULL,
`review` tinyint(1) NOT NULL,
`internal_notes` longtext NOT NULL,
`created_by_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_by_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`author` varchar(300) NOT NULL,
`title` varchar(300) NOT NULL,
`pubyear` int DEFAULT NULL,
`description` longtext NOT NULL,
`language_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textexpression_4a21cf42` (`created_by_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textexpression_6f403c1` (`updated_by_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textexpression_7ab48146` (`language_id`),
CONSTRAINT `created_by_id_refs_id_64e5bcc5` FOREIGN KEY (`created_by_id`) REFERENCES `auth_user` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `language_id_refs_id_1381d1d8` FOREIGN KEY (`language_id`) REFERENCES `tractatusapp_language` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `updated_by_id_refs_id_64e5bcc5` FOREIGN KEY (`updated_by_id`) REFERENCES `auth_user` (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3;
LOCK TABLES `tractatusapp_textexpression` WRITE;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `tractatusapp_textexpression` DISABLE KEYS */;
INSERT INTO `tractatusapp_textexpression` (`id`, `created_at`, `updated_at`, `editedrecord`, `review`, `internal_notes`, `created_by_id`, `updated_by_id`, `author`, `title`, `pubyear`, `description`, `language_id`)
VALUES
(3,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'','text_ogden.html',NULL,'',1),
(4,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'','text_pears.html',NULL,'',1),
(5,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'','text_german.html',NULL,'',2);
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `tractatusapp_textexpression` ENABLE KEYS */;
UNLOCK TABLES;
# Dump of table tractatusapp_textfragment
# ------------------------------------------------------------
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tractatusapp_textfragment`;
CREATE TABLE `tractatusapp_textfragment` (
`id` int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`created_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`updated_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`editedrecord` tinyint(1) NOT NULL,
`review` tinyint(1) NOT NULL,
`internal_notes` longtext NOT NULL,
`created_by_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_by_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`contents` longtext NOT NULL,
`language_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textfragment_4a21cf42` (`created_by_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textfragment_6f403c1` (`updated_by_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textfragment_7ab48146` (`language_id`),
CONSTRAINT `created_by_id_refs_id_4e312547` FOREIGN KEY (`created_by_id`) REFERENCES `auth_user` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `language_id_refs_id_4161001c` FOREIGN KEY (`language_id`) REFERENCES `tractatusapp_language` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `updated_by_id_refs_id_4e312547` FOREIGN KEY (`updated_by_id`) REFERENCES `auth_user` (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3;
LOCK TABLES `tractatusapp_textfragment` WRITE;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `tractatusapp_textfragment` DISABLE KEYS */;
INSERT INTO `tractatusapp_textfragment` (`id`, `created_at`, `updated_at`, `editedrecord`, `review`, `internal_notes`, `created_by_id`, `updated_by_id`, `contents`, `language_id`)
VALUES
(527,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The world is everything that is the case.</div>',1),
(528,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The world is the totality of facts, not of things.</div>',1),
(529,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The world is determined by the facts, and by these being <em>all</em> the facts.</div>',1),
(530,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">For the totality of facts determines both what is the case, and also all that is not the case.</div>',1),
(531,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The facts in logical space are the world.</div>',1),
(532,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The world divides into facts.</div>',1),
(533,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Any one can either be the case or not be the case, and everything else remain the same.</div>',1),
(534,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">What is the case, the fact, is the existence of atomic facts.</div>',1),
(535,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">An atomic fact is a combination of objects (entities, things).</div>',1),
(536,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is essential to a thing that it can be a constituent part of an atomic fact.</div>',1),
(537,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In logic nothing is accidental: if a thing <em>can</em> occur in an atomic fact the possibility of that atomic fact must already be prejudged in the thing.</div>',1),
(538,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It would, so to speak, appear as an accident, when to a thing that could exist alone on its own account, subsequently a state of affairs could be made to fit.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If things can occur in atomic facts, this possibility must already lie in them.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(A logical entity cannot be merely possible. Logic treats of every possibility, and all possibilities are its facts.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">Just as we cannot think of spatial objects at all apart from space, or temporal objects apart from time, so we cannot think of <em>any</em> object apart from the possibility of its connexion with other things.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If I can think of an object in the context of an atomic fact, I cannot think of it apart from the <em>possibility</em> of this context.</div>',1),
(539,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The thing is independent, in so far as it can occur in all <em>possible</em> circumstances, but this form of independence is a form of connexion with the atomic fact, a form of dependence. (It is impossible for words to occur in two different ways, alone and in the proposition.)</div>',1),
(540,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If I know an object, then I also know all the possibilities of its occurrence in atomic facts.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Every such possibility must lie in the nature of the object.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">A new possibility cannot subsequently be found.</div>',1),
(541,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In order to know an object, I must know not its external but all its internal qualities.</div>',1),
(542,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If all objects are given, then thereby are all <em>possible</em> atomic facts also given.</div>',1),
(543,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Every thing is, as it were, in a space of possible atomic facts. I can think of this space as empty, but not of the thing without the space.</div>',1),
(544,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A spatial object must lie in infinite space. (A point in space is an argument place.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">A speck in a visual field need not be red, but it must have a colour; it has, so to speak, a colour space round it. A tone must have <em>a</em> pitch, the object of the sense of touch <em>a</em> hardness, etc.</div>',1),
(545,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Objects contain the possibility of all states of affairs.</div>',1),
(546,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The possibility of its occurrence in atomic facts is the form of the object.</div>',1),
(547,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The object is simple.</div>',1),
(548,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Every statement about complexes can be analysed into a statement about their constituent parts, and into those propositions which completely describe the complexes.</div>',1),
(549,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Objects form the substance of the world. Therefore they cannot be compound.</div>',1),
(550,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If the world had no substance, then whether a proposition had sense would depend on whether another proposition was true.</div>',1),
(551,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It would then be impossible to form a picture of the world (true or false).</div>',1),
(552,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that however different from the real one an imagined world may be, it must have something—a form—in common with the real world.</div>',1),
(553,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">This fixed form consists of the objects.</div>',1),
(554,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The substance of the world <em>can</em> only determine a form and not any material properties. For these are first presented by the propositions—first formed by the configuration of the objects.</div>',1),
(555,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Roughly speaking: objects are colourless.</div>',1),
(556,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Two objects of the same logical form are—apart from their external properties—only differentiated from one another in that they are different.</div>',1),
(557,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Either a thing has properties which no other has, and then one can distinguish it straight away from the others by a description and refer to it; or, on the other hand, there are several things which have the totality of their properties in common, and then it is quite impossible to point to any one of them.</div><div class=\"ogd\">For it a thing is not distinguished by anything, I cannot distinguish it—for otherwise it would be distinguished.</div>',1),
(558,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Substance is what exists independently of what is the case.</div>',1),
(559,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is form and content.</div>',1),
(560,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Space, time and colour (colouredness) are forms of objects.</div>',1),
(561,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Only if there are objects can there be a fixed form of the world.</div>',1),
(562,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The fixed, the existent and the object are one.</div>',1),
(563,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The object is the fixed, the existent; the configuration is the changing, the variable.</div>',1),
(564,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The configuration of the objects forms the atomic fact.</div>',1),
(565,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the atomic fact objects hang one in another, like the links of a chain.</div>',1),
(566,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the atomic fact the objects are combined in a definite way.</div>',1),
(567,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The way in which objects hang together in the atomic fact is the structure of the atomic fact.</div>',1),
(568,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The form is the possibility of the structure.</div>',1),
(569,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The structure of the fact consists of the structures of the atomic facts.</div>',1),
(570,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The totality of existent atomic facts is the world.</div>',1),
(571,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The totality of existent atomic facts also determines which atomic facts do not exist.</div>',1),
(572,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The existence and non-existence of atomic facts is the reality.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(The existence of atomic facts we also call a positive fact, their non-existence a negative fact.)</div>',1),
(573,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Atomic facts are independent of one another.</div>',1),
(574,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">From the existence of non-existence of an atomic fact we cannot infer the existence of non-existence of another.</div>',1),
(575,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The total reality is the world.</div>',1),
(576,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We make to ourselves pictures of facts.</div>',1),
(577,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture presents the facts in logical space, the existence and non-existence of atomic facts.</div>',1),
(578,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture is a model of reality.</div>',1),
(579,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">To the objects correspond in the picture the elements of the picture.</div>',1),
(580,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The elements of the picture stand, in the picture, for the objects.</div>',1),
(581,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture consists in the fact that its elements are combined with one another in a definite way.</div>',1),
(582,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture is a fact.</div>',1),
(583,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">That the elements of the picture are combined with one another in a definite way, represents that the things are so combined with one another.</div><div class=\"ogd\">This connexion of the elements of the picture is called its structure, and the possibility of this structure is called the form of representation of the picture.</div>',1),
(584,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The form of representation is the possibility that the things are combined with one another as are the elements of the picture.</div>',1),
(585,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\"><em>Thus</em> the picture is linked with reality; it reaches up to it.</div>',1),
(586,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is like a scale applied to reality.</div>',1),
(587,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Only the outermost points of the dividing lines <em>touch</em> the object to be measured.</div>',1),
(588,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">According to this view the representing relation which makes it a picture, also belongs to the picture.</div>',1),
(589,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The representing relation consists of the co-ordinations of the elements of the picture and the things.</div>',1),
(590,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">These co-ordinations are as it were the feelers of its elements with which the picture touches reality.</div>',1),
(591,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In order to be a picture a fact must have something in common with what it pictures.</div>',1),
(592,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the picture and the pictured there must be something identical in order that the one can be a picture of the other at all.</div>',1),
(593,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">What the picture must have in common with reality in order to be able to represent it after is manner—rightly or falsely—is its form of representation.</div>',1),
(594,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture can represent every reality whose form it has.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The spatial picture, everything spatial, the coloured, everything coloured, etc.</div>',1),
(595,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture, however, cannot represent its form of representation; it shows it forth.</div>',1),
(596,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture represents its object from without (its standpoint is its form of representation), therefore the picture represents its object rightly or falsely.</div>',1),
(597,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">But the picture cannot place itself outside of its form of representation.</div>',1),
(598,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">What every picture, of whatever form, must have in common with reality in order to be able to represent it at all—rightly or falsely—is the logical form, that is, the form of reality.</div>',1),
(599,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If the form of representation is the logical form, then the picture is called a logical picture.</div>',1),
(600,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Every picture is <em>also</em> a logical picture. (On the other hand, for example, not every picture is spatial.)</div>',1),
(601,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The logical picture can depict the world.</div>',1),
(602,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture has the logical form of representation in common with what it pictures.</div>',1),
(603,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture depicts reality by representing a possibility of the existence and non-existence of atomic facts.</div>',1),
(604,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture represents a possible state of affairs in logical space.</div>',1),
(605,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture contains the possibility of the state of affairs which it represents.</div>',1),
(606,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture agrees with reality or not; it is right or wrong, true or false.</div>',1),
(607,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The picture represents what it represents, independently of its truth or falsehood, through the form of representation.</div>',1),
(608,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">What the picture represents is its sense.</div>',1),
(609,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the agreement or disagreement of its sense with reality, its truth or falsity consists.</div>',1),
(610,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In order to discover whether the picture is true or false we must compare it with reality.</div>',1),
(611,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It cannot be discovered from the picture alone whether it is true or false.</div>',1),
(612,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">There is no picture which is a priori true.</div>',1),
(613,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The logical picture of the facts is the thought.</div>',1),
(614,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">“An atomic fact is thinkable”—means: we can imagine it.</div>',1),
(615,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The totality of true thoughts is a picture of the world.</div>',1),
(616,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The thought contains the possibility of the state of affairs which it thinks. What is thinkable is also possible.</div>',1),
(617,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We cannot think anything unlogical, for otherwise we should have to think unlogically.</div>',1),
(618,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It used to be said that God could create everything, except what was contrary to the laws of logic. The truth is, we could not <em>say</em> of an “unlogical” world how it would look.</div>',1),
(619,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">To present in language anything which “contradicts logic” is as impossible as in geometry to present by its co-ordinates a figure which contradicts the laws of space; or to give the co-ordinates of a point which does not exist.</div>',1),
(620,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We could present spatially an atomic fact which contradicted the laws of physics, but not one which contradicted the laws of geometry.</div>',1),
(621,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">An a priori true thought would be one whose possibility guaranteed its truth.</div>',1),
(622,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Only if we could know a priori that a thought is true if its truth was to be recognized from the thought itself (without an object of comparison).</div>',1),
(623,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the proposition the thought is expressed perceptibly through the senses.</div>',1),
(624,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We use the sensibly perceptible sign (sound or\nwritten sign, etc.) of the proposition as a projection of the possible\nstate of affairs.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The method of projection is the thinking of the sense of the proposition.</div>',1),
(625,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The sign through which we express the though I call the propositional sign. And the proposition is the propositional sign in its projective relation to the world.</div>',1),
(626,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">To the proposition belongs everything which belongs to the projection; but not what is projected.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Therefore the possibility of what is projected but not this itself.</div><div class=\"ogd\">In the proposition, therefore, its sense is not yet contained, but the possibility of expressing it.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(“The content of the proposition” means the content of the significant proposition.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">In the proposition the form of its sense is contained, but not its content.</div>',1),
(627,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The propositional sign consists in the fact that its elements, the words, are combined in it in a definite way.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The propositional sign is a fact.</div>',1),
(628,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The proposition is not a mixture of words (just as the musical theme is not a mixture of tones).</div><div class=\"ogd\">The proposition is articulate.</div>',1),
(629,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Only facts can express a sense, a class of names cannot.</div>',1),
(630,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">That the propositional sign is a fact is concealed by the ordinary form of expression, written or printed.</div><div class=\"ogd\">For in the printed proposition, for example, the sign of a proposition does not appear essentially different from a word.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Thus it was possible for Frege to call the proposition a compounded name.)</div>',1),
(631,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The essential nature of the propositional sign becomes very clear when we imagine it made up of spatial objects (such as tables, chairs, books) instead of written signs.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The mutual spatial position of these things then expresses the sense of the proposition.</div>',1),
(632,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We must not say, “The complex sign ‘<var>aRb</var>’ says ‘<var>a</var> stands in relation <var>R</var> to <var>b</var>’”; but we must say, “<em>That</em> ‘<var>a</var>’ stands in a certain relation to ‘<var>b</var>’ says <em>that</em> <var>aRb</var>”.</div>',1),
(633,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">States of affairs can be described but not <em>named</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Names resemble points; propositions resemble arrows, they have sense.)</div>',1),
(634,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In propositions thoughts can be so expressed that to the objects of the thoughts correspond the elements of the propositional sign.</div>',1),
(635,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">These elements I call “simple signs” and the proposition “completely analysed”.</div>',1),
(636,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The simple signs employed in propositions are called names.</div>',1),
(637,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The name means the object. The object is its meaning. (“<var>A</var>” is the same sign as “<var>A</var>”.)</div>',1),
(638,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">To the configuration of the simple signs in the propositional sign corresponds the configuration of the objects in the state of affairs.</div>',1),
(639,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the proposition the name represents the object.</div>',1),
(640,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Objects I can only <em>name</em>. Signs represent them. I can only speak <em>of</em> them. I cannot <em>assert them</em>. A proposition can only say <em>how</em> a thing is, not <em>what</em> it is.</div>',1),
(641,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The postulate of the possibility of the simple signs is the postulate of the determinateness of the sense.</div>',1),
(642,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A proposition about a complex stands in internal relation to the proposition about its constituent part.</div><div class=\"ogd\">A\ncomplex can only be given by its description, and this will either be\nright or wrong. The proposition in which there is mention of a complex,\nif this does not exist, becomes not nonsense but simply false.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That a propositional element signifies a complex can be seen from an indeterminateness in the propositions in which it occurs. We <em>know</em> that everything is not yet determined by this proposition. (The notation for generality <em>contains</em> a prototype.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">The combination of the symbols of a complex in a simple symbol can be expressed by a definition.</div>',1),
(643,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">There is one and only one complete analysis of the proposition.</div>',1),
(644,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The proposition expresses what it expresses in a definite and clearly specifiable way: the proposition is articulate.</div>',1),
(645,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The name cannot be analysed further by any definition. It is a primitive sign.</div>',1),
(646,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Every defined sign signifies <em>via</em> those signs by which it is defined, and the definitions show the way.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Two signs, one a primitive sign, and one defined by primitive signs, cannot signify in the same way. Names <em>cannot</em> be taken to pieces by definition (nor any sign which alone and independently has a meaning).</div>',1),
(647,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">What does not get expressed in the sign is shown by its application. What the signs conceal, their application declares.</div>',1),
(648,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The meanings of primitive signs can be explained by elucidations. Elucidations are propositions which contain the primitive signs. They can, therefore, only be understood when the meanings of these signs are already known.</div>',1),
(649,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Only the proposition has sense; only in the context of a proposition has a name meaning.</div>',1),
(650,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Every part of a proposition which characterizes its sense I call an expression (a symbol).</div><div class=\"ogd\">(The proposition itself is an expression.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">Expressions are everything—essential for the sense of the proposition—that propositions can have in common with one another.</div><div class=\"ogd\">An expression characterizes a form and a content.</div>',1),
(651,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">An expression presupposes the forms of all propositions in which it can occur. It is the common characteristic mark of a class of propositions.</div>',1),
(652,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is therefore represented by the general form of the propositions which it characterizes.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And in this form the expression is <em>constant</em> and everything else <em>variable</em>.</div>',1),
(653,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">An expression is thus presented by a variable, whose values are the propositions which contain the expression.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(In the limiting case the variable becomes constant, the expression a proposition.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">I call such a variable a “propositional variable”.</div>',1),
(654,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">An expression has meaning only in a proposition. Every variable can be conceived as a propositional variable.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Including the variable name.)</div>',1),
(655,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If we change a constituent part of a proposition into a variable, there is a class of propositions which are all the values of the resulting variable proposition. This class in general still depends on what, by arbitrary agreement, we mean by parts of that proposition. But if we change all those signs, whose meaning was arbitrarily determined, into variables, there always remains such a class. But this is now no longer dependent on any agreement; it depends only on the nature of the proposition. It corresponds to a logical form, to a logical prototype.</div>',1),
(656,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">What values the propositional variable can assume is determined.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The determination of the values <em>is</em> the variable.</div>',1),
(657,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The determination of the values of the propositional variable is done by <em>indicating the propositions</em> whose common mark the variable is.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The determination is a description of these propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The determination will therefore deal only with symbols not with their meaning.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And <em>only</em> this is essential to the determination, <em>that it is only a description of symbols and asserts nothing about what is symbolized</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The way in which we describe the propositions is not essential.</div>',1),
(658,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">I conceive the proposition—like Frege and Russell—as a function of the expressions contained in it.</div>',1),
(659,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The sign is the part of the symbol perceptible by the senses.</div>',1),
(660,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Two different symbols can therefore have the sign (the written sign or the sound sign) in common—they then signify in different ways.</div>',1),
(661,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It can never indicate the common characteristic of two objects that we symbolize them with the same signs but by different <em>methods of symbolizing</em>. For the sign is arbitrary. We could therefore equally well choose two different signs and where then would be what was common in the symbolization?</div>',1),
(662,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the language of everyday life it very often happens that the same word signifies in two different ways—and therefore belongs to two different symbols—or that two words, which signify in different ways, are apparently applied in the same way in the proposition.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Thus the word “is” appears as the copula, as the sign of equality, and as the expression of existence; “to exist” as an intransitive verb like “to go”; “identical” as an adjective; we speak of <em>something</em> but also of the fact of <em>something</em> happening.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(In the proposition “Green is green”—where the first word is a proper name as the last an adjective—these words have not merely different meanings but they are <em>different symbols</em>.)</div>',1),
(663,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Thus there easily arise the most fundamental confusions (of which the whole of philosophy is full).</div>',1),
(664,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In order to avoid these errors, we must employ a symbolism which excludes them, by not applying the same sign in different symbols and by not applying signs in the same way which signify in different ways. A symbolism, that is to say, which obeys the rules of <em>logical</em> grammar—of logical syntax.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(The logical symbolism of Frege and Russell is such a language, which, however, does still not exclude all errors.)</div>',1),
(665,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In order to recognize the symbol in the sign we must consider the significant use.</div>',1),
(666,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The sign determines a logical form only together with its logical syntactic application.</div>',1),
(667,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If a sign is <em>not necessary</em> then it is meaningless. That is the meaning of Occam’s razor.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(If everything in the symbolism works as though a sign had meaning, then it has meaning.)</div>',1),
(668,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In logical syntax the meaning of a sign ought never to play a rôle; it must admit of being established without mention being thereby made of the <em>meaning</em> of a sign; it ought to presuppose <em>only</em> the description of the expressions.</div>',1),
(669,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">From this observation we get a further view—into Russell’s <em>Theory of Types</em>. Russell’s error is shown by the fact that in drawing up his symbolic rules he has to speak about the things his signs mean.</div>',1),
(670,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">No proposition can say anything about itself, because the propositional sign cannot be contained in itself (that is the “whole theory of types”).</div>',1),
(671,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A function cannot be its own argument, because the functional sign already contains the prototype of its own argument and it cannot contain itself.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If, for example, we suppose that the function <var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>fx</var>) could be its own argument, then there would be a proposition “<var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>fx</var>))”, and in this the outer function <var>F</var> and the inner function <var>F</var> must have different meanings; for the inner has the form <var>ϕ</var>(<var>fx</var>), the outer the form <var>ψ</var>(<var>ϕ</var>(<var>fx</var>)). Common to both functions is only the letter “<var>F</var>”, which by itself signifies nothing.</div><div class=\"ogd\">This is at once clear, if instead of “<var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>F</var><var>u</var>)” we write “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>ϕ</var>):</span><var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>ϕu</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>ϕu</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>Fu</var>”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Herewith Russell’s paradox vanishes.</div>',1),
(672,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The rules of logical syntax must follow of themselves, if we only know how every single sign signifies.</div>',1),
(673,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A proposition possesses essential and accidental features.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Accidental are the features which are due to a particular way of producing the propositional sign. Essential are those which alone enable the proposition to express its sense.</div>',1),
(674,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The essential in a proposition is therefore that which is common to all propositions which can express the same sense.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And in the same way in general the essential in a symbol is that which all symbols which can fulfill the same purpose have in common.</div>',1),
(675,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">One could therefore say the real name is that which all symbols, which signify an object, have in common. It would then follow, step by step, that no sort of composition was essential for a name.</div>',1),
(676,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In our notations there is indeed something arbitrary, but <em>this</em> is not arbitrary, namely that <em>if</em> we have determined anything arbitrarily, then something else <em>must</em> be the case. (This results from the <em>essence</em> of the notation.)</div>',1),
(677,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A particular method of symbolizing may be unimportant, but it is always important that this is a <em>possible</em> method of symbolizing. And this happens as a rule in philosophy: The single thing proves over and over again to be unimportant, but the possibility of every single thing reveals something about the nature of the world.</div>',1),
(678,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Definitions are rules for the translation of one language into another. Every correct symbolism must be translatable into every other according to such rules. It is <em>this</em> which all have in common.</div>',1),
(679,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">What signifies in the symbol is what is common to all those symbols by which it can be replaced according to the rules of logical syntax.</div>',1),
(680,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We can, for example, express what is common to all notations for the truth-functions as follows: It is common to them that they all, for example, <em>can be replaced</em> by the notations of “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” (“not <var>p</var>”) and “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>” (“<var>p</var> or <var>q</var>”).</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Herewith is indicated the way in which a special possible notation can give us general information.)</div>',1),
(681,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The sign of the complex is not arbitrarily resolved in the analysis, in such a way that its resolution would be different in every propositional structure.</div>',1),
(682,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The proposition determines a place in logical space: the existence of this logical place is guaranteed by the existence of the constituent parts alone, by the existence of the significant proposition.</div>',1),
(683,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The propositional sign and the logical co-ordinates: that is the logical place.</div>',1),
(684,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The geometrical and the logical place agree in that each is the possibility of an existence.</div>',1),
(685,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Although a proposition may only determine one place in logical space, the whole logical space must already be given by it.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Otherwise denial, the logical sum, the logical product, etc., would always introduce new elements—in co-ordination.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">(The logical scaffolding round the picture determines the logical space. The proposition reaches through the whole logical space.)</div>',1),
(686,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The applied, thought, propositional sign, is the thought.</div>',1),
(687,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The thought is the significant proposition.</div>',1),
(688,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The totality of propositions is the language.</div>',1),
(689,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Man possesses the capacity of constructing languages, in which every sense can be expressed, without having an idea how and what each word means—just as one speaks without knowing how the single sounds are produced.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Colloquial language is a part of the human organism and is not less complicated than it.</div><div class=\"ogd\">From it it is humanly impossible to gather immediately the logic of language.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Language disguises the thought; so that from the external form of the clothes one cannot infer the form of the thought they clothe, because the external form of the clothes is constructed with quite another object than to let the form of the body be recognized.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The silent adjustments to understand colloquial language are enormously complicated.</div>',1),
(690,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Most propositions and questions, that have been written about philosophical matters, are not false, but senseless. We cannot, therefore, answer questions of this kind at all, but only state their senselessness. Most questions and propositions of the philosophers result from the fact that we do not understand the logic of our language.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(They are of the same kind as the question whether the Good is more or less identical than the Beautiful.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">And so it is not to be wondered at that the deepest problems are really <em>no</em> problems.</div>',1),
(691,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">All philosophy is “Critique of language” (but not at all in Mauthner’s sense). Russell’s merit is to have shown that the apparent logical form of the proposition need not be its real form.</div>',1),
(692,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The proposition is a picture of reality.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The proposition is a model of the reality as we think it is.</div>',1),
(693,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">At the first glance the proposition—say as it stands printed on paper—does not seem to be a picture of the reality of which it treats. But nor does the musical score appear at first sight to be a picture of a musical piece; nor does our phonetic spelling (letters) seem to be a picture of our spoken language.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And yet these symbolisms prove to be pictures—even in the ordinary sense of the word—of what they represent.</div>',1),
(694,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is obvious that we perceive a proposition of the form <var>aRb</var> as a picture. Here the sign is obviously a likeness of the signified.</div>',1),
(695,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">And if we penetrate to the essence of this pictorial nature we see that this is not disturbed by <em>apparent irregularities</em> (like the use of <span class=\"symbol\">♯</span> and <span class=\"symbol\">♭</span> in the score).</div><div class=\"ogd\">For these irregularities also picture what they are to express; only in another way.</div>',1),
(696,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The gramophone record, the musical thought, the score, the waves of sound, all stand to one another in that pictorial internal relation, which holds between language and the world.</div><div class=\"ogd\">To all of them the logical structure is common.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Like the two youths, their two horses and their lilies in the story. They are all in a certain sense one.)</div>',1),
(697,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the fact that there is a general rule by which the musician is able to read the symphony out of the score, and that there is a rule by which one could reconstruct the symphony from the line on a gramophone record and from this again—by means of the first rule—construct the score, herein lies the internal similarity between these things which at first sight seem to be entirely different. And the rule is the law of projection which projects the symphony into the language of the musical score. It is the rule of translation of this language into the language of the gramophone record.</div>',1),
(698,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The possibility of all similes, of all the images of our language, rests on the logic of representation.</div>',1),
(699,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In order to understand the essence of the proposition, consider hieroglyphic writing, which pictures the facts it describes.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And from it came the alphabet without the essence of the representation being lost.</div>',1),
(700,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">This we see from the fact that we understand the sense of the propositional sign, without having had it explained to us.</div>',1),
(701,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The proposition is a picture of reality, for I know the state of affairs presented by it, if I understand the proposition. And I understand the proposition, without its sense having been explained to me.</div>',1),
(702,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The proposition <em>shows</em> its sense.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The proposition <em>shows</em> how things stand, <em>if</em> it is true. And it <em>says</em>, that they do so stand.</div>',1),
(703,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The proposition determines reality to this extent, that one only needs to say “Yes” or “No” to it to make it agree with reality.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Reality must therefore be completely described by the proposition.</div><div class=\"ogd\">A proposition is the description of a fact.</div><div class=\"ogd\">As the description of an object describes it by its external properties so propositions describe reality by its internal properties.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The proposition constructs a world with the help of a logical scaffolding, and therefore one can actually see in the proposition all the logical features possessed by reality <em>if</em> it is true. One can <em>draw conclusions</em> from a false proposition.</div>',1),
(704,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">To understand a proposition means to know what is the case, if it is true.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(One can therefore understand it without knowing whether it is true or not.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">One understands it if one understands it constituent parts.</div>',1),
(705,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The translation of one language into another is not a process of translating each proposition of the one into a proposition of the other, but only the constituent parts of propositions are translated.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(And the dictionary does not only translate substantives but also adverbs and conjunctions, etc., and it treats them all alike.)</div>',1),
(706,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The meanings of the simple signs (the words) must be explained to us, if we are to understand them.</div><div class=\"ogd\">By means of propositions we explain ourselves.</div>',1),
(707,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is essential to propositions, that they can communicate a <em>new</em> sense to us.</div>',1),
(708,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A proposition must communicate a new sense with old words.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The proposition communicates to us a state of affairs, therefore it must be <em>essentially</em> connected with the state of affairs.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And the connexion is, in fact, that it is its logical picture.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The proposition only asserts something, in so far as it is a picture.</div>',1),
(709,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the proposition a state of affairs is, as it were, put together for the sake of experiment.</div><div class=\"ogd\">One can say, instead of, This proposition has such and such a sense, This proposition represents such and such a state of affairs.</div>',1),
(710,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">One name stands for one thing, and another for another thing, and they are connected together. And so the whole, like a living picture, presents the atomic fact.</div>',1),
(711,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The possibility of propositions is based upon the principle of the representation of objects by signs.</div><div class=\"ogd\">My fundamental thought is that the “logical constants” do not represent. That the <em>logic</em> of the facts cannot be represented.</div>',1),
(712,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The proposition is a picture of its state of affairs, only in so far as it is logically articulated.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Even the proposition “ambulo” is composite, for its stem gives a different sense with another termination, or its termination with another stem.)</div>',1),
(713,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the proposition there must be exactly as many thing distinguishable as there are in the state of affairs, which it represents.</div><div class=\"ogd\">They must both possess the same logical (mathematical) multiplicity (cf. Hertz’s Mechanics, on Dynamic Models).</div>',1),
(714,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">This mathematical multiplicity naturally cannot in its turn be represented. One cannot get outside it in the representation.</div>',1),
(715,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If we tried, for example, to express what is expressed by “<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>” by putting an index before <var>fx</var>, like: “<span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>Gen</var>.</span></span><var>fx</var>”, it would not do, we should not know what was generalized. If we tried to show it by an index <var>g</var>, like: “<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var><sub><var>g</var></sub>)” it would not do—we should not know the scope of the generalization.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If we were to try it by introducing a mark in the argument places, like “<span class=\"mathop\">(<var>G</var>, <var>G</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>G</var>, <var>G</var>)”, it would not do—we could not determine the identity of the variables, etc.</div><div class=\"ogd\">All these ways of symbolizing are inadequate because they have not the necessary mathematical multiplicity.</div>',1),
(716,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">For the same reason the idealist explanation of the seeing of spatial relations through “spatial spectacles” does not do, because it cannot explain the multiplicity of these relations.</div>',1),
(717,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Reality is compared with the proposition.</div>',1),
(718,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Propositions can be true or false only by being pictures of the reality.</div>',1),
(719,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If one does not observe that propositions have a sense independent of the facts, one can easily believe that true and false are two relations between signs and things signified with equal rights.</div><div class=\"ogd\">One could, then, for example, say that “<var>p</var>” signifies in the true way what “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” signifies in the false way, etc.</div>',1),
(720,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Can we not make ourselves understood by means of false propositions as hitherto with true ones, so long as we know that they are meant to be false? No! For a proposition is true, if what we assert by means of it is the case; and if by “<var>p</var>” we mean <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, and what we mean is the case, then “<var>p</var>” in the new conception is true and not false.</div>',1),
(721,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">That, however, the signs “<var>p</var>” and “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” <em>can</em> say the same thing is important, for it shows that the sign “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>” corresponds to nothing in reality.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That negation occurs in a proposition, is no characteristic of its sense (<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>p</var>).</div><div class=\"ogd\">The propositions “<var>p</var>” and “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” have opposite senses, but to them corresponds one and the same reality.</div>',1),
(722,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">An illustration to explain the concept of truth. A black spot on white paper; the form of the spot can be described by saying of each point of the plane whether it is white or black. To the fact that a point is black corresponds a positive fact; to the fact that a point is white (not black), a negative fact. If I indicate a point of the plane (a truth-value in Frege’s terminology), this corresponds to the assumption proposed for judgment, etc. etc.</div><div class=\"ogd\">But to be able to say that a point is black or white, I must first know under what conditions a point is called white or black; in order to be able to say “<var>p</var>” is true (or false) I must have determined under what conditions I call “<var>p</var>” true, and thereby I determine the sense of the proposition.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The point at which the simile breaks down is this: we can indicate a point on the paper, without knowing what white and black are; but to a proposition without a sense corresponds nothing at all, for it signifies no thing (truth-value) whose properties are called “false” or “true”; the verb of the proposition is not “is true” or “is false”—as Frege thought—but that which “is true” must already contain the verb.</div>',1),
(723,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Every proposition must <em>already</em> have a sense; assertion cannot give it a sense, for what it asserts is the sense itself. And the same holds of denial, etc.</div>',1),
(724,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">One could say, the denial is already related to the logical place determined by the proposition that is denied.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The denying proposition determines a logical place <em>other</em> than does the proposition denied.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The denying proposition determines a logical place, with the help of the logical place of the proposition denied, by saying that it lies outside the latter place.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That one can deny again the denied proposition, shows that what is denied is already a proposition and not merely the preliminary to a proposition.</div>',1),
(725,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A proposition presents the existence and non-existence of atomic facts.</div>',1),
(726,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The totality of true propositions is the total natural science (or the totality of the natural sciences).</div>',1),
(727,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Philosophy is not one of the natural sciences.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(The word “philosophy” must mean something which stands above or below, but not beside the natural sciences.)</div>',1),
(728,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The object of philosophy is the logical clarification of thoughts.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Philosophy is not a theory but an activity.</div><div class=\"ogd\">A philosophical work consists essentially of elucidations.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The result of philosophy is not a number of “philosophical propositions”, but to make propositions clear.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Philosophy should make clear and delimit sharply the thoughts which otherwise are, as it were, opaque and blurred.</div>',1),
(729,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Psychology is no nearer related to philosophy, than is any other natural science.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The theory of knowledge is the philosophy of psychology.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Does not my study of sign-language correspond to the study of thought processes which philosophers held to be so essential to the philosophy of logic? Only they got entangled for the most part in unessential psychological investigations, and there is an analogous danger for my method.</div>',1),
(730,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The Darwinian theory has no more to do with philosophy than has any other hypothesis of natural science.</div>',1),
(731,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Philosophy limits the disputable sphere of natural science.</div>',1),
(732,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It should limit the thinkable and thereby the unthinkable.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It should limit the unthinkable from within through the thinkable.</div>',1),
(733,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It will mean the unspeakable by clearly displaying the speakable.</div>',1),
(734,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Everything that can be thought at all can be thought clearly. Everything that can be said can be said clearly.</div>',1),
(735,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Propositions can represent the whole reality, but they cannot represent what they must have in common with reality in order to be able to represent it—the logical form.</div><div class=\"ogd\">To be able to represent the logical form, we should have to be able to put ourselves with the propositions outside logic, that is outside the world.</div>',1),
(736,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Propositions cannot represent the logical form: this mirrors itself in the propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That which mirrors itself in language, language cannot represent.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That which expresses <em>itself</em> in language, <em>we</em> cannot express by language.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The propositions <em>show</em> the logical form of reality.</div><div class=\"ogd\">They exhibit it.</div>',1),
(737,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Thus a proposition “<var>fa</var>” shows that in its sense the object <var>a</var> occurs, two propositions “<var>fa</var>” and “<var>ga</var>” that they are both about the same object.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If two propositions contradict one another, this is shown by their structure; similarly if one follows from another, etc.</div>',1),
(738,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">What <em>can</em> be shown <em>cannot</em> be said.</div>',1),
(739,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Now we understand our feeling that we are in possession of the right logical conception, if only all is right in our symbolism.</div>',1),
(740,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We can speak in a certain sense of formal properties of objects and atomic facts, or of properties of the structure of facts, and in the same sense of formal relations and relations of structures.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Instead of property of the structure I also say “internal property”; instead of relation of structures “internal relation”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">I introduce these expressions in order to show the reason for the confusion, very widespread among philosophers, between internal relations and proper (external) relations.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">The holding of such internal properties and relations cannot, however, be asserted by propositions, but it shows itself in the propositions, which present the facts and treat of the objects in question.</div>',1),
(741,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">An internal property of a fact we also call a feature of this fact. (In the sense in which we speak of facial features.)</div>',1),
(742,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A property is internal if it is unthinkable that its object does not possess it.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(This bright blue colour and that stand in the internal relation of bright and darker eo ipso. It is unthinkable that <em>these</em> two objects should not stand in this relation.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Here to the shifting use of the words “property” and “relation” there corresponds the shifting use of the word “object”.)</div>',1),
(743,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The existence of an internal property of a possible state of affairs is not expressed by a proposition, but it expresses itself in the proposition which presents that state of affairs, by an internal property of this proposition.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It would be as senseless to ascribe a formal property to a proposition as to deny it the formal property.</div>',1),
(744,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">One cannot distinguish forms from one another by saying that one has this property, the other that: for this assumes that there is a sense in asserting either property of either form.</div>',1),
(745,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The existence of an internal relation between possible states of affairs expresses itself in language by an internal relation between the propositions presenting them.</div>',1),
(746,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Now this settles the disputed question “whether all relations are internal or external”.</div>',1),
(747,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Series which are ordered by <em>internal</em> relations I call formal series.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The series of numbers is ordered not by an external, but by an internal relation.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Similarly the series of propositions “<var>aRb</var>”,</div><div class=\"ogd\">“<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRb</var>”,</div><div class=\"ogd\">“<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRy</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>yRb</var>”, etc.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(If <var>b</var> stands in one of these relations to <var>a</var>, I call <var>b</var> a successor of <var>a</var>.)</div>',1),
(748,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the sense in which we speak of formal properties we can now speak also of formal concepts.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(I introduce this expression in order to make clear the confusion of formal concepts with proper concepts which runs through the whole of the old logic.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">That anything falls under a formal concept as an object belonging to it, cannot be expressed by a proposition. But it is shown in the symbol for the object itself. (The name shows that it signifies an object, the numerical sign that it signifies a number, etc.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">Formal concepts, cannot, like proper concepts, be presented by a function.</div><div class=\"ogd\">For their characteristics, the formal properties, are not expressed by the functions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The expression of a formal property is a feature of certain symbols.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The sign that signifies the characteristics of a formal concept is, therefore, a characteristic feature of all symbols, whose meanings fall under the concept.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The expression of the formal concept is therefore a propositional variable in which only this characteristic feature is constant.</div>',1),
(749,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The propositional variable signifies the formal concept, and its values signify the objects which fall under this concept.</div>',1),
(750,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Every variable is the sign of a formal concept.</div><div class=\"ogd\">For every variable presents a constant form, which all its values possess, and which can be conceived as a formal property of these values.</div>',1),
(751,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">So the variable name “<var>x</var>” is the proper sign of the pseudo-concept <em>object</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Wherever the word “object” (“thing”, “entity”, etc.) is rightly used, it is expressed in logical symbolism by the variable name.</div><div class=\"ogd\">For example in the proposition “there are two objects which …”, by “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)</span>…”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Wherever it is used otherwise, <em>i.e.</em> as a proper concept word, there arise senseless pseudo-propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">So one cannot, <em>e.g.</em> say “There are objects” as one says “There are books”. Nor “There are 100 objects” or “There are <span class=\"symbol\">ℵ</span><sub>0</sub> objects”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And it is senseless to speak of the <em>number of all objects</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The same holds of the words “Complex”, “Fact”, “Function”, “Number”, etc.</div><div class=\"ogd\">They all signify formal concepts and are presented in logical symbolism by variables, not by functions or classes (as Frege and Russell thought).</div><div class=\"ogd\">Expressions like “1 is a number”, “there is only one number nought”, and all like them are senseless.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(It is as senseless to say, “there is only one 1” as it would be to say: 2<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>2 is at 3 o’clock equal to 4.)</div>',1),
(752,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The formal concept is already given with an object, which falls under it. One cannot, therefore, introduce both, the objects which fall under a formal concept <em>and</em> the formal concept itself, as primitive ideas. One cannot, therefore, <em>e.g.</em> introduce (as Russell does) the concept of function and also special functions as primitive ideas; or the concept of number and definite numbers.</div>',1),
(753,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If we want to express in logical symbolism the general proposition “<var>b</var> is a successor of <var>a</var>” we need for this an expression for the general term of the formal series: </div><div class=\"ogd\"><div class=\"centered\"><var>aRb</var>,<br />\n<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRb</var>,<br />\n<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRy</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>yRb</var>,<br />\n… .</div></div>',1),
(754,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The question about the existence of a formal concept is senseless. For no proposition can answer such a question.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(For example, one cannot ask: “Are there unanalysable subject-predicate propositions?”)</div>',1),
(755,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The logical forms are <em>anumerical</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Therefore there are in logic no pre-eminent numbers, and therefore there is no philosophical monism or dualism, etc.</div>',1),
(756,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The sense of a proposition is its agreement and disagreement with the possibilities of the existence and non-existence of the atomic facts.</div>',1),
(757,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The simplest proposition, the elementary proposition, asserts the existence of an atomic fact.</div>',1),
(758,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is a sign of an elementary proposition, that no elementary proposition can contradict it.</div>',1),
(759,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The elementary proposition consists of names. It is a connexion, a concatenation, of names.</div>',1),
(760,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is obvious that in the analysis of propositions we must come to elementary propositions, which consist of names in immediate combination.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The question arises here, how the propositional connexion comes to be.</div>',1),
(761,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Even if the world is infinitely complex, so that every fact consists of an infinite number of atomic facts and every atomic fact is composed of an infinite number of objects, even then there must be objects and atomic facts.</div>',1),
(762,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The name occurs in the proposition only in the context of the elementary proposition.</div>',1),
(763,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The names are the simple symbols, I indicate them by single letters (<var>x</var>, <var>y</var>, <var>z</var>).</div><div class=\"ogd\">The elementary proposition I write as function of the names, in the form “<var>fx</var>”, “<var>ϕ</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)”, etc.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Or I indicate it by the letters <var>p</var>, <var>q</var>, <var>r</var>.</div>',1),
(764,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If I use two signs with one and the same meaning, I express this by putting between them the sign “=”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">“<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>” means then, that the sign “<var>a</var>” is replaceable by the sign “<var>b</var>”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(If I introduce by an equation a new sign “<var>b</var>”, by determining that it shall replace a previously known sign “<var>a</var>”, I write the equation—definition—(like Russell) in the form “<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var> Def.”. A definition is a symbolic rule.)</div>',1),
(765,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Expressions of the form “<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>” are therefore only expedients in presentation: They assert nothing about the meaning of the signs “<var>a</var>” and “<var>b</var>”.</div>',1),
(766,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Can we understand two names without knowing whether they signify the same thing or two different things? Can we understand a proposition in which two names occur, without knowing if they mean the same or different things?</div><div class=\"ogd\">If I know the meaning of an English and a synonymous German word, it is impossible for me not to know that they are synonymous, it is impossible for me not to be able to translate them into one another.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Expressions like “<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>”, or expressions deduced from these are neither elementary propositions nor otherwise significant signs. (This will be shown later.)</div>',1),
(767,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If the elementary proposition is true, the atomic fact exists; if it is false the atomic fact does not exist.</div>',1),
(768,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The specification of all true elementary propositions describes the world completely. The world is completely described by the specification of all elementary propositions plus the specification, which of them are true and which false.</div>',1),
(769,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">With regard to the existence of <var>n</var> atomic facts there are <table class=\"possibilities\"><tbody><tr><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middleright\">K<sub><var>n</var></sub> = </td><td class=\"summationtop\"><var class=\"smallvar\">n</var></td><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middleright\"><span class=\"largeparen\">(</span></td><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middlecenter\"><var>n</var><br /><var>ν</var></td><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middleleft\"><span class=\"largeparen\">)</span></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationmiddle\"><span class=\"largeop\">∑</span></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationbottom\"><span class=\"smallvar\"><var>ν</var> = 0</span></td></tr></tbody></table> possibilities.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It is possible for all combinations of atomic facts to exist, and the others not to exist.</div>',1),
(770,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">To these combinations correspond the same number of possibilities of the truth—and falsehood—of <var>n</var> elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(771,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The truth-possibilities of the elementary propositions mean the possibilities of the existence and non-existence of the atomic facts.</div>',1),
(772,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The truth-possibilities can be presented by schemata of the following kind (“T” means “true”, “F” “false”. The rows of T’s and F’s under the row of the elementary propositions mean their truth-possibilities in an easily intelligible symbolism).</div><div class=\"ogd\"><div class=\"centered\"><table class=\"truthtable\"><tbody><tr><th class=\"l\"><var>p</var></th><th class=\"m\"><var>q</var></th><th class=\"e\"><var>r</var></th></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"m\">T</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">T</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"m\">T</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">T</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr></tbody></table><span class=\"padrthree\"></span><table class=\"truthtable\"><tbody><tr><th class=\"l\"><var>p</var></th><th class=\"e\"><var>q</var></th></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr></tbody></table><span class=\"padrthree\"></span><table class=\"truthtable\"><tbody><tr><th class=\"e\"><var>p</var></th></tr><tr><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr></tbody></table></div></div>',1),
(773,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A proposition is the expression of agreement and disagreement with the truth-possibilities of the elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(774,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The truth-possibilities of the elementary propositions are the conditions of the truth and falsehood of the propositions.</div>',1),
(775,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It seems probable even at first sight that the introduction of the elementary propositions is fundamental for the comprehension of the other kinds of propositions. Indeed the comprehension of the general propositions depends <em>palpably</em> on that of the elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(776,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">With regard to the agreement and disagreement of a proposition with the truth-possibilities of <var>n</var> elementary propositions there are <table class=\"possibilities\"><tbody><tr><td class=\"summationtop\"><span class=\"smallvar\">K<sub><var>n</var></sub></span></td><td class=\"middleright\" rowspan=\"3\"><span class=\"largeparen\">(</span></td><td class=\"middlecenter\" rowspan=\"3\">K<sub><var>n</var></sub><br /><var>κ</var></td><td class=\"middleright\" rowspan=\"3\"><span class=\"largeparen\">)</span> = L<sub><var>n</var></sub></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationmiddle\"><span class=\"largeop\">∑</span></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationmiddle\"><span class=\"smallvar\"><var>κ</var> = 0</span></td></tr></tbody></table> possibilities.</div>',1),
(777,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Agreement with the truth-possibilities can be expressed by co-ordinating with them in the schema the mark “T” (true).</div><div class=\"ogd\">Absence of this mark means disagreement.</div>',1),
(778,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The expression of the agreement and disagreement with the truth-possibilities of the elementary propositions expresses the truth-conditions of the proposition.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The proposition is the expression of its truth-conditions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Frege has therefore quite rightly put them at the beginning, as explaining the signs of his logical symbolism. Only Frege’s explanation of the truth-concept is false: if “the true” and “the false” were real objects and the arguments in <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, etc., then the sense of <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var> would by no means be determined by Frege’s determination.)</div>',1),
(779,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The sign which arises from the co-ordination of that mark “T” with the truth-possibilities is a propositional sign.</div>',1),
(780,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that to the complex of the signs “F” and “T” no object (or complex of objects) corresponds; any more than to horizontal and vertical lines or to brackets. There are no “logical objects”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Something analogous holds of course for all signs, which express the same as the schemata of “T” and “F”.</div>',1),
(781,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Thus <em>e.g.</em></div>',1),
(782,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">For <var>n</var> elementary propositions there are <span class=\"mathrm\"><var>L</var></span><sub><var>n</var></sub> possible groups of truth-conditions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The groups of truth-conditions which belong to the truth-possibilities of a number of elementary propositions can be ordered in a series.</div>',1),
(783,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Among the possible groups of truth-conditions there are two extreme cases.</div><div class=\"ogd\">In the one case the proposition is true for all the truth-possibilities of the elementary propositions. We say that the truth-conditions are <em>tautological</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">In the second case the proposition is false for all the truth-possibilities. The truth-conditions are <em>self-contradictory</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">In the first case we call the proposition a tautology, in the second case a contradiction.</div>',1),
(784,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The proposition shows what it says, the tautology and the contradiction that they say nothing.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The tautology has no truth-conditions, for it is unconditionally true; and the contradiction is on no condition true.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Tautology and contradiction are without sense.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Like the point from which two arrows go out in opposite directions.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">(I know, <em>e.g.</em> nothing about the weather, when I know that it rains or does not rain.)</div>',1),
(785,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Tautology and contradiction are, however, not senseless; they are part of the symbolism, in the same way that “0” is part of the symbolism of Arithmetic.</div>',1),
(786,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Tautology and contradiction are not pictures of the reality. They present no possible state of affairs. For the one allows <em>every</em> possible state of affairs, the other <em>none</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">In the tautology the conditions of agreement with the world—the presenting relations—cancel one another, so that it stands in no presenting relation to reality.</div>',1),
(787,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The truth-conditions determine the range, which is left to the facts by the proposition.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(The proposition, the picture, the model, are in a negative sense like a solid body, which restricts the free movement of another: in a positive sense, like the space limited by solid substance, in which a body may be placed.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">Tautology leaves to reality the whole infinite logical space; contradiction fills the whole logical space and leaves no point to reality. Neither of them, therefore, can in any way determine reality.</div>',1),
(788,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The truth of tautology is certain, of propositions possible, of contradiction impossible.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Certain, possible, impossible: here we have an indication of that gradation which we need in the theory of probability.)</div>',1),
(789,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The logical product of a tautology and a proposition says the same as the proposition. Therefore that product is identical with the proposition. For the essence of the symbol cannot be altered without altering its sense.</div>',1),
(790,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">To a definite logical combination of signs corresponds a definite logical combination of their meanings; <em>every arbitrary</em> combination only corresponds to the unconnected signs.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That is, propositions which are true for every state of affairs cannot be combinations of signs at all, for otherwise there could only correspond to them definite combinations of objects.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(And to no logical combination corresponds <em>no</em> combination of the objects.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">Tautology and contradiction are the limiting cases of the combination of symbols, namely their dissolution.</div>',1),
(791,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Of course the signs are also combined with one another in the tautology and contradiction, <em>i.e.</em> they stand in relations to one another, but these relations are meaningless, unessential to the <em>symbol</em>.</div>',1),
(792,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Now it appears to be possible to give the most general form of proposition; <em>i.e.</em> to give a description of the propositions of some one sign language, so that every possible sense can be expressed by a symbol, which falls under the description, and so that every symbol which falls under the description can express a sense, if the meanings of the names are chosen accordingly.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that in the description of the most general form of proposition <em>only</em> what is essential to it may be described—otherwise it would not be the most general form.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That there is a general form is proved by the fact that there cannot be a proposition whose form could not have been foreseen (<em>i.e.</em> constructed). The general form of proposition is: Such and such is the case.</div>',1),
(793,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Suppose <em>all</em> elementary propositions were given me: then we can simply ask: what propositions I can build out of them. And these are <em>all</em> propositions and <em>so</em> are they limited.</div>',1),
(794,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The propositions are everything which follows from the totality of all elementary propositions (of course also from the fact that it is the <em>totality of them all</em>). (So, in some sense, one could say, that <em>all</em> propositions are generalizations of the elementary propositions.)</div>',1),
(795,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The general proposition form is a variable.</div>',1),
(796,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Propositions are truth-functions of elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(An elementary proposition is a truth-function of itself.)</div>',1),
(797,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The elementary propositions are the truth-arguments of propositions.</div>',1),
(798,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is natural to confuse the arguments of functions with the indices of names. For I recognize the meaning of the sign containing it from the argument just as much as from the index.</div><div class=\"ogd\">In Russell’s “+<sub><var>c</var></sub>”, for example, “<sub><var>c</var></sub>” is an index which indicates that the whole sign is the addition sign for cardinal numbers. But this way of symbolizing depends on arbitrary agreement, and one could choose a simple sign instead of “+<sub><var>c</var></sub>”: but in “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” “<var>p</var>” is not an index but an argument; the sense of “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” <em>cannot</em> be understood, unless the sense of “<var>p</var>” has previously been understood. (In the name <NAME>, Julius is an index. The index is always part of a description of the object to whose name we attach it, <em>e.g.</em> <em>The</em> Cæsar of the Julian gens.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">The confusion of argument and index is, if I am not mistaken, at the root of Frege’s theory of the meaning of propositions and functions. For Frege the propositions of logic were names and their arguments the indices of these names.</div>',1),
(799,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The truth-functions can be ordered in series.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That is the foundation of the theory of probability.</div>',1),
(800,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The truth-functions of every number of elementary propositions can be written in a schema of the following kind:</div>',1),
(801,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If the truth-grounds which are common to a number of propositions are all also truth-grounds of some one proposition, we say that the truth of this proposition follows from the truth of those propositions.</div>',1),
(802,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In particular the truth of a proposition <var>p</var> follows from that of a proposition <var>q</var>, if all the truth-grounds of the second are truth-grounds of the first.</div>',1),
(803,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The truth-grounds of <var>q</var> are contained in those of <var>p</var>; <var>p</var> follows from <var>q</var>.</div>',1),
(804,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If <var>p</var> follows from <var>q</var>, the sense of “<var>p</var>” is contained in that of “<var>q</var>”.</div>',1),
(805,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If a god creates a world in which certain propositions are true, he creates thereby also a world in which all propositions consequent on them are true. And similarly he could not create a world in which the proposition “<var>p</var>” is true without creating all its objects.</div>',1),
(806,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A proposition asserts every proposition which follows from it.</div>',1),
(807,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">“<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>q</var>” is one of the propositions which assert “<var>p</var>” and at the same time one of the propositions which assert “<var>q</var>”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Two propositions are opposed to one another if there is no significant proposition which asserts them both.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Every proposition which contradicts another, denies it.</div>',1),
(808,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">That the truth of one proposition follows from the truth of other propositions, we perceive from the structure of the propositions.</div>',1),
(809,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If the truth of one proposition follows from the truth of others, this expresses itself in relations in which the forms of these propositions stand to one another, and we do not need to put them in these relations first by connecting them with one another in a proposition; for these relations are internal, and exist as soon as, and by the very fact that, the propositions exist.</div>',1),
(810,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">When we conclude from <var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var> and <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var> to <var>q</var> the relation between the forms of the propositions “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>” and “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” is here concealed by the method of symbolizing. But if we write, <em>e.g.</em> instead of “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>” “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.|.</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>q</var>” and instead of “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>p</var>” (<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>neither <var>p</var> nor <var>q</var>), then the inner connexion becomes obvious.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(The fact that we can infer <var>fa</var> from <span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var> shows that generality is present also in the symbol “<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>”.</div>',1),
(811,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If <var>p</var> follows from <var>q</var>, I can conclude from <var>q</var> to <var>p</var>; infer <var>p</var> from <var>q</var>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The method of inference is to be understood from the two propositions alone.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Only they themselves can justify the inference.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Laws of inference, which—as in Frege and Russell—are to justify the conclusions, are senseless and would be superfluous.</div>',1),
(812,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">All inference takes place a priori.</div>',1),
(813,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">From an elementary proposition no other can be inferred.</div>',1),
(814,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In no way can an inference be made from the existence of one state of affairs to the existence of another entirely different from it.</div>',1),
(815,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">There is no causal nexus which justifies such an inference.</div>',1),
(816,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The events of the future <em>cannot</em> be inferred from those of the present.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Superstition is the belief in the causal nexus.</div>',1),
(817,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The freedom of the will consists in the fact that future actions cannot be known now. We could only know them if causality were an <em>inner</em> necessity, like that of logical deduction.—The connexion of knowledge and what is known is that of logical necessity.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(“A knows that <var>p</var> is the case” is senseless if <var>p</var> is a tautology.)</div>',1),
(818,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If from the fact that a proposition is obvious to us it does not <em>follow</em> that it is true, then obviousness is no justification for our belief in its truth.</div>',1),
(819,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If a proposition follows from another, then the latter says more than the former, the former less than the latter.</div>',1),
(820,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If <var>p</var> follows from <var>q</var> and <var>q</var> from <var>p</var> then they are one and the same proposition.</div>',1),
(821,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A tautology follows from all propositions: it says nothing.</div>',1),
(822,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Contradiction is something shared by propositions, which <em>no</em> proposition has in common with another. Tautology is that which is shared by all propositions, which have nothing in common with one another.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Contradiction vanishes so to speak outside, tautology inside all propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Contradiction is the external limit of the propositions, tautology their substanceless centre.</div>',1),
(823,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>r</var></sub> is the number of the truth-grounds of the proposition “<var>r</var>”, <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub> the number of those truth-grounds of the proposition “<var>s</var>” which are at the same time truth-grounds of “<var>r</var>”, then we call the ratio <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub> : <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>r</var></sub> the measure of the <em>probability</em> which the proposition “<var>r</var>” gives to the proposition “<var>s</var>”.</div>',1),
(824,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Suppose in a schema like that above in No. 5.101 <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>r</var></sub> is the number of the “T”’s in the proposition <var>r</var>, <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub> the number of those “T”’s in the proposition <var>s</var>, which stand in the same columns as “T”’s of the proposition <var>r</var>; then the proposition <var>r</var> gives to the proposition <var>s</var> the probability <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub> : <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>r</var></sub>.</div>',1),
(825,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">There is no special object peculiar to probability propositions.</div>',1),
(826,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Propositions which have no truth-arguments in common with one another we call independent.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Independent propositions (<em>e.g.</em> any two elementary propositions) give to one another the probability ½.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If <var>p</var> follows from <var>q</var>, the proposition <var>q</var> gives to the proposition <var>p</var> the probability 1. The certainty of logical conclusion is a limiting case of probability.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Application to tautology and contradiction.)</div>',1),
(827,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A proposition is in itself neither probable nor improbable. An event occurs or does not occur, there is no middle course.</div>',1),
(828,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In an urn there are equal numbers of white and black balls (and no others). I draw one ball after another and put them back in the urn. Then I can determine by the experiment that the numbers of the black and white balls which are drawn approximate as the drawing continues.</div><div class=\"ogd\">So <em>this</em> is not a mathematical fact.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If then, I say, It is equally probable that I should draw a white and a black ball, this means, All the circumstances known to me (including the natural laws hypothetically assumed) give to the occurrence of the one event no more probability than to the occurrence of the other. That is they give—as can easily be understood from the above explanations—to each the probability ½.</div><div class=\"ogd\">What I can verify by the experiment is that the occurrence of the two events is independent of the circumstances with which I have no closer acquaintance.</div>',1),
(829,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The unit of the probability proposition is: The circumstances—with which I am not further acquainted—give to the occurrence of a definite event such and such a degree of probability.</div>',1),
(830,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Probability is a generalization.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It involves a general description of a propositional form.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Only in default of certainty do we need probability. If we are not completely acquainted with a fact, but know <em>something</em> about its form.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(A proposition can, indeed, be an incomplete picture of a certain state of affairs, but it is always <em>a</em> complete picture.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">The probability proposition is, as it were, an extract from other propositions.</div>',1),
(831,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The structures of propositions stand to one another in internal relations.</div>',1),
(832,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We can bring out these internal relations in our manner of expression, by presenting a proposition as the result of an operation which produces it from other propositions (the bases of the operation).</div>',1),
(833,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The operation is the expression of a relation between the structures of its result and its bases.</div>',1),
(834,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The operation is that which must happen to a proposition in order to make another out of it.</div>',1),
(835,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">And that will naturally depend on their formal properties, on the internal similarity of their forms.</div>',1),
(836,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The internal relation which orders a series is equivalent to the operation by which one term arises from another.</div>',1),
(837,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The first place in which an operation can occur is where a proposition arises from another in a logically significant way; <em>i.e.</em> where the logical construction of the proposition begins.</div>',1),
(838,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The truth-functions of elementary proposition, are results of operations which have the elementary propositions as bases. (I call these operations, truth-operations.)</div>',1),
(839,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The sense of a truth-function of <var>p</var> is a function of the sense of <var>p</var>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Denial, logical addition, logical multiplication, etc., etc., are operations.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Denial reverses the sense of a proposition.)</div>',1),
(840,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">An operation shows itself in a variable; it shows how we can proceed from one form of proposition to another.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It gives expression to the difference between the forms.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(And that which is common the the bases, and the result of an operation, is the bases themselves.)</div>',1),
(841,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The operation does not characterize a form but only the difference between forms.</div>',1),
(842,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The same operation which makes “<var>q</var>” from “<var>p</var>”, makes “<var>r</var>” from “<var>q</var>”, and so on. This can only be expressed by the fact that “<var>p</var>”, “<var>q</var>”, “<var>r</var>”, etc., are variables which give general expression to certain formal relations.</div>',1),
(843,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The occurrence of an operation does not characterize the sense of a proposition.</div><div class=\"ogd\">For an operation does not assert anything; only its result does, and this depends on the bases of the operation.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Operation and function must not be confused with one another.)</div>',1),
(844,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A function cannot be its own argument, but the result of an operation can be its own basis.</div>',1),
(845,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Only in this way is the progress from term to term in a formal series possible (from type to type in the hierarchy of Russell and Whitehead). (Russell and Whitehead have not admitted the possibility of this progress but have made use of it all the same.)</div>',1),
(846,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The repeated application of an operation to its own result I call its successive application (“<span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>a</var>” is the result of the threefold successive application of “<span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>” to “<var>a</var>”).</div><div class=\"ogd\">In a similar sense I speak of the successive application of <em>several</em> operations to a number of propositions.</div>',1),
(847,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The general term of the formal series <var>a</var>, <span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>a</var>, <span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>a</var>,<span class=\"mathrel\">…</span>. I write thus: “[<var>a</var>, <var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>x</var>]”. This expression in brackets is a variable. The first term of the expression is the beginning of the formal series, the second the form of an arbitrary term <var>x</var> of the series, and the third the form of that term of the series which immediately follows <var>x</var>.</div>',1),
(848,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The concept of the successive application of an operation is equivalent to the concept “and so on”.</div>',1),
(849,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">One operation can reverse the effect of another. Operations can cancel one another.</div>',1),
(850,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Operations can vanish (<em>e.g.</em> denial in “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>”. <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>p</var>).</div>',1),
(851,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">All propositions are results of truth-operations on the elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The truth-operation is the way in which a truth-function arises from elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">According to the nature of truth-operations, in the same way as out of elementary propositions arise their truth-functions, from truth-functions arises a new one. Every truth-operation creates from truth-functions of elementary propositions, another truth-function of elementary propositions <em>i.e.</em> a proposition. The result of every truth-operation on the results of truth-operations on elementary propositions is also the result of <em>one</em> truth-operation on elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Every proposition is the result of truth-operations on elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(852,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The Schemata No. 4.31 are also significant, if “<var>p</var>”, “<var>q</var>”, “<var>r</var>”, etc. are not elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And it is easy to see that the propositional sign in No. 4.442 expresses one truth-function of elementary propositions even when “<var>p</var>” and “<var>q</var>” are truth-functions of elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(853,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">All truth-functions are results of the successive application of a finite number of truth-operations to elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(854,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Here it becomes clear that there are no such things as “logical objects” or “logical constants” (in the sense of Frege and Russell).</div>',1),
(855,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">For all those results of truth-operations on truth-functions are identical, which are one and the same truth-function of elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(856,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">That <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span>, <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span>, etc., are not relations in the sense of right and left, etc., is obvious.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The possibility of crosswise definition of the logical “primitive signs” of Frege and Russell shows by itself that these are not primitive signs and that they signify no relations.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And it is obvious that the “<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>” which we define by means of “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>” and “<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>” is identical with that by which we define “<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>” with the help of “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>”, and that this “<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>” is the same as the first, and so on.</div>',1),
(857,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">That from a fact <var>p</var> an infinite number of <em>others</em> should follow, namely, <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, etc., is indeed hardly to be believed, and it is no less wonderful that the infinite number of propositions of logic (of mathematics) should follow from half a dozen “primitive propositions”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">But the propositions of logic say the same thing. That is, nothing.</div>',1),
(858,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Truth-functions are not material functions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If <em>e.g.</em> an affirmation can be produced by repeated denial, is the denial—in any sense—contained in the affirmation? Does “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” deny <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, or does it affirm <var>p</var>; or both?</div><div class=\"ogd\">The proposition “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” does not treat of denial as an object, but the possibility of denial is already prejudged in affirmation.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And if there was an object called “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>”, then “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” would have to say something other than “<var>p</var>”. For the one proposition would then treat of <span class=\"mathop\">~</span>, the other would not.</div>',1),
(859,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">This disappearance of the apparent logical constants also occurs if “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>fx</var>” says the same as “<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>”, or “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>” the same as “<var>fa</var>”.</div>',1),
(860,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If a proposition is given to us then the results of all truth-operations which have it as their basis are given <em>with</em> it.</div>',1),
(861,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If there are logical primitive signs a correct logic must make clear their position relative to one another and justify their existence. The construction of logic <em>out of</em> its primitive signs must become clear.</div>',1),
(862,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If logic has primitive ideas these must be independent of one another. If a primitive idea is introduced it must be introduced in all contexts in which it occurs at all. One cannot therefore introduce it for <em>one</em> context and then again for another. For example, if denial is introduced, we must understand it in propositions of the form “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>”, just as in propositions like “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>)”, “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>fx</var>” and others. We may not first introduce it for one class of cases and then for another, for it would then remain doubtful whether its meaning in the two cases was the same, and there would be no reason to use the same way of symbolizing in the two cases.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(In short, what Frege (“Grundgesetze der Arithmetik”) has said about the introduction of signs by definitions holds, mutatis mutandis, for the introduction of primitive signs also.)</div>',1),
(863,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The introduction of a new expedient in the symbolism of logic must always be an event full of consequences. No new symbol may be introduced in logic in brackets or in the margin—with, so to speak, an entirely innocent face.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Thus in the “Principia Mathematica” of Russell and Whitehead there occur definitions and primitive propositions in words. Why suddenly words here? This would need a justification. There was none, and can be none for the process is actually not allowed.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">But if the introduction of a new expedient has proved necessary in one place, we must immediately ask: Where is this expedient <em>always</em> to be used? Its position in logic must be made clear.</div>',1),
(864,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">All numbers in logic must be capable of justification.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Or rather it must become plain that there are no numbers in logic.</div><div class=\"ogd\">There are no pre-eminent numbers.</div>',1),
(865,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In logic there is no side by side, there can be no classification.</div><div class=\"ogd\">In logic there cannot be a more general and a more special.</div>',1),
(866,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The solution of logical problems must be simple for they set the standard of simplicity.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Men have always thought that there must be a sphere of questions whose answers—a priori—are symmetrical and united into a closed regular structure.</div><div class=\"ogd\">A sphere in which the proposition, simplex sigillum veri, is valid.</div>',1),
(867,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">When we have rightly introduced the logical signs, the sense of all their combinations has been already introduced with them: therefore not only “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>” but also “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>q</var>)”, etc. etc. We should then already have introduced the effect of all possible combinations of brackets; and it would then have become clear that the proper general primitive signs are not “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>”, “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>”, etc., but the most general form of their combinations.</div>',1),
(868,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The apparently unimportant fact that the apparent relations like <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span> and <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span> need brackets—unlike real relations—is of great importance.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The use of brackets with these apparent primitive signs shows that these are not the real primitive signs; and nobody of course would believe that the brackets have meaning by themselves.</div>',1),
(869,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Logical operation signs are punctuations.</div>',1),
(870,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that everything which can be said <em>beforehand</em> about the form of <em>all</em> propositions at all can be said <em>on one occasion</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">For all logical operations are already contained in the elementary proposition. For “<var>fa</var>” says the same as</div><div class=\"ogd\"><div class=\"displaymath\">“<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>”.</div></div><div class=\"ogd\">Where there is composition, there is argument and function, and where these are, all logical constants already are.</div><div class=\"ogd\">One could say: the one logical constant is that which <em>all</em> propositions, according to their nature, have in common with one another.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That however is the general form of proposition.</div>',1),
(871,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The general form of proposition is the essence of proposition.</div>',1),
(872,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">To give the essence of proposition means to give the essence of all description, therefore the essence of the world.</div>',1),
(873,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The description of the most general propositional form is the description of the one and only general primitive sign in logic.</div>',1),
(874,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Logic must take care of itself.</div><div class=\"ogd\">A <em>possible</em> sign must also be able to signify. Everything which is possible in logic is also permitted. (“Socrates is identical” means nothing because there is no property which is called “identical”. The proposition is senseless because we have not made some arbitrary determination, not because the symbol is in itself unpermissible.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">In a certain sense we cannot make mistakes in logic.</div>',1),
(875,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Self-evidence, of which Russell has said so much, can only be discard in logic by language itself preventing every logical mistake. That logic is a priori consists in the fact that we <em>cannot</em> think illogically.</div>',1),
(876,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We cannot give a sign the wrong sense. </div>',1),
(877,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Occam’s razor is, of course, not an arbitrary rule nor one justified by its practical success. It simply says that <em>unnecessary</em> elements in a symbolism mean nothing.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Signs which serve <em>one</em> purpose are logically equivalent, signs\nwhich serve <em>no</em> purpose are logically meaningless.</div>',1),
(878,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Frege says: Every legitimately constructed proposition must have a sense; and I say: Every possible proposition is legitimately constructed, and if it has no sense this can only be because we have given no <em>meaning</em> to some of its constituent parts.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Even if we believe that we have done so.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">Thus “Socrates is identical” says nothing, because we have given <em>no</em> meaning to the word “identical” as <em>adjective</em>. For when it occurs as the sign of equality it symbolizes in an entirely different way—the symbolizing relation is another—therefore the symbol is in the two cases entirely different; the two symbols have the sign in common with one another only by accident.</div>',1),
(879,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The number of necessary fundamental operations depends <em>only</em> on our notation.</div>',1),
(880,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is only a question of constructing a system of signs of a definite number of dimensions—of a definite mathematical multiplicity.</div>',1),
(881,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that we are not concerned here with a <em>number of primitive ideas</em> which must be signified but with the expression of a rule.</div>',1),
(882,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Every truth-function is a result of the successive application of the operation <span class=\"mathop\">(-----<span class=\"mathrm\">T</span>)</span>(<var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, . . . . .) to elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">This operation denies all the propositions in the right-hand bracket and I call it the negation of these propositions.</div>',1),
(883,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">An expression in brackets whose terms are propositions I indicate—if the order of the terms in the bracket is indifferent—by a sign of the form “(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)”. “<var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>” is a variable whose values are the terms of the expression in brackets, and the line over the variable indicates that it stands for all its values in the bracket.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Thus if <var>ξ</var> has the 3 values P, Q, R, then (<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>(P, Q, R).)</div><div class=\"ogd\">The values of the variables must be determined.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The determination is the description of the propositions which the variable stands for.</div><div class=\"ogd\">How the description of the terms of the expression in brackets takes place is unessential.</div><div class=\"ogd\">We may distinguish 3 kinds of description: 1. Direct enumeration. In this case we can place simply its constant values instead of the variable. 2. Giving a function <var>fx</var>, whose values for all values of <var>x</var> are the propositions to be described. 3. Giving a formal law, according to which those propositions are constructed. In this case the terms of the expression in brackets are all the terms of a formal series.</div>',1),
(884,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Therefore I write instead of “<span class=\"mathop\">(-----<span class=\"mathrm\">T</span>)</span>(<var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, . . . . .)”, “<span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)”.</div><div class=\"ogd\"><span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>) is the negation of all the values of the propositional variable <var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>.</div>',1),
(885,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">As it is obviously easy to express how propositions can be constructed by means of this operation and how propositions are not to be constructed by means of it, this must be capable of exact expression.</div>',1),
(886,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If <var>ξ</var> has only one value, then <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var> (not <var>p</var>), if it has two values then <span class=\"nop\">N</span> (<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>q</var> (neither <var>p</var> nor <var>q</var>).</div>',1),
(887,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">How can the all-embracing logic which mirrors the world use such special catches and manipulations? Only because all these are connected into an infinitely fine network, to the great mirror.</div>',1),
(888,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">“<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” is true if “<var>p</var>” is false. Therefore in the true proposition “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” “<var>p</var>” is a false proposition. How then can the stroke “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>” bring it into agreement with reality?</div><div class=\"ogd\">That which denies in “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” is however not “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>”, but that which all signs of this notation, which deny <var>p</var>, have in common.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Hence the common rule according to which “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>”, “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>”, “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>”, “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>”, etc. etc. (to infinity) are constructed. And this which is common to them all mirrors denial.</div>',1),
(889,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We could say: What is common to all symbols, which assert both <var>p</var> and <var>q</var>, is the proposition “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>q</var>”. What is common to all symbols, which asserts either <var>p</var> or <var>q</var>, is the proposition “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And similarly we can say: Two propositions are opposed to one another when they have nothing in common with one another; and every proposition has only one negative, because there is only one proposition which lies altogether outside it.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Thus in Russell’s notation also it appears evident that “<var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” says the same thing as “<var>q</var>”; that “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” says nothing.</div>',1),
(890,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If a notation is fixed, there is in it a rule according to which all the propositions denying <var>p</var> are constructed, a rule according to which all the propositions asserting <var>p</var> are constructed, a rule according to which all the propositions asserting <var>p</var> or <var>q</var> are constructed, and so on. These rules are equivalent to the symbols and in them their sense is mirrored.</div>',1),
(891,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It must be recognized in our symbols that what is connected by “<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>”, “<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span>”, etc., must be propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And this is the case, for the symbols “<var>p</var>” and “<var>q</var>” presuppose “<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>”, “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>”, etc. If the sign “<var>p</var>” in “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>” does not stand for a complex sign, then by itself it cannot have sense; but then also the signs “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>p</var>”, “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>p</var>”, etc. which have the same sense as “<var>p</var>” have no sense. If, however, “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>p</var>” has no sense, then also “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>” can have no sense.</div>',1),
(892,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Must the sign of the negative proposition be constructed by means of the sign of the positive? Why should one not be able to express the negative proposition by means of a negative fact? (Like: if “<var>a</var>” does not stand in a certain relation to “<var>b</var>”, it could express that <var>aRb</var> is not the case.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">But here also the negative proposition is indirectly constructed with the positive.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The positive <em>proposition</em> must presuppose the existence of the negative <em>proposition</em> and conversely.</div>',1),
(893,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If the values of <var>ξ</var> are the total values of a function <var>fx</var> for all values of <var>x</var>, then <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>.</div>',1),
(894,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">I separate the concept <em>all</em> from the truth-function.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Frege and Russell have introduced generality in connexion with the logical product or the logical sum. Then it would be difficult to understand the propositions “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>” and “<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>” in which both ideas lie concealed.</div>',1),
(895,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">That which is peculiar to the “symbolism of generality” is firstly, that it refers to a logical prototype, and secondly, that it makes constants prominent.</div>',1),
(896,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The generality symbol occurs as an argument.</div>',1),
(897,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If the objects are given, therewith are <em>all</em> objects also given.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If the elementary propositions are given, then therewith <em>all</em> elementary propositions are also given.</div>',1),
(898,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is not correct to render the proposition “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>”—as Russell does—in the words “<var>fx</var> is <em>possible</em>”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Certainty, possibility or impossibility of a state of affairs are not expressed by a proposition but by the fact that an expression is a tautology, a significant proposition or a contradiction.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That precedent to which one would always appeal, must be present in the symbol itself.</div>',1),
(899,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">One can describe the world completely by completely generalized propositions, <em>i.e.</em> without from the outset co-ordinating any name with a definite object.</div><div class=\"ogd\">In order then to arrive at the customary way of expression we need simply say after an expression “there is only and only one <var>x</var>, which …”: and this <var>x</var> is <var>a</var>.</div>',1),
(900,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A completely generalized proposition is like every other proposition composite. (This is shown by the fact that in “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>, <var>ϕ</var>).</span><var>ϕx</var>” we must mention “<var>ϕ</var>” and “<var>x</var>” separately. Both stand independently in signifying relations to the world as in the ungeneralized proposition.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">A characteristic of a composite symbol: it has something in common with <em>other</em> symbols.</div>',1),
(901,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The truth or falsehood of <em>every</em> proposition alters something in the general structure of the world. And the range which is allowed to its structure by the totality of elementary propositions is exactly that which the completely general propositions delimit.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(If an elementary proposition is true, then, at any rate, there is one <em>more</em> elementary proposition true.)</div>',1),
(902,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Identity of the object I express by identity of the sign and not by means of a sign of identity. Difference of the objects by difference of the signs.</div>',1),
(903,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">That identity is not a relation between objects is obvious. This becomes very clear if, for example, one considers the proposition “<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>):</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>.</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>”. What this proposition says is simply that <em>only</em> <var>a</var> satisfies the function <var>f</var>, and not that only such things satisfy the function <var>f</var> which have a certain relation to <var>a</var>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">One could of course say that in fact <em>only</em> <var>a</var> has this relation to <var>a</var>, but in order to express this we should need the sign of identity itself.</div>',1),
(904,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Russell’s definition of “=” won’t do; because according to it one cannot say that two objects have all their properties in common. (Even if this proposition is never true, it is nevertheless <em>significant</em>.)</div>',1),
(905,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Roughly speaking: to say of <em>two</em> things that they are identical is nonsense, and to say of <em>one</em> thing that it is identical with itself is to say nothing.</div>',1),
(906,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">I write therefore not “<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>b</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>” but “<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>a</var>)” (or “<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>b</var>,<var>b</var>)”). And not “<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>b</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>”, but “<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>b</var>)”.</div>',1),
(907,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">And analogously: not “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span> <var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>y</var>”, but “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>x</var>)”; and not “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>y</var>”, but “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Therefore instead of Russell’s “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)”: “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>.</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>x</var>)”.)</div>',1),
(908,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Instead of “<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>):</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>” we therefore write <em>e.g.</em> “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>.</span><var>fa</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>fy</var>”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And if the proposition “<em>only</em> one <var>x</var> satisfies <var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>( )” reads: “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>.</span><var>fa</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>fy</var>”.</div>',1),
(909,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The identity sign is therefore not an essential constituent of logical notation.</div>',1),
(910,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">And we see that the apparent propositions like: “<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>”, “<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>b</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>c</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>c</var>”, “<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>x</var>”. “<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>”, etc. cannot be written in a correct logical notation at all.</div>',1),
(911,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">So all problems disappear which are connected with such pseudo-propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">This is the place to solve all the problems with arise through Russell’s “Axiom of Infinity”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">What the axiom of infinity is meant to say would be expressed in language by the fact that there is an infinite number of names with different meanings.</div>',1),
(912,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">There are certain cases in which one is tempted to use expressions of the form “<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>” or “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>p</var>” and of that kind. And indeed this takes place when one would speak of the archetype Proposition, Thing, etc. So Russell in the <em>Principles of Mathematics</em> has rendered the nonsense “<var>p</var> is a proposition” in symbols by “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>p</var>” and has put it as hypothesis before certain propositions to show that their places for arguments could only be occupied by propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(It is nonsense to place the hypothesis <var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>p</var> before a proposition in order to ensure that its arguments have the right form, because the hypotheses for a non-proposition as argument becomes not false but meaningless, and because the proposition itself becomes senseless for arguments of the wrong kind, and therefore it survives the wrong arguments no better and no worse than the senseless hypothesis attached for this purpose.)</div>',1),
(913,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Similarly it was proposed to express “There are no things” by “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>x</var>”. But even if this were a proposition—would it not be true if indeed “There were things”, but these were not identical with themselves?</div>',1),
(914,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the general propositional form, propositions occur in a proposition only as bases of the truth-operations.</div>',1),
(915,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">At first sight it appears as if there were also a different way in which one proposition could occur in another.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Especially in certain propositional forms of psychology, like “A thinks, that <var>p</var> is the case”, or “A thinks <var>p</var>”, etc.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Here it appears superficially as if the proposition <var>p</var> stood to the object A in a kind of relation.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(And in modern epistemology (Russell, Moore, etc.) those propositions have been conceived in this way.)</div>',1),
(916,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">But it is clear that “A believes that <var>p</var>”, “A thinks <var>p</var>”, “A says <var>p</var>”, are of the form “‘<var>p</var>’ says <var>p</var>”: and here we have no co-ordination of a fact and an object, but a co-ordination of facts by means of a co-ordination of their objects.</div>',1),
(917,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">This shows that there is no such thing as the soul—the subject, etc.—as it is conceived in superficial psychology.</div><div class=\"ogd\">A composite soul would not be a soul any longer.</div>',1),
(918,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The correct explanation of the form of the proposition “A judges <var>p</var>” must show that it is impossible to judge a nonsense. (Russell’s theory does not satisfy this condition.)</div>',1),
(919,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">To perceive a complex means to perceive that its constituents are combined in such and such a way.</div><div class=\"ogd\">This perhaps explains that the figure <div class=\"centered\"><img src=\"http://hacks.michelepasin.org/media/hacks/custom/tractatusapp/img/thecube.svg\" alt=\"Cube with a face and b face\" class=\"thecubepng\" /></div> can be seen in two ways as a cube; and all similar phenomena. For we really see two different facts. (If I fix my eyes first on the corners <em>a</em> and only glance at <em>b</em>, <em>a</em> appears in front and <em>b</em> behind, and vice versa.)</div>',1),
(920,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We must now answer a priori the question as to all possible forms of the elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The elementary proposition consists of names. Since we cannot give the number of names with different meanings, we cannot give the composition of the elementary proposition.</div>',1),
(921,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Our fundamental principle is that every question which can be decided at all by logic can be decided without further trouble.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(And if we get into a situation where we need to answer such a problem by looking at the world, this shows that we are on a fundamentally wrong track.)</div>',1),
(922,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The “experience” which we need to understand logic is not that such and such is the case, but that something <em>is</em>; but that is <em>no</em> experience.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Logic <em>precedes</em> every experience—that something is <em>so</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It is before the How, not before the What.</div>',1),
(923,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">And if this were not the case, how could we apply logic? We could say: if there were a logic, even if there were no world, how then could there be a logic, since there is a world?</div>',1),
(924,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Russell said that there were simple relations between different numbers of things (individuals). But between what numbers? And how should this be decided—by experience?</div><div class=\"ogd\">(There is no pre-eminent number.)</div>',1),
(925,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The enumeration of any special forms would be entirely arbitrary.</div>',1),
(926,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">How could we decide a priori whether, for example, I can get into a situation in which I need to symbolize with a sign of a 27-termed relation?</div>',1),
(927,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">May we then ask this at all? Can we set out a sign form and not know whether anything can correspond to it?</div><div class=\"ogd\">Has the question sense: what must there <em>be</em> in order that anything can be the case?</div>',1),
(928,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that we have a concept of the elementary proposition apart from its special logical form.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Where, however, we can build symbols according to a system, there this system is the logically important thing and not the single symbols.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And how would it be possible that I should have to deal with forms in logic which I can invent: but I must have to deal with that which makes it possible for me to invent them.</div>',1),
(929,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">There cannot be a hierarchy of the forms of the elementary propositions. Only that which we ourselves construct can we foresee.</div>',1),
(930,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Empirical reality is limited by the totality of objects. The boundary appears again in the totality of elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The hierarchies are and must be independent of reality.</div>',1),
(931,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If we know on purely logical grounds, that there must be elementary propositions, then this must be known by everyone who understands propositions in their unanalysed form.</div>',1),
(932,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">All propositions of our colloquial language are actually, just as they are, logically completely in order. That simple thing which we ought to give here is not a model of the truth but the complete truth itself.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Our problems are not abstract but perhaps the most concrete that there are.)</div>',1),
(933,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The <em>application</em> of logic decides what elementary propositions there are.</div><div class=\"ogd\">What lies in its application logic cannot anticipate.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that logic may not conflict with its application.</div><div class=\"ogd\">But logic must have contact with its application.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Therefore logic and its application may not overlap one another.</div>',1),
(934,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If I cannot give elementary propositions a priori then it must lead to obvious nonsense to try to give them.</div>',1),
(935,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\"><em>The limits of my language</em> mean the limits of my world.</div>',1),
(936,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Logic fills the world: the limits of the world are also its limits.</div><div class=\"ogd\">We cannot therefore say in logic: This and this there is in the world, that there is not.</div><div class=\"ogd\">For that would apparently presuppose that we exclude certain possibilities, and this cannot be the case since otherwise logic must get outside the limits of the world: that is, if it could consider these limits from the other side also.</div><div class=\"ogd\">What we cannot think, that we cannot think: we cannot therefore <em>say</em> what we cannot think.</div>',1),
(937,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">This remark provides a key to the question, to what extent solipsism is a truth.</div><div class=\"ogd\">In fact what solipsism <em>means</em>, is quite correct, only it cannot be <em>said</em>, but it shows itself.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That the world is <em>my</em> world, shows itself in the fact that the limits of the language (the language which only I understand) mean the limits of <em>my</em> world.</div>',1),
(938,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The world and life are one.</div>',1),
(939,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">I am my world. (The microcosm.)</div>',1),
(940,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The thinking, presenting subject; there is no such thing.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If I wrote a book “The world as I found it”, I should also have therein to report on my body and say which members obey my will and which do not, etc. This then would be a method of isolating the subject or rather of showing that in an important sense there is no subject: that is to say, of it alone in this book mention could <em>not</em> be made.</div>',1),
(941,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The subject does not belong to the world but it is a limit of the world.</div>',1),
(942,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\"><em>Where in</em> the world is a metaphysical subject to be noted?</div><div class=\"ogd\">You say that this case is altogether like that of the eye and the field of sight. But you do <em>not</em> really see the eye.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And from nothing <em>in the field of sight</em> can it be concluded that it is seen from an eye.</div>',1),
(943,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">For the field of sight has not a form like this: <div class=\"centered\"><span class=\"sfmiddle\"><span class=\"lowered\">Eye —</span><img src=\"http://hacks.michelepasin.org/media/hacks/custom/tractatusapp/img/theeye.svg\" alt=\"Eye image\" class=\"theeyepng\" /></div></div>',1),
(944,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">This is connected with the fact that no part of our experience is also a priori.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Everything we see could also be otherwise.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Everything we describe at all could also be otherwise.</div><div class=\"ogd\">There is no order of things a priori.</div>',1),
(945,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Here we see that solipsism strictly carried out coincides with pure realism. The I in solipsism shrinks to an extensionless point and there remains the reality co-ordinated with it.</div>',1),
(946,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">There is therefore really a sense in which the philosophy we can talk of a non-psychological I.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The I occurs in philosophy through the fact that the “world is my world”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The philosophical I is not the man, not the human body or the human soul of which psychology treats, but the metaphysical subject, the limit—not a part of the world.</div>',1),
(947,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The general form of truth-function is: [<span class=\"overlined\"><var>p</var></span>, <span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>, <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)].</div><div class=\"ogd\">This is the general form of proposition.</div>',1),
(948,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">This says nothing else than that every proposition is the result of successive applications of the operation <span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"nop\">N</span>’</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>) to the elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(949,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If we are given the general form of the way in which a proposition is constructed, then thereby we are also given the general form of the way in which by an operation out of one proposition another can be created.</div>',1),
(950,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The general form of the operation <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var>η</var></span>) is therefore: <span class=\"mathop\">[<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>, <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)]’</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var>η</var></span>) (<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>[<span class=\"overlined\"><var>η</var></span>, <span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>, <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)]).</div><div class=\"ogd\">This is the most general form of transition from one proposition to another.</div>',1),
(951,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">And thus we come to numbers: I define</div><div class=\"ogd\"><div class=\"centered\"><table class=\"alignedmath\"><tbody><tr><td class=\"righttight\"><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span></td><td class=\"lefttight\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0</sup>’</span><var>x</var> Def. and</td></tr><tr><td class=\"righttight\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span></td><td class=\"lefttight\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var>+1</sup>’</span><var>x</var> Def.</td></tr></tbody></table></div></div><div class=\"ogd\">According, then, to these symbolic rules we write the series</div><div class=\"ogd\"><div class=\"displaymath\"><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var>,<span class=\"mathrel\">…</span></div></div><div class=\"ogd\">as:</div><div class=\"ogd\"><div class=\"displaymath\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0+1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0+1+1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>,<span class=\"mathrel\">…</span></div></div><div class=\"ogd\">Therefore I write in place of “[<var>x</var>, <var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>]”,</div><div class=\"ogd\"><div class=\"displaymath\">“[<span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var><span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>]”.</div></div><div class=\"ogd\">And I define:</div><div class=\"ogd\"><div class=\"centered\"><table class=\"alignedmath\"><tbody><tr><td class=\"lefttight\">0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>1 Def.</td></tr><tr><td class=\"lefttight\">0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>2 Def.</td></tr><tr><td class=\"lefttight\">0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>3 Def.</td></tr><tr><td class=\"lefttight\">and so on.</td></tr></tbody></table></div></div>',1),
(952,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A number is the exponent of an operation.</div>',1),
(953,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The concept number is nothing else than that which is common to all numbers, the general form of a number.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The concept number is the variable number.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And the concept of equality of numbers is the general form of all special equalities of numbers.</div>',1),
(954,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The general form of the cardinal number is: [0, <var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, <var>ξ</var><span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1].</div>',1),
(955,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The theory of classes is altogether superfluous in mathematics.</div><div class=\"ogd\">This is connected with the fact that the generality which we need in mathematics is not the <em>accidental</em> one.</div>',1),
(956,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The propositions of logic are tautologies.</div>',1),
(957,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The propositions of logic therefore say nothing. (They are the analytical propositions.)</div>',1),
(958,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Theories which make a proposition of logic appear substantial are always false. One could <em>e.g.</em> believe that the words “true” and “false” signify two properties among other properties, and then it would appear as a remarkable fact that every proposition possesses one of these properties. This now by no means appears self-evident, no more so than the proposition “All roses are either yellow or red” would seem even if it were true. Indeed our proposition now gets quite the character of a proposition of natural science and this is a certain symptom of its being falsely understood.</div>',1),
(959,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The correct explanation of logical propositions must give them a peculiar position among all propositions.</div>',1),
(960,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is the characteristic mark of logical propositions that one can perceive in the symbol alone that they are true; and this fact contains in itself the whole philosophy of logic. And so also it is one of the most important facts that the truth or falsehood of non-logical propositions can <em>not</em> be recognized from the propositions alone.</div>',1),
(961,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The fact that the propositions of logic are tautologies <em>shows</em> the formal—logical—properties of language, of the world.</div><div class=\"ogd\">That its constituent parts connected together <em>in this way</em> give a tautology characterizes the logic of its constituent parts.</div><div class=\"ogd\">In order that propositions connected together in a definite way may give a tautology they must have definite properties of structure. That they give a tautology when <em>so</em> connected shows therefore that they possess these properties of structure.</div>',1),
(962,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">That <em>e.g.</em> the propositions “<var>p</var>” and “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>” in the connexion “<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>)” give a tautology shows that they contradict one another. That the propositions “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var>”, “<var>p</var>” and “<var>q</var>” connected together in the form “(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span>(<var>p</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">:<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>:</span>(<var>q</var>)” give a tautology shows that <var>q</var> follows from <var>p</var> and <var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var>. That “<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>:</span><var>fa</var>” is a tautology shows that <var>fa</var> follows from <span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>, etc. etc.</div>',1),
(963,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that we could have used for this purpose contradictions instead of tautologies.</div>',1),
(964,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In order to recognize a tautology as such, we can, in cases in which no sign of generality occurs in the tautology, make use of the following intuitive method: I write instead of “<var>p</var>”, “<var>q</var>”, “<var>r</var>”, etc., “<span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><var class=\"doublepushvar\">p</var><span class=\"mathrm\">F</span>”, “<span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><var class=\"doublepushvar\">q</var><span class=\"mathrm\">F</span>”, “<span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><var class=\"doublepushvar\">r</var><span class=\"mathrm\">F</span>”, etc. The truth-combinations I express by brackets, <em>e.g.</em>:</div>',1),
(965,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The propositions of logic demonstrate the logical properties of propositions, by combining them into propositions which say nothing.</div><div class=\"ogd\">This method could be called a zero-method. In a logical proposition propositions are brought into equilibrium with one another, and the state of equilibrium then shows how these propositions must be logically constructed.</div>',1),
(966,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Whence it follows that we can get on without logical propositions, for we can recognize in an adequate notation the formal properties of the propositions by mere inspection.</div>',1),
(967,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If for example two propositions “<var>p</var>” and “<var>q</var>” give a tautology in the connexion “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var>”, then it is clear that <var>q</var> follows from <var>p</var>.</div><div class=\"ogd\"><em>E.g.</em> that “<var>q</var>” follows from “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>p</var>” we see from these two propositions themselves, but we can also show it by combining them to “<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>:</span><var>q</var>” and then showing that this is a tautology.</div>',1),
(968,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">This throws light on the question why logical propositions can no more be empirically established than they can be empirically refuted. Not only must a proposition of logic be incapable of being contradicted by any possible experience, but it must also be incapable of being established by any such.</div>',1),
(969,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It now becomes clear why we often feel as though “logical truths” must be “<em>postulated</em>” by us. We can in fact postulate them in so far as we can postulate an adequate notation.</div>',1),
(970,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It also becomes clear why logic has been called the theory of forms and of inference.</div>',1),
(971,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that the laws of logic cannot themselves obey further logical laws.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(There is not, as Russell supposed, for every “type” a special law of contradiction; but one is sufficient, since it is not applied to itself.)</div>',1),
(972,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The mark of logical propositions is not their general validity.</div><div class=\"ogd\">To be general is only to be accidentally valid for all things. An ungeneralized proposition can be tautologous just as well as a generalized one.</div>',1),
(973,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Logical general validity, we could call essential as opposed to accidental general validity, <em>e.g.</em> of the proposition “all men are mortal”. Propositions like Russell’s “axiom of reducibility” are not logical propositions, and this explains our feeling that, if true, they can only be true by a happy chance.</div>',1),
(974,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We can imagine a world in which the axiom of reducibility is not valid. But it is clear that logic has nothing to do with the question whether our world is really of this kind or not.</div>',1),
(975,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The logical propositions describe the scaffolding of the world, or rather they present it. They “treat” of nothing. They presuppose that names have meaning, and that elementary propositions have sense. And this is their connexion with the world. It is clear that it must show something about the world that certain combinations of symbols—which essentially have a definite character—are tautologies. Herein lies the decisive point. We said that in the symbols which we use much is arbitrary, much not. In logic only this expresses: but this means that in logic it is not <em>we</em> who express, by means of signs, what we want, but in logic the nature of the essentially necessary signs itself asserts. That is to say, if we know the logical syntax of any sign language, then all the propositions of logic are already given.</div>',1),
(976,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is possible, even in the old logic, to give at the outset a description of all “true” logical propositions.</div>',1),
(977,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Hence there can <em>never</em> be surprises in logic.</div>',1),
(978,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Whether a proposition belongs to logic can be calculated by calculating the logical properties of the <em>symbol</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And this we do when we prove a logical proposition. For without troubling ourselves about a sense and a meaning, we form the logical propositions out of others by mere <em>symbolic rules</em>.</div><div class=\"ogd\">We prove a logical proposition by creating it out of other logical propositions by applying in succession certain operations, which again generate tautologies out of the first. (And from a tautology only tautologies <em>follow</em>.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">Naturally this way of showing that its propositions are tautologies is quite unessential to logic. Because the propositions, from which the proof starts, must show without proof that they are tautologies.</div>',1),
(979,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In logic process and result are equivalent. (Therefore no surprises.)</div>',1),
(980,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Proof in logic is only a mechanical expedient to facilitate the recognition of tautology, where it is complicated.</div>',1),
(981,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It would be too remarkable, if one could prove a significant proposition <em>logically</em> from another, and a logical proposition <em>also</em>. It is clear from the beginning that the logical proof of a significant proposition and the proof <em>in</em> logic must be two quite different things.</div>',1),
(982,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The significant proposition asserts something, and its proof shows that it is so; in logic every proposition is the form of a proof.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Every proposition of logic is a modus ponens presented in signs. (And the modus ponens can not be expressed by a proposition.)</div>',1),
(983,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Logic can always be conceived to be such that every proposition is its own proof.</div>',1),
(984,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">All propositions of logic are of equal rank; there are not some which are essentially primitive and others deduced from there.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Every tautology itself shows that it is a tautology.</div>',1),
(985,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that the number of “primitive propositions of logic” is arbitrary, for we could deduce logic from one primitive proposition by simply forming, for example, the logical produce of Frege’s primitive propositions. (Frege would perhaps say that this would no longer be immediately self-evident. But it is remarkable that so exact a thinker as Frege should have appealed to the degree of self-evidence as the criterion of a logical proposition.)</div>',1),
(986,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Logic is not a theory but a reflexion of the world.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Logic is transcendental.</div>',1),
(987,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Mathematics is a logical method.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The propositions of mathematics are equations, and therefore pseudo-propositions.</div>',1),
(988,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Mathematical propositions express no thoughts.</div>',1),
(989,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In life it is never a mathematical proposition which we need, but we use mathematical propositions <em>only</em> in order to infer from propositions which do not belong to mathematics to others which equally do not belong to mathematics.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(In philosophy the question “Why do we really use that word, that proposition?” constantly leads to valuable results.)</div>',1),
(990,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The logic of the world which the propositions of logic show in tautologies, mathematics shows in equations.</div>',1),
(991,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If two expressions are connected by the sign of equality, this means that they can be substituted for one another. But whether this is the case must show itself in the two expressions themselves.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It characterizes the logical form of two expressions, that they can be substituted for one another.</div>',1),
(992,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is a property of affirmation that it can be conceived as double denial.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It is a property of “1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1” that it can be conceived as “(1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1)<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>(1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1)”.</div>',1),
(993,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Frege says that these expressions have the same meaning but different senses.</div><div class=\"ogd\">But what is essential about equation is that it is not necessary in order to show that both expressions, which are connected by the sign of equality, have the same meaning: for this can be perceived from the two expressions themselves.</div>',1),
(994,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">And, that the propositions of mathematics can be proved means nothing else than that their correctness can be seen without our having to compare what they express with the facts as regards correctness.</div>',1),
(995,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The identity of the meaning of two expressions cannot be <em>asserted</em>. For in order to be able to assert anything about their meaning, I must know their meaning, and if I know their meaning, I know whether they mean the same or something different.</div>',1),
(996,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The equation characterizes only the standpoint from which I consider the two expressions, that is to say the standpoint of their equality of meaning.</div>',1),
(997,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">To the question whether we need intuition for the solution of mathematical problems it must be answered that language itself here supplies the necessary intuition.</div>',1),
(998,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The process of calculation brings about just this intuition.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Calculation is not an experiment.</div>',1),
(999,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Mathematics is a method of logic.</div>',1),
(1000,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The essential of mathematical method is working with equations. On this method depends the fact that every proposition of mathematics must be self-intelligible.</div>',1),
(1001,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The method by which mathematics arrives at its equations is the method of substitution.</div><div class=\"ogd\">For equations express the substitutability of two expressions, and we proceed from a number of equations to new equations, replacing expressions by others in accordance with the equations.</div>',1),
(1002,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Thus the proof of the proposition 2<span class=\"mathrel\">×</span>2<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>4 runs:</div><div class=\"ogd\"><div class=\"centered\">\n<span class=\"mathop\">(Ω<sup><var>ν</var></sup>)<sup><var>μ</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var><span class=\"mathrel\">×</span><var>μ</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var> Def.<br />\n<span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>2<span class=\"mathrel\">×</span>2</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω<sup>2</sup>)<sup>2</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω<sup>2</sup>)<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>2</sup>’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>2</sup>’</span><var>x</var><br />\n = <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω’Ω)’</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω’Ω)’</span><var>x</var><br />\n= <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>4</sup>’</span><var>x</var>.<br />\n</div></div>',1),
(1003,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Logical research means the investigation of <em>all regularity</em>. And outside logic all is accident.</div>',1),
(1004,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The so-called law of induction cannot in any case be a logical law, for it is obviously a significant propositions.—And therefore it cannot be a law a priori either.</div>',1),
(1005,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The law of causality is not a law but the form of a law.<a href=\"http://people.umass.edu/phil335-klement-2/tlp/footnotes.html#fn2ogden\" id=\"fn2marker\">†</a></div>',1),
(1006,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">“Law of Causality” is a class name. And as in mechanics there are, for instance, minimum-laws, such as that of least actions, so in physics there are causal laws, laws of the causality form.</div>',1),
(1007,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Men had indeed an idea that there must be <em>a</em> “law of least action”, before they knew exactly how it ran. (Here, as always, the a priori certain proves to be something purely logical.)</div>',1),
(1008,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We do not <em>believe</em> a priori in a law of conservation, but we <em>know</em> a priori the possibility of a logical form.</div>',1),
(1009,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">All propositions, such as the law of causation, the law of continuity in nature, the law of least expenditure in nature, etc. etc., all these are a priori intuitions of possible forms of the propositions of science.</div>',1),
(1010,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Newtonian mechanics, for example, brings the description of the universe to a unified form. Let us imagine a white surface with irregular black spots. We now say: Whatever kind of picture these make I can always get as near as I like to its description, if I cover the surface with a sufficiently fine square network and now say of every square that it is white or black. In this way I shall have brought the description of the surface to a unified form. This form is arbitrary, because I could have applied with equal success a net with a triangular or hexagonal mesh. It can happen that the description would have been simpler with the aid of a triangular mesh; that is to say we might have described the surface more accurately with a triangular, and coarser, than with the finer square mesh, or vice versa, and so on. To the different networks correspond different systems of describing the world. Mechanics determine a form of description by saying: All propositions in the description of the world must be obtained in a given way from a number of given propositions—the mechanical axioms. It thus provides the bricks for building the edifice of science, and says: Whatever building thou wouldst erect, thou shalt construct it in some manner with these bricks and these alone.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(As with the system of numbers one must be able to write down any arbitrary number, so with the system of mechanics one must be able to write down any arbitrary physical proposition.)</div>',1),
(1011,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">And now we see the relative position of logic and mechanics. (We could construct the network out of figures of different kinds, as out of triangles and hexagons together.) That a picture like that instanced above can be described by a network of a given form asserts <em>nothing</em> about the picture. (For this holds of every picture of this kind.) But <em>this</em> does characterize the picture, the fact, namely, that it can be <em>completely</em> described by a definite net of <em>definite</em> fineness.</div><div class=\"ogd\">So too the fact that it can be described by Newtonian mechanics asserts nothing about the world; but <em>this</em> asserts something, namely, that it can be described in that particular way in which as a matter of fact it is described. The fact, too, that it can be described more simply by one system of mechanics than by another says something about the world.</div>',1),
(1012,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Mechanics is an attempt to construct according to a single plan all <em>true</em> propositions which we need for the description of the world.</div>',1),
(1013,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Through the whole apparatus of logic the physical laws still speak of the objects of the world.</div>',1),
(1014,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We must not forget that the description of the world by mechanics is always quite general. There is, for example, never any mention of <em>particular</em> material points in it, but always only of <em>some points or other</em>.</div>',1),
(1015,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Although the spots in our picture are geometrical figures, geometry can obviously say nothing about their actual form and position. But the network is <em>purely</em> geometrical, and all its properties can be given a priori.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Laws, like the law of causation, etc., treat of the network and not what the network describes.</div>',1),
(1016,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If there were a law of causality, it might run: “There are natural laws”.</div><div class=\"ogd\">But that can clearly not be said: it shows itself.</div>',1),
(1017,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">In the terminology of Hertz we might say: Only <em>uniform</em> connections are <em>thinkable</em>.</div>',1),
(1018,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We cannot compare any process with the “passage of time”—there is no such thing—but only with another process (say, with the movement of the chronometer).</div><div class=\"ogd\">Hence the description of the temporal sequence of events is only possible if we support ourselves on another process.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It is exactly analogous for space. When, for example, we say that neither of two events (which mutually exclude one another) can occur, because there is <em>no cause</em> why the one should occur rather than the other, it is really a matter of our being unable to describe <em>one</em> of the two events unless there is some sort of asymmetry. And if there <em>is</em> such an asymmetry, we can regard this as the <em>cause</em> of the occurrence of the one and of the non-occurrence of the other.</div>',1),
(1019,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The Kantian problem of the right and left hand which cannot be made to cover one another already exists in the plane, and even in one-dimensional space; where the two congruent figures <var>a</var> and <var>b</var> cannot be made to cover one another without </div>',1),
(1020,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">What can be described can happen too, and what is excluded by the law of causality cannot be described.</div>',1),
(1021,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The process of induction is the process of assuming the <em>simplest</em> law that can be made to harmonize with our experience.</div>',1),
(1022,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">This process, however, has no logical foundation but only a psychological one.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that there are no grounds for believing that the simplest course of events will really happen.</div>',1),
(1023,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">That the sun will rise to-morrow, is an hypothesis; and that means that we do not <em>know</em> whether it will rise.</div>',1),
(1024,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">A necessity for one thing to happen because another has happened does not exist. There is only <em>logical</em> necessity.</div>',1),
(1025,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">At the basis of the whole modern view of the world lies the illusion that the so-called laws of nature are the explanations of natural phenomena.</div>',1),
(1026,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">So people stop short at natural laws as something unassailable, as did the ancients at God and Fate.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And they are both right and wrong. but the ancients were clearer, in so far as they recognized one clear conclusion, whereas the modern system makes it appear as though <em>everything</em> were explained.</div>',1),
(1027,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The world is independent of my will.</div>',1),
(1028,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Even if everything we wished were to happen, this would only be, so to speak, a favour of fate, for there is no <em>logical</em> connexion between will and world, which would guarantee this, and the assumed physical connexion itself we could not again will.</div>',1),
(1029,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">As there is only a <em>logical</em> necessity, so there is only a <em>logical</em> impossibility.</div>',1),
(1030,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">For two colours, <em>e.g.</em> to be at one place in the visual field, is impossible, logically impossible, for it is excluded by the logical structure of colour.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Let us consider how this contradiction presents itself in physics. Somewhat as follows: That a particle cannot at the same time have two velocities, <em>i.e.</em> that at the same time it cannot be in two places, <em>i.e.</em> that particles in different places at the same time cannot be identical.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that the logical product of two elementary propositions can neither be a tautology nor a contradiction. The assertion that a point in the visual field has two different colours at the same time, is a contradiction.</div>',1),
(1031,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">All propositions are of equal value.</div>',1),
(1032,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The sense of the world must lie outside the world. In the world everything is as it is and happens as it does happen. <em>In</em> it there is no value—and if there were, it would be of no value.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If there is a value which is of value, it must lie outside all happening and being-so. For all happening and being-so is accidental.</div><div class=\"ogd\">What makes it non-accidental cannot lie <em>in</em> the world, for otherwise this would again be accidental.</div><div class=\"ogd\">It must lie outside the world.</div>',1),
(1033,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Hence also there can be no ethical propositions.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Propositions cannot express anything higher.</div>',1),
(1034,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">It is clear that ethics cannot be expressed.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Ethics are transcendental.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Ethics and æsthetics are one.)</div>',1),
(1035,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The first thought in setting up an ethical law of the form “thou shalt …” is: And what if I do not do it? But it is clear that ethics has nothing to do with punishment and reward in the ordinary sense. This question as to the <em>consequences</em> of an action must therefore be irrelevant. At least these consequences will not be events. For there must be something right in that formulation of the question. There must be some sort of ethical reward and ethical punishment, but this must lie in the action itself.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(And this is clear also that the reward must be something acceptable, and the punishment something unacceptable.)</div>',1),
(1036,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Of the will as the subject of the ethical we cannot speak.</div><div class=\"ogd\">And the will as a phenomenon is only of interest to psychology.</div>',1),
(1037,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">If good or bad willing changes the world, it can only change the limits of the world, not the facts; not the things that can be expressed in language.</div><div class=\"ogd\">In brief, the world must thereby become quite another, it must so to speak wax or wane as a whole.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The world of the happy is quite another than that of the unhappy.</div>',1),
(1038,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">As in death, too, the world does not change, but ceases.</div>',1),
(1039,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Death is not an event of life. Death is not lived through.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If by eternity is understood not endless temporal duration but timelessness, then he lives eternally who lives in the present.</div><div class=\"ogd\">Our life is endless in the way that our visual field is without limit.</div>',1),
(1040,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The temporal immortality of the human soul, that is to say, its eternal survival also after death, is not only in no way guaranteed, but this assumption in the first place will not do for us what we always tried to make it do. Is a riddle solved by the fact that I survive for ever? Is this eternal life not as enigmatic as our present one? The solution of the riddle of life in space and time lies <em>outside</em> space and time.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(It is not problems of natural science which have to be solved.)</div>',1),
(1041,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\"><em>How</em> the world is, is completely indifferent for what is higher. God does not reveal himself <em>in</em> the world.</div>',1),
(1042,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The facts all belong only to the task and not to its performance.</div>',1),
(1043,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Not <em>how</em> the world is, is the mystical, but <em>that</em> it is.</div>',1),
(1044,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The contemplation of the world sub specie aeterni is its contemplation as a limited whole.</div><div class=\"ogd\">The feeling that the world is a limited whole is the mystical feeling.</div>',1),
(1045,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">For an answer which cannot be expressed the question too cannot be expressed.</div><div class=\"ogd\"><em>The riddle</em> does not exist.</div><div class=\"ogd\">If a question can be put at all, then it <em>can</em> also be answered.</div>',1),
(1046,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Scepticism is <em>not</em> irrefutable, but palpably senseless, if it would doubt where a question cannot be asked.</div><div class=\"ogd\">For doubt can only exist where there is a question; a question only where there is an answer, and this only where something <em>can</em> be <em>said</em>.</div>',1),
(1047,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">We feel that even if <em>all possible</em> scientific questions be answered, the problems of life have still not been touched at all. Of course there is then no question left, and just this is the answer.</div>',1),
(1048,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The solution of the problem of life is seen in the vanishing of this problem.</div><div class=\"ogd\">(Is not this the reason why men to whom after long doubting the sense of life became clear, could not then say wherein this sense consisted?)</div>',1),
(1049,'2011-10-03 12:15:06','2011-10-03 12:15:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">There is indeed the inexpressible. This <em>shows</em> itself; it is the mystical.</div>',1),
(1050,'2011-10-03 12:15:06','2011-10-03 12:15:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">The right method of philosophy would be this: To say nothing except what can be said, <em>i.e.</em> the propositions of natural science, <em>i.e.</em> something that has nothing to do with philosophy: and then always, when someone else wished to say something metaphysical, to demonstrate to him that he had given no meaning to certain signs in his propositions. This method would be unsatisfying to the other—he would not have the feeling that we were teaching him philosophy—but it would be the only strictly correct method.</div>',1),
(1051,'2011-10-03 12:15:06','2011-10-03 12:15:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">My propositions are elucidatory in this way: he who understands me finally recognizes them as senseless, when he has climbed out through them, on them, over them. (He must so to speak throw away the ladder, after he has climbed up on it.)</div><div class=\"ogd\">He must surmount these propositions; then he sees the world rightly.</div>',1),
(1052,'2011-10-03 12:15:06','2011-10-03 12:15:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ogd\">Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent.</div>',1),
(1053,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The world is all that is the case.</div>',1),
(1054,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The world is the totality of facts, not of things.</div>',1),
(1055,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The world is determined by the facts, and by their being <em>all</em> the facts.</div>',1),
(1056,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">For the totality of facts determines what is the case, and also whatever is not the case.</div>',1),
(1057,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The facts in logical space are the world.</div>',1),
(1058,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The world divides into facts.</div>',1),
(1059,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Each item can be the case or not the case while everything else remains the same.</div>',1),
(1060,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What is the case—a fact—is the existence of states of affairs.</div>',1),
(1061,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A state of affairs (a state of things) is a combination of objects (things).</div>',1),
(1062,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is essential to things that they should be possible constituents of states of affairs.</div>',1),
(1063,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In logic nothing is accidental: if a thing <em>can</em> occur in a state of affairs, the possibility of the state of affairs must be written into the thing itself.</div>',1),
(1064,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It would seem to be a sort of accident, if it turned out that a situation would fit a thing that could already exist entirely on its own.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If things can occur in states of affairs, this possibility must\nbe in them from the beginning. </div><div class=\"pmc\">(Nothing in the province of logic can be merely possible. Logic deals with every possibility and all possibilities are its facts.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">Just as we are quite unable to imagine spatial objects outside space or temporal objects outside time, so too there is <em>no</em> object that we can imagine excluded from the possibility of combining with others.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If I can imagine objects combined in states of affairs, I cannot imagine them excluded from the possibility of such combinations.</div>',1),
(1065,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Things are independent in so far as they can occur in all <em>possible</em> situations, but this form of independence is a form of connexion with states of affairs, a form of dependence. (It is impossible for words to appear in two different roles: by themselves, and in propositions.)</div>',1),
(1066,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If I know an object I also know all its possible occurrences in states of affairs.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Every one of these possibilities must be part of the nature of the object.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">A new possibility cannot be discovered later.</div>',1),
(1067,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If I am to know an object, though I need not know its external properties, I must know all its internal properties.</div>',1),
(1068,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If all objects are given, then at the same time all <em>possible</em> states of affairs are also given.</div>',1),
(1069,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Each thing is, as it were, in a space of possible states of affairs. This space I can imagine empty, but I cannot imagine the thing without the space.</div>',1),
(1070,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A spatial object must be situated in infinite space. (A spatial point is an argument-place.) </div><div class=\"pmc\">A speck in the visual field, thought it need not be red, must have some colour: it is, so to speak, surrounded by colour-space. Notes must have <em>some</em> pitch, objects of the sense of touch <em>some</em> degree of hardness, and so on.</div>',1),
(1071,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Objects contain the possibility of all situations.</div>',1),
(1072,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The possibility of its occurring in states of affairs is the form of an object.</div>',1),
(1073,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Objects are simple.</div>',1),
(1074,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Every statement about complexes can be resolved into a statement about their constituents and into the propositions that describe the complexes completely.</div>',1),
(1075,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Objects make up the substance of the world. That is why they cannot be composite.</div>',1),
(1076,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If the world had no substance, then whether a proposition had sense would depend on whether another proposition was true.</div>',1),
(1077,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In that case we could not sketch any picture of the world (true or false).</div>',1),
(1078,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is obvious that an imagined world, however different it may be from the real one, must have <em>something</em>—a form—in common with it.</div>',1),
(1079,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Objects are just what constitute this unalterable form.</div>',1),
(1080,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The substance of the world <em>can</em> only determine a form, and not any material properties. For it is only by means of propositions that material properties are represented—only by the configuration of objects that they are produced.</div>',1),
(1081,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a manner of speaking, objects are colourless.</div>',1),
(1082,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If two objects have the same logical form, the only distinction between them, apart from their external properties, is that they are different.</div>',1),
(1083,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Either a thing has properties that nothing else has, in which\ncase we can immediately use a description to distinguish it from the\nothers and refer to it; or, on the other hand, there are several things\nthat have the whole set of their properties in common, in which case it\nis quite impossible to indicate one of them.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For it there is nothing to distinguish a thing, I cannot distinguish it, since otherwise it would be distinguished after all.</div>',1),
(1084,'2011-10-03 12:15:34','2011-10-03 12:15:34',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The substance is what subsists independently of what is the case.</div>',1),
(1085,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is form and content.</div>',1),
(1086,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Space, time, colour (being coloured) are forms of objects.</div>',1),
(1087,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There must be objects, if the world is to have unalterable form.</div>',1),
(1088,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Objects, the unalterable, and the subsistent are one and the same.</div>',1),
(1089,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Objects are what is unalterable and subsistent; their configuration is what is changing and unstable.</div>',1),
(1090,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The configuration of objects produces states of affairs.</div>',1),
(1091,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a state of affairs objects fit into one another like the links of a chain.</div>',1),
(1092,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a state of affairs objects stand in a determinate relation to one another.</div>',1),
(1093,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The determinate way in which objects are connected in a state of affairs is the structure of the state of affairs.</div>',1),
(1094,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Form is the possibility of structure.</div>',1),
(1095,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The structure of a fact consists of the structures of states of affairs.</div>',1),
(1096,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The totality of existing states of affairs is the world.</div>',1),
(1097,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The totality of existing states of affairs also determines which states of affairs do not exist.</div>',1),
(1098,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The existence and non-existence of states of affairs is reality.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(We call the existence of states of affairs a positive fact, and their non-existence a negative fact.)</div>',1),
(1099,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">States of affairs are independent of one another.</div>',1),
(1100,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">From the existence or non-existence of one state of affairs it is impossible to infer the existence or non-existence of another.</div>',1),
(1101,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The sum-total of reality is the world.</div>',1),
(1102,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We picture facts to ourselves.</div>',1),
(1103,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture presents a situation in logical space, the existence and non-existence of states of affairs.</div>',1),
(1104,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture is a model of reality.</div>',1),
(1105,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a picture objects have the elements of the picture corresponding to them.</div>',1),
(1106,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a picture the elements of the picture are the representatives of objects.</div>',1),
(1107,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What constitutes a picture is that its elements are related to one another in a determinate way.</div>',1),
(1108,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture is a fact.</div>',1),
(1109,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The fact that the elements of a picture are related to one another in a determinate way represents that things are related to one another in the same way.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Let us call this connexion of its elements the structure of the picture, and let us call the possibility of this structure the pictorial form of the picture.</div>',1),
(1110,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Pictorial form is the possibility that things are related to one another in the same way as the elements of the picture.</div>',1),
(1111,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\"><em>That</em> is how a picture is attached to reality; it reaches right out to it.</div>',1),
(1112,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is laid against reality like a measure.</div>',1),
(1113,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Only the end-points of the graduating lines actually <em>touch</em> the object that is to be measured.</div>',1),
(1114,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">So a picture, conceived in this way, also includes the pictorial relationship, which makes it into a picture.</div>',1),
(1115,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The pictorial relationship consists of the correlations of the picture’s elements with things.</div>',1),
(1116,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">These correlations are, as it were, the feelers of the picture’s elements, with which the picture touches reality.</div>',1),
(1117,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If a fact is to be a picture, it must have something in common with what it depicts.</div>',1),
(1118,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There must be something identical in a picture and what it depicts, to enable the one to be a picture of the other at all.</div>',1),
(1119,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What a picture must have in common with reality, in order to be able to depict it—correctly or incorrectly—in the way that it does, is its pictorial form.</div>',1),
(1120,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture can depict any reality whose form it has.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A spatial picture can depict anything spatial, a coloured one anything coloured, etc.</div>',1),
(1121,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture cannot, however, depict its pictorial form: it displays it.</div>',1),
(1122,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture represents its subject from a position outside it. (Its standpoint is its representational form.) That is why a picture represents its subject correctly or incorrectly.</div>',1),
(1123,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture cannot, however, place itself outside its representational form.</div>',1),
(1124,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What any picture, of whatever form, must have in common with reality, in order to be able to depict it—correctly or incorrectly—in any way at all, is logical form, i.e. the form of reality.</div>',1),
(1125,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture whose pictorial form is logical form is called a logical picture.</div>',1),
(1126,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Every picture is <em>at the same time</em> a logical one. (On the other hand, not every picture is, for example, a spatial one.)</div>',1),
(1127,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Logical pictures can depict the world.</div>',1),
(1128,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture has logico-pictorial form in common with what it depicts.</div>',1),
(1129,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture depicts reality by representing a possibility of existence and non-existence of states of affairs.</div>',1),
(1130,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture represents a possible situation in logical \nspace.</div>',1),
(1131,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture contains the possibility of the situation that it represents.</div>',1),
(1132,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A picture agrees with reality or fails to agree; it is correct or incorrect, true or false.</div>',1),
(1133,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What a picture represents it represents independently of its truth or falsity, by means of its pictorial form.</div>',1),
(1134,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What a picture represents is its sense.</div>',1),
(1135,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The agreement or disagreement or its sense with reality constitutes its truth or falsity.</div>',1),
(1136,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In order to tell whether a picture is true or false we must compare it with reality.</div>',1),
(1137,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is impossible to tell from the picture alone whether it is true or false.</div>',1),
(1138,'2011-10-03 12:15:35','2011-10-03 12:15:35',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There are no pictures that are true <em>a priori</em>.</div>',1),
(1139,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A logical picture of facts is a thought.</div>',1),
(1140,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">‘A state of affairs is thinkable’: what this means is that we can\npicture it to ourselves.</div>',1),
(1141,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The totality of true thoughts is a picture of the world.</div>',1),
(1142,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A thought contains the possibility of the situation of which it is the thought. What is thinkable is possible too.</div>',1),
(1143,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Thought can never be of anything illogical, since, if it were, we should have to think illogically.</div>',1),
(1144,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It used to be said that God could create anything except what would be contrary to the laws of logic. The truth is that we could not <em>say</em> what an ‘illogical’ world would look like.</div>',1),
(1145,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is as impossible to represent in language anything that ‘contradicts logic’ as it is in geometry to represent by its co-ordinates a figure that contradicts the laws of space, or to give the co-ordinates of a point that does not exist.</div>',1),
(1146,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Though a state of affairs that would contravene the laws of physics can be represented by us spatially, one that would contravene the laws of geometry cannot.</div>',1),
(1147,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If a thought were correct <em>a priori</em>, it would be a thought whose possibility ensured its truth.</div>',1),
(1148,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\"><em>A priori</em> knowledge that a thought was true would be possible only if its truth were recognizable from the thought itself (without anything to compare it with).</div>',1),
(1149,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a proposition a thought finds an expression that can be perceived by the senses.</div>',1),
(1150,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We use the perceptible sign of a proposition (spoken or written,\netc.) as a projection of a possible situation.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The method of projection is to think of the sense of the proposition.</div>',1),
(1151,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">I call the sign with which we express a thought a propositional sign.—And a proposition is a propositional sign in its projective relation to the world.</div>',1),
(1152,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition includes all that the projection includes, but not what is projected.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Therefore, though what is projected is not itself included, its possibility is.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A proposition, therefore, does not actually contain its sense, but does contain the possibility of expressing it.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(‘The content of a proposition’ means the content of a proposition that has sense.) </div><div class=\"pmc\">A proposition contains the form, but not the content, of its sense.</div>',1),
(1153,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What constitutes a propositional sign is that in its elements (the words) stand in a determinate relation to one another.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A propositional sign is a fact.</div>',1),
(1154,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition is not a blend of words.—(Just as a theme in music is not a blend of notes.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">A proposition is articulate.</div>',1),
(1155,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Only facts can express a sense, a set of names cannot.</div>',1),
(1156,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Although a propositional sign is a fact, this is obscured by the usual form of expression in writing or print.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For in a printed proposition, for example, no essential difference is apparent between a propositional sign and a word.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(That is what made it possible for Frege to call a proposition a composite name.)</div>',1),
(1157,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The essence of a propositional sign is very clearly seen if we imagine one composed of spatial objects (such as tables, chairs, and books) instead of written signs.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Then the spatial arrangement of these things will express the sense of the proposition.</div>',1),
(1158,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Instead of, ‘The complex sign “<var>aRb</var>” says that <var>a</var> stands to <var>b</var> in\nthe relation <var>R</var>’, we ought to put, ‘<em>That</em> “<var>a</var>” stands to “<var>b</var>” in a certain\nrelation says <em>that</em> <var>aRb</var>.’</div>',1),
(1159,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Situations can be described but not <em>given names</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Names are like points; propositions like arrows—they have sense.)</div>',1),
(1160,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a proposition a thought can be expressed in such a way that elements of the propositional sign correspond to the objects of the thought.</div>',1),
(1161,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">I call such elements ‘simple signs’, and such a proposition ‘complete analysed’.</div>',1),
(1162,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The simple signs employed in propositions are called names.</div>',1),
(1163,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A name means an object. The object is its meaning. (‘<var>A</var>’ is the same sign as ‘<var>A</var>’.)</div>',1),
(1164,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The configuration of objects in a situation corresponds to the configuration of simple signs in the propositional sign.</div>',1),
(1165,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a proposition a name is the representative of an object.</div>',1),
(1166,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Objects can only be <em>named</em>. Signs are their representatives. I can only speak <em>about</em> them: I cannot <em>put them into words</em>. Propositions can only say <em>how</em> things are, not <em>what</em> they are.</div>',1),
(1167,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The requirement that simple signs be possible is the requirement that sense be determinate.</div>',1),
(1168,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition about a complex stands in an internal relation to a proposition about a constituent of the complex.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A complex can be given\nonly by its description, which will be right or wrong. A proposition\nthat mentions a complex will not be nonsensical, if the complex does\nnot exist, but simply false.</div><div class=\"pmc\">When a propositional element signifies a complex, this can be seen from an indeterminateness in the propositions in which it occurs. In such cases we <em>know</em> that the proposition leaves something undetermined. (In fact the notation for generality <em>contains</em> a prototype.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">The contraction of a symbol for a complex into a simple symbol can be expressed in a definition.</div>',1),
(1169,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition has one and only one complete analysis.</div>',1),
(1170,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What a proposition expresses it expresses in a determinate manner, which can be set out clearly: a proposition is articulated.</div>',1),
(1171,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A name cannot be dissected any further by means of a definition: it is a primitive sign.</div>',1),
(1172,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Every sign that has a definition signifies <em>via</em> the signs that serve to define it; and the definitions point the way.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Two signs cannot signify in the same manner if one is primitive and the other is defined by means of primitive signs. Names <em>cannot</em> be anatomized by means of definitions. (Nor can any sign that has a meaning independently and on its own.)</div>',1),
(1173,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What signs fail to express, their application shows. What signs slur over, their application says clearly.</div>',1),
(1174,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The meanings of primitive signs can be explained by means of elucidations. Elucidations are propositions that contain the primitive signs. So they can only be understood if the meanings of those signs are already known.</div>',1),
(1175,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Only propositions have sense; only in the nexus of a proposition does a name have meaning.</div>',1),
(1176,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">I call any part of a proposition that characterizes its sense an expression (or a symbol).</div><div class=\"pmc\">(A proposition is itself an expression.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">Everything essential to their sense that propositions can have in common with one another is an expression.</div><div class=\"pmc\">An expression is the mark of a form and a content.</div>',1),
(1177,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">An expression presupposes the forms of all the propositions in which it can occur. It is the common characteristic mark of a class of propositions.</div>',1),
(1178,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is therefore presented by means of the general form of the propositions that it characterizes.</div><div class=\"pmc\">In fact, in this form the expression will be <em>constant</em> and everything else <em>variable</em>.</div>',1),
(1179,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Thus an expression is presented by means of a variable whose values are the propositions that contain the expression.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(In the limiting case the variable becomes a constant, the expression becomes a proposition.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">I call such a variable a ‘propositional variable’.</div>',1),
(1180,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">An expression has meaning only in a proposition. All variables can be construed as propositional variables.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Even variable names.)</div>',1),
(1181,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If we turn a constituent of a proposition into a variable, there is a class of propositions all of which are values of the resulting variable proposition. In general, this class too will be dependent on the meaning that our arbitrary conventions have given to parts of the original proposition. But if all the signs in it that have arbitrarily determined meanings are turned into variables, we shall still get a class of this kind. This one, however, is not dependent on any convention, but solely on the nature of the proposition. It corresponds to a logical form—a logical prototype.</div>',1),
(1182,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What values a propositional variable may take is something that is stipulated.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The stipulation of values <em>is</em> the variable.</div>',1),
(1183,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">To stipulate values for a propositional variable is to <em>give the propositions</em> whose common characteristic the variable is.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The stipulation is a description of those propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The stipulation will therefore be concerned only with symbols, not with their meaning.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And the <em>only</em> thing essential to the stipulation is <em>that it is merely a description of symbols and states nothing about what is signified</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">How the description of the propositions is produced is not essential.</div>',1),
(1184,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Like Frege and Russell I construe a proposition as a function of the expressions contained in it.</div>',1),
(1185,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A sign is what can be perceived of a symbol.</div>',1),
(1186,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">So one and the same sign (written or spoken, etc.) can be common to two different symbols—in which case they will signify in different ways.</div>',1),
(1187,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Our use of the same sign to signify two different objects can never indicate a common characteristic of the two, if we use it with two different <em>modes of signification</em>. For the sign, of course, is arbitrary. So we could choose two different signs instead, and then what would be left in common on the signifying side?</div>',1),
(1188,'2011-10-03 12:15:36','2011-10-03 12:15:36',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In everyday language it very frequently happens that the same word has different modes of signification—and so belongs to different symbols—or that two words that have different modes of signification are employed in propositions in what is superficially the same way.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Thus the word ‘is’ figures as the copula, as a sign for identity, and as an expression for existence; ‘exist’ figures as an intransitive verb like ‘go’, and ‘identical’ as an adjective; we speak of <em>something</em>, but also of <em>something’s</em> happening.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(In the proposition, ‘Green is green’—where the first word is the proper name of a person and the last an adjective—these words do not merely have different meanings: they are <em>different symbols</em>.)</div>',1),
(1189,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In this way the most fundamental confusions are easily produced (the whole of philosophy is full of them).</div>',1),
(1190,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In order to avoid such errors we must make use of a sign-language that excludes them by not using the same sign for different symbols and by not using in a superficially similar way signs that have different modes of signification: that is to say, a sign-language that is governed by <em>logical</em> grammar—by logical syntax.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(The conceptual notation of Frege and Russell is such a language, though, it is true, it fails to exclude all mistakes.)</div>',1),
(1191,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In order to recognize a symbol by its sign we must observe how it is used with a sense.</div>',1),
(1192,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A sign does not determine a logical form unless it is taken together with its logico-syntactical employment.</div>',1),
(1193,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If a sign is <em>useless</em>, it is meaningless. That is the point of Occam’s maxim.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(If everything behaves as if a sign had meaning, then it does have meaning.)</div>',1),
(1194,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In logical syntax the meaning of a sign should never play a role. It must be possible to establish logical syntax without mentioning the <em>meaning</em> of a sign: <em>only</em> the description of expressions may be presupposed.</div>',1),
(1195,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">From this observation we turn to Russell’s ‘theory of types’. It can be seen that Russell must be wrong, because he had to mention the meaning of signs when establishing the rules for them.</div>',1),
(1196,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">No proposition can make a statement about itself, because a propositional sign cannot be contained in itself (that is the whole of the ‘theory of types’).</div>',1),
(1197,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The reason why a function cannot be its own argument is that the sign for a function already contains the prototype of its argument, and it cannot contain itself.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For let us suppose that the function <var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>fx</var>) could be its own argument: in that case there would be a proposition ‘<var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>fx</var>))’, in which the outer function <var>F</var> and the inner function <var>F</var> must have different meanings, since the inner one has the form <var>ϕ</var>(<var>fx</var>) and the outer one has the form <var>ψ</var>(<var>ϕ</var>(<var>fx</var>)). Only the letter ‘<var>F</var>’ is common to the two functions, but the letter by itself signifies nothing.</div><div class=\"pmc\">This immediately becomes clear if instead of ‘<var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>F</var><var>u</var>)’ we write ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>ϕ</var>):</span><var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>ϕu</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>ϕu</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>Fu</var>’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">That disposes of Russell’s paradox.</div>',1),
(1198,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The rules of logical syntax must go without saying, once we know how each individual sign signifies.</div>',1),
(1199,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition possesses essential and accidental features.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Accidental features are those that result from the particular way in which the propositional sign is produced. Essential features are those without which the proposition could not express its sense.</div>',1),
(1200,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">So what is essential in a proposition is what all propositions that can express the same sense have in common.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And similarly, in general, what is essential in a symbol is what all symbols that can serve the same purpose have in common.</div>',1),
(1201,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">So one could say that the real name of an object was what all symbols that signified it had in common. Thus, one by one, all kinds of composition would prove to be unessential to a name.</div>',1),
(1202,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Although there is something arbitrary in our notations, <em>this much</em> is not arbitrary—that <em>when</em> we have determined one thing arbitrarily, something else is necessarily the case. (This derives from the <em>essence</em> of notation.)</div>',1),
(1203,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A particular mode of signifying may be unimportant but it is always important that it is a <em>possible</em> mode of signifying. And that is generally so in philosophy: again and again the individual case turns out to be unimportant, but the possibility of each individual case discloses something about the essence of the world.</div>',1),
(1204,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Definitions are rules for translating from one language into another. Any correct sign-language must be translatable into any other in accordance with such rules: it is <em>this</em> that they all have in common.</div>',1),
(1205,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What signifies in a symbol is what is common to all the symbols that the rules of logical syntax allow us to substitute for it.</div>',1),
(1206,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">For instance, we can express what is common to all notations for truth-functions in the following way: they have in common that, for example, the notation that uses ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ (‘not <var>p</var>’) and ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>’ (‘<var>p</var> or <var>q</var>’) <em>can be substituted</em> for any of them.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(This serves to characterize the way in which something general can be disclosed by the possibility of a specific notation.)</div>',1),
(1207,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Nor does analysis resolve the sign for a complex in an arbitrary way, so that it would have a different resolution every time that it was incorporated in a different proposition.</div>',1),
(1208,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition determines a place in logical space. The existence of this logical place is guaranteed by the mere existence of the constituents—by the existence of the proposition with a sense.</div>',1),
(1209,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The propositional sign with logical co-ordinates—that is the logical place.</div>',1),
(1210,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In geometry and logic alike a place is a possibility: something can exist in it.</div>',1),
(1211,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition can determine only one place in logical space: nevertheless the whole of logical space must already be given by it.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Otherwise negation, logical sum, logical product, etc., would introduce more and more new elements—in co-ordination.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">(The logical scaffolding surrounding a picture determines logical space. The force of a proposition reaches through the whole of logical space.)</div>',1),
(1212,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A propositional sign, applied and thought out, is a thought.</div>',1),
(1213,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A thought is a proposition with a sense.</div>',1),
(1214,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The totality of propositions is language.</div>',1),
(1215,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Man possesses the ability to construct languages capable of expressing every sense, without having any idea how each word has meaning or what its meaning is—just as people speak without knowing how the individual sounds are produced.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Everyday language is a part of the human organism and is no less complicated than it.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It is not humanly possible to gather immediately from it what the logic of language is.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Language disguises thought. So much so, that from the outward form of the clothing it is impossible to infer the form of the thought beneath it, because the outward form of the clothing is not designed to reveal the form of the body, but for entirely different purposes.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The tacit conventions on which the understanding of everyday language depends are enormously complicated.</div>',1),
(1216,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Most of the propositions and questions to be found in philosophical works are not false but nonsensical. Consequently we cannot give any answer to questions of this kind, but can only point out that they are nonsensical. Most of the propositions and questions of philosophers arise from our failure to understand the logic of our language.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(They belong to the same class as the question whether the good is more or less identical than the beautiful.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">And it is not surprising that the deepest problems are in fact <em>not</em> problems at all.</div>',1),
(1217,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">All philosophy is a ‘critique of language’ (though not in Mauthner’s sense). It was Russell who performed the service of showing that the apparent logical form of a proposition need not be its real one.</div>',1),
(1218,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition is a picture of reality.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A proposition is a model of reality as we imagine it.</div>',1),
(1219,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">At first sight a proposition—one set out on the printed page, for example—does not seem to be a picture of the reality with which it is concerned. But neither do written notes seem at first sight to be a picture of a piece of music, nor our phonetic notation (the alphabet) to be a picture of our speech.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And yet these sign-languages prove to be pictures, even in the ordinary sense, of what they represent.</div>',1),
(1220,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is obvious that a proposition of the form ‘<var>aRb</var>’ strikes us as a picture. In this case the sign is obviously a likeness of what is signified.</div>',1),
(1221,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">And if we penetrate to the essence of this pictorial character, we see that it is <em>not</em> impaired by <em>apparent irregularities</em> (such as the use of <span class=\"symbol\">♯</span> and <span class=\"symbol\">♭</span> in musical notation).</div><div class=\"pmc\">For even these irregularities depict what they are intended to express; only they do it in a different way.</div>',1),
(1222,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A gramophone record, the musical idea, the written notes, and the sound-waves, all stand to one another in the same internal relation of depicting that holds between language and the world. </div><div class=\"pmc\">They are all constructed according to a common logical pattern.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Like the two youths in the fairy-tale, their two horses, and their lilies. They are all in a certain sense one.)</div>',1),
(1223,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There is a general rule by means of which the musician can obtain the symphony from the score, and which makes it possible to derive the symphony from the groove on the gramophone record, and, using the first rule, to derive the score again. That is what constitutes the inner similarity between these things which seem to be constructed in such entirely different ways. And that rule is the law of projection which projects the symphony into the language of musical notation. It is the rule for translating this language into the language of gramophone records.</div>',1),
(1224,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The possibility of all imagery, of all our pictorial modes of expression, is contained in the logic of depiction.</div>',1),
(1225,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In order to understand the essential nature of a proposition, we should consider hieroglyphic script, which depicts the facts that it describes.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And alphabetic script developed out of it without losing what was essential to depiction.</div>',1),
(1226,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We can see this from the fact that we understand the sense of a propositional sign without its having been explained to us.</div>',1),
(1227,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition is a picture of reality: for if I understand a proposition, I know the situation that it represents. And I understand the proposition without having had its sense explained to me.</div>',1),
(1228,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition <em>shows</em> its sense.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A proposition <em>shows</em> how things stand <em>if</em> it is true. And it <em>says that</em> they do so stand.</div>',1),
(1229,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition must restrict reality to two alternatives: yes or no.</div><div class=\"pmc\">In order to do that, it must describe reality completely.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A proposition is a description of a state of affairs.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Just as a description of an object describes it by giving its external properties, so a proposition describes reality by its internal properties.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A proposition constructs a world with the help of a logical scaffolding, so that one can actually see from the proposition how everything stands logically <em>if</em> it is true. One can <em>draw inferences</em> from a false proposition.</div>',1),
(1230,'2011-10-03 12:15:37','2011-10-03 12:15:37',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">To understand a proposition means to know what is the case if it is true.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(One can understand it, therefore, without knowing whether it is true.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">It is understood by anyone who understands its constituents.</div>',1),
(1231,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">When translating one language into another, we do not proceed by translating each <em>proposition</em> of the one into a <em>proposition</em> of the other, but merely by translating the constituents of propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(And the dictionary translates not only substantives, but also verbs, adjectives, and conjunctions, etc.; and it treats them all in the same way.)</div>',1),
(1232,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The meanings of simple signs (words) must be explained to us if we are to understand them.</div><div class=\"pmc\">With propositions, however, we make ourselves understood.</div>',1),
(1233,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It belongs to the essence of a proposition that it should be able to communicate a <em>new</em> sense to us.</div>',1),
(1234,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition must use old expressions to communicate a new sense.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A proposition communicates a situation to us, and so it must be <em>essentially</em> connected with the situation.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And the connexion is precisely that it is its logical picture.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A proposition states something only in so far as it is a picture.</div>',1),
(1235,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a proposition a situation is, as it were, constructed by way of experiment.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Instead of, ‘This proposition has such and such a sense’, we can simply say, ‘This proposition represents such and such a situation’.</div>',1),
(1236,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">One name stands for one thing, another for another thing, and they are combined with one another. In this way the whole group—like a <em>tableau vivant</em>—presents a state of affairs.</div>',1),
(1237,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The possibility of propositions is based on the principle that objects have signs as their representatives.</div><div class=\"pmc\">My fundamental idea is that the ‘logical constants’ are not representatives; that there can be no representatives of the <em>logic</em> of facts.</div>',1),
(1238,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is only in so far as a proposition is logically articulated that it is a picture of a situation.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Even the proposition, <em>Ambulo</em>, is composite: for its stem with a different ending yields a different sense, and so does its ending with a different stem.)</div>',1),
(1239,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a proposition there must be exactly as many distinguishable parts as in the situation that it represents.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The two must possess the same logical (mathematical) multiplicity. (Compare Hertz’s <i>Mechanics</i> on dynamical models.)</div>',1),
(1240,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">This mathematical multiplicity, of course, cannot itself be the subject of depiction. One cannot get away from it when depicting.</div>',1),
(1241,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If, for example, we wanted to express what we now write as ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>’ by putting an affix in front of ‘<var>fx</var>’—for instance by writing ‘<span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>Gen</var>.</span></span><var>fx</var>’—it would not be adequate: we should not know what was being generalized. If we wanted to signalize it with an affix ‘<var>g</var>’—for instance by writing ‘<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var><sub><var>g</var></sub>)’—that would not be adequate either: we should not know the scope of the generality-sign.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If we were to try to do it by introducing a mark into the argument-places—for instance by writing ‘<span class=\"mathop\">(<var>G</var>, <var>G</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>G</var>, <var>G</var>)’ —it would not be adequate: we should not be able to establish the identity of the variables. And so on.</div><div class=\"pmc\">All these modes of signifying are inadequate because they lack the necessary mathematical multiplicity.</div>',1),
(1242,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">For the same reason the idealist’s appeal to ‘spatial spectacles’ is inadequate to explain the seeing of spatial relations, because it cannot explain the multiplicity of these relations.</div>',1),
(1243,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Reality is compared with propositions.</div>',1),
(1244,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition can be true or false only in virtue of being a picture of reality.</div>',1),
(1245,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It must not be overlooked that a proposition has a sense that is independent of the facts: otherwise one can easily suppose that true and false are relations of equal status between signs and what they signify.</div><div class=\"pmc\">In that case one could say, for example, that ‘<var>p</var>’ signified in the true way what ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ signified in the false way, etc.</div>',1),
(1246,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Can we not make ourselves understood with false propositions just as we have done up till now with true ones?—So long as it is known that they are meant to be false.—No! For a proposition is true if we use it to say that things stand in a certain way, and they do; and if by ‘<var>p</var>’ we mean <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var> and things stand as we mean that they do, then, construed in the new way, ‘<var>p</var>’ is true and not false.</div>',1),
(1247,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">But it is important that the signs ‘<var>p</var>’ and ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ can say the same thing. For it shows that nothing in reality corresponds to the sign ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The occurrence of negation in a proposition is not enough to characterize its sense (<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>p</var>).</div><div class=\"pmc\">The propositions ‘<var>p</var>’ and ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ have opposite sense, but there corresponds to them one and the same reality.</div>',1),
(1248,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">An analogy to illustrate the concept of truth: imagine a black spot on white paper: you can describe the shape of the spot by saying, for each point on the sheet, whether it is black or white. To the fact that a point is black there corresponds a positive fact, and to the fact that a point is white (not black), a negative fact. If I designate a point on the sheet (a truth-value according to Frege), then this corresponds to the supposition that is put forward for judgement, etc. etc.</div><div class=\"pmc\">But in order to be able to say that a point is black or white, I must first know when a point is called black, and when white: in order to be able to say, ‘“<var>p</var>” is true (or false)’, I must have determined in what circumstances I call ‘<var>p</var>’ true, and in so doing I determine the sense of the proposition.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Now the point where the simile breaks down is this: we can indicate a point on the paper even if we do not know what black and white are, but if a proposition has no sense, nothing corresponds to it, since it does not designate a thing (a truth-value) which might have properties called ‘false’ or ‘true’. The verb of a proposition is not ‘is true’ or ‘is false’, as Frege thought: rather, that which ‘is true’ must already contain the verb.</div>',1);
INSERT INTO `tractatusapp_textfragment` (`id`, `created_at`, `updated_at`, `editedrecord`, `review`, `internal_notes`, `created_by_id`, `updated_by_id`, `contents`, `language_id`)
VALUES
(1249,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Every proposition must <em>already</em> have a sense: it cannot be given a sense by affirmation. Indeed its sense is just what is affirmed. And the same applies to negation, etc.</div>',1),
(1250,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">One could say that negation must be related to the logical place determined by the negated proposition.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The negating proposition determines a logical place <em>different</em> from that of the negated proposition.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The negating proposition determines a logical place with the help of the logical place of the negated proposition. For it describes it as lying outside the latter’s logical place.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The negated proposition can be negated again, and this in itself shows that what is negated is already a proposition, and not merely something that is preliminary to a proposition.</div>',1),
(1251,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Propositions represent the existence and non-existence of states of affairs.</div>',1),
(1252,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The totality of true propositions is the whole of natural science (or the whole corpus of the natural sciences).</div>',1),
(1253,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Philosophy is not one of the natural sciences.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(The word ‘philosophy’ must mean something whose place is above or below the natural sciences, not beside them.)</div>',1),
(1254,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Philosophy aims at the logical clarification of thoughts.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Philosophy is not a body of doctrine but an activity.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A philosophical work consists essentially of elucidations.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Philosophy does not result in ‘philosophical propositions’, but rather in the clarification of propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Without philosophy thoughts are, as it were, cloudy and indistinct: its task is to make them clear and to give them sharp boundaries.</div>',1),
(1255,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Psychology is no more closely related to philosophy than any other natural science.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Theory of knowledge is the philosophy of psychology.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Does not my study of sign-language correspond to the study of thought-processes, which philosophers used to consider so essential to the philosophy of logic? Only in most cases they got entangled in unessential psychological investigations, and with my method too there is an analogous risk.</div>',1),
(1256,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Darwin’s theory has no more to do with philosophy than any other hypothesis in natural science.</div>',1),
(1257,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Philosophy sets limits to the much disputed sphere of natural science.</div>',1),
(1258,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It must set limits to what can be thought; and, in doing so, to what cannot be thought.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It must set limits to what cannot be thought by working outwards through what can be thought.</div>',1),
(1259,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It will signify what cannot be said, by presenting clearly what can be said.</div>',1),
(1260,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Everything that can be thought at all can be thought clearly. Everything that can be put into words can be put clearly.</div>',1),
(1261,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Propositions can represent the whole of reality, but they cannot represent what they must have in common with reality in order to be able to represent it—logical form.</div><div class=\"pmc\">In order to be able to represent logical form, we should have to be able to station ourselves with propositions somewhere outside logic, that is to say outside the world.</div>',1),
(1262,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Propositions cannot represent logical form: it is mirrored in them.</div><div class=\"pmc\">What finds its reflection in language, language cannot represent.</div><div class=\"pmc\">What expresses <em>itself</em> in language, <em>we</em> cannot express by means of language.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Propositions <em>show</em> the logical form of reality.</div><div class=\"pmc\">They display it.</div>',1),
(1263,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Thus one proposition ‘<var>fa</var>’ shows that the object <var>a</var> occurs in its sense, two propositions ‘<var>fa</var>’ and ‘<var>ga</var>’ show that the same object is mentioned in both of them.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If two propositions contradict one another, then their structure shows it; the same is true if one of them follows from the other. And so on.</div>',1),
(1264,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What <em>can</em> be shown, <em>cannot</em> be said.</div>',1),
(1265,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Now, too, we understand our feeling that once we have a sign-language in which everything is all right, we already have a correct logical point of view.</div>',1),
(1266,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a certain sense we can talk about formal properties of objects and states of affairs, or, in the case of facts, about structural properties: and in the same sense about formal relations and structural relations.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Instead of ‘structural property’ I also say ‘internal property’; instead of ‘structural relation’, ‘internal relation’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">I introduce these expressions in order to indicate the source of the confusion between internal relations and relations proper (external relations), which is very widespread among philosophers.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">It is impossible, however, to assert by means of propositions that such internal properties and relations obtain: rather, this makes itself manifest in the propositions that represent the relevant states of affairs and are concerned with the relevant objects.</div>',1),
(1267,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">An internal property of a fact can also be called a feature of that fact (in the sense in which we speak of facial features, for example).</div>',1),
(1268,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A property is internal if it is unthinkable that its object should not possess it.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(This shade of blue and that one stand, <em>eo ipso</em>, in the internal relation of lighter to darker. It is unthinkable that <em>these</em> two objects should not stand in this relation.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Here the shifting use of the word ‘object’ corresponds to the shifting use of the words ‘property’ and ‘relation’.)</div>',1),
(1269,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The existence of an internal property of a possible situation is not expressed by means of a proposition: rather, it expresses itself in the proposition representing the situation, by means of an internal property of that proposition.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It would be just as nonsensical to assert that a proposition had a formal property as to deny it.</div>',1),
(1270,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is impossible to distinguish forms from one another by saying that one has this property and another that property: for this presupposes that it makes sense to ascribe either property to either form.</div>',1),
(1271,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The existence of an internal relation between possible situations expresses itself in language by means of an internal relation between the propositions representing them.</div>',1),
(1272,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Here we have the answer to the vexed question ‘whether all relations are internal or external’.</div>',1),
(1273,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">I call a series that is ordered by an internal relation a series of forms.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The order of the number-series is not governed by an external relation but by an internal relation.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The same is true of the series of propositions ‘<var>aRb</var>’,</div><div class=\"pmc\">‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRb</var>’,</div><div class=\"pmc\">‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRy</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>yRb</var>’, and so forth.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(If <var>b</var> stands in one of these relations to <var>a</var>, I call <var>b</var> a successor of <var>a</var>.)</div>',1),
(1274,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We can now talk about formal concepts, in the same sense that we speak of formal properties.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(I introduce this expression in order to exhibit the source of the confusion between formal concepts and concepts proper, which pervades the whole of traditional logic.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">When something falls under a formal concept as one of its objects, this cannot be expressed by means of a proposition. Instead it is shown in the very sign for this object. (A name shows that it signifies an object, a sign for a number that it signifies a number, etc.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">Formal concepts cannot, in fact, be represented by means of a function, as concepts proper can.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For their characteristics, formal properties, are not expressed by means of functions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The expression for a formal property is a feature of certain symbols.</div><div class=\"pmc\">So the sign for the characteristics of a formal concept is a distinctive feature of all symbols whose meanings fall under the concept.</div><div class=\"pmc\">So the expression for a formal concept is a propositional variable in which this distinctive feature alone is constant.</div>',1),
(1275,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The propositional variable signifies the formal concept, and its values signify the objects that fall under the concept.</div>',1),
(1276,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Every variable is the sign for a formal concept.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For every variable represents a constant form that all its values possess, and this can be regarded as a formal property of those values.</div>',1),
(1277,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Thus the variable name ‘<var>x</var>’ is the proper sign for the pseudo-concept <em>object</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Wherever the word ‘object’ (‘thing’, etc.) is correctly used, it is expressed in conceptual notation by a variable name.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For example, in the proposition, ‘There are 2 objects which …’, it is expressed by ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)</span>…’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Wherever it is used in a different way, that is as a proper concept-word, nonsensical pseudo-propositions are the result.</div><div class=\"pmc\">So one cannot say, for example, ‘There are objects’, as one might say, ‘There are books’. And it is just as impossible to say, ‘There are 100 objects’, or, ‘There are <span class=\"symbol\">ℵ</span><sub>0</sub> objects’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And it is nonsensical to speak of the <em>total number of objects</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The same applies to the words ‘complex’, ‘fact’, ‘function’, ‘number’, etc.</div><div class=\"pmc\">They all signify formal concepts, and are represented in conceptual notation by variables, not by functions or classes (as <NAME> Russell believed).</div><div class=\"pmc\">‘1 is a number’, ‘There is only one zero’, and all similar expressions are nonsensical.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(It is just as nonsensical to say, ‘There is only one 1’, as it would be to say, ‘2<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>2 at 3 o’clock equals 4’.)</div>',1),
(1278,'2011-10-03 12:15:38','2011-10-03 12:15:38',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A formal concept is given immediately any object falling under it is given. It is not possible, therefore, to introduce as primitive ideas objects belonging to a formal concept <em>and</em> the formal concept itself. So it is impossible, for example, to introduce as primitive ideas both the concept of a function and specific functions, as Russell does; or the concept of a number and particular numbers.</div>',1),
(1279,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If we want to express in conceptual notation the general proposition, ‘<var>b</var> is a successor of <var>a</var>’, then we require an expression for the general term of the series of forms</div><div class=\"pmc\"><div class=\"centered\"><var>aRb</var>,<br />\n<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRb</var>,<br />\n<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRy</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>yRb</var>,<br />\n… .</div></div>',1),
(1280,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">To ask whether a formal concept exists is nonsensical. For no proposition can be the answer to such a question.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(So, for example, the question, ‘Are there unanalysable subject-predicate propositions?’ cannot be asked.)</div>',1),
(1281,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Logical forms are <em>without</em> number.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Hence there are no pre-eminent numbers in logic, and hence there is no possibility of philosophical monism or dualism, etc.</div>',1),
(1282,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The sense of a proposition is its agreement and disagreement with possibilities of existence and non-existence of states of affairs.</div>',1),
(1283,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The simplest kind of proposition, an elementary proposition, asserts the existence of a state of affairs.</div>',1),
(1284,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is a sign of a proposition’s being elementary that there can be no elementary proposition contradicting it.</div>',1),
(1285,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">An elementary proposition consists of names. It is a nexus, a concatenation, of names.</div>',1),
(1286,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is obvious that the analysis of propositions must bring us to elementary propositions which consist of names in immediate combination.</div><div class=\"pmc\">This raises the question how such combination into propositions comes about.</div>',1),
(1287,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Even if the world is infinitely complex, so that every fact consists of infinitely many states of affairs and every state of affairs is composed of infinitely many objects, there would still have to be objects and states of affairs.</div>',1),
(1288,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is only in the nexus of an elementary proposition that a name occurs in a proposition.</div>',1),
(1289,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Names are the simple symbols: I indicate them by single letters (‘<var>x</var>’, ‘<var>y</var>’, ‘<var>z</var>’).</div><div class=\"pmc\">I write elementary propositions as functions of names, so that they have the form ‘<var>fx</var>’, ‘<var>ϕ</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)’, etc.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Or I indicate them by the letters ‘<var>p</var>’, ‘<var>q</var>’, ‘<var>r</var>’.</div>',1),
(1290,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">When I use two signs with one and the same meaning, I express this by putting the sign ‘=’ between them.</div><div class=\"pmc\">So ‘<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>’ means that the sign ‘<var>b</var>’ can be substituted for the sign ‘<var>a</var>’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(If I use an equation to introduce a new sign ‘<var>b</var>’, laying down that it shall serve as a substitute for a sign ‘<var>a</var>’ that is already known, then, like Russell, I write the equation—definition—in the form ‘<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var> Def.’ A definition is a rule dealing with signs.)</div>',1),
(1291,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Expressions of the form ‘<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>’ are, therefore, mere representational devices. They state nothing about the meaning of the signs ‘<var>a</var>’ and ‘<var>b</var>’.</div>',1),
(1292,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Can we understand two names without knowing whether they signify the same thing or two different things?—Can we understand a proposition in which two names occur without knowing whether their meaning is the same or different?</div><div class=\"pmc\">Suppose I know the meaning of an English word and of a German word that means the same: then it is impossible for me to be unaware that they do mean the same; I must be capable of translating each into the other.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Expressions like ‘<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>’, and those derived from them, are neither elementary propositions nor is there any other way in which they have sense. (This will become evident later.)</div>',1),
(1293,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If an elementary proposition is true, the state of affairs exists: if an elementary proposition is false, the state of affairs does not exist.</div>',1),
(1294,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If all true elementary propositions are given, the result is a complete description of the world. The world is completely described by giving all elementary propositions, and adding which of them are true and which false.</div>',1),
(1295,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">For <var>n</var> states of affairs, there are <table class=\"possibilities\"><tbody><tr><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middleright\">K<sub><var>n</var></sub> = </td><td class=\"summationtop\"><var class=\"smallvar\">n</var></td><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middleright\"><span class=\"largeparen\">(</span></td><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middlecenter\"><var>n</var><br /><var>ν</var></td><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middleleft\"><span class=\"largeparen\">)</span></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationmiddle\"><span class=\"largeop\">∑</span></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationbottom\"><span class=\"smallvar\"><var>ν</var> = 0</span></td></tr></tbody></table> possibilities of existence and non-existence.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Of these states of affairs any combination can exist and the remainder not exist.</div>',1),
(1296,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There correspond to these combinations the same number of possibilities of truth—and falsity—for <var>n</var> elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(1297,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Truth-possibilities of elementary propositions mean possibilities of existence and non-existence of states of affairs.</div>',1),
(1298,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We can represent truth-possibilities by schemata of the following kind (‘T’ means ‘true’, ‘F’ means ‘false’; the rows of ‘T’s’ and ‘F’s’ under the row of elementary propositions symbolize their truth-possibilities in a way that can easily be understood):</div><div class=\"pmc\"><div class=\"centered\"><table class=\"truthtable\"><tbody><tr><th class=\"l\"><var>p</var></th><th class=\"m\"><var>q</var></th><th class=\"e\"><var>r</var></th></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"m\">T</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">T</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"m\">T</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">T</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr></tbody></table><span class=\"padrthree\"></span><table class=\"truthtable\"><tbody><tr><th class=\"l\"><var>p</var></th><th class=\"e\"><var>q</var></th></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">T</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr></tbody></table><span class=\"padrthree\"></span><table class=\"truthtable\"><tbody><tr><th class=\"e\"><var>p</var></th></tr><tr><td class=\"e\">T</td></tr><tr><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr></tbody></table></div></div>',1),
(1299,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition is an expression of agreement and disagreement with truth-possibilities of elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(1300,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Truth-possibilities of elementary propositions are the conditions of the truth and falsity of propositions.</div>',1),
(1301,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It immediately strikes one as probable that the introduction of elementary propositions provides the basis for understanding all other kinds of proposition. Indeed the understanding of general propositions <em>palpably</em> depends on the understanding of elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(1302,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">For <var>n</var> elementary propositions there are <table class=\"possibilities\"><tbody><tr><td class=\"summationtop\"><span class=\"smallvar\">K<sub><var>n</var></sub></span></td><td class=\"middleright\" rowspan=\"3\"><span class=\"largeparen\">(</span></td><td class=\"middlecenter\" rowspan=\"3\">K<sub><var>n</var></sub><br /><var>κ</var></td><td class=\"middleright\" rowspan=\"3\"><span class=\"largeparen\">)</span> = L<sub><var>n</var></sub></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationmiddle\"><span class=\"largeop\">∑</span></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationmiddle\"><span class=\"smallvar\"><var>κ</var> = 0</span></td></tr></tbody></table> ways in which a proposition can agree and disagree with their truth possibilities.</div>',1),
(1303,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We can express agreement with truth-possibilities by correlating the mark ‘T’ (true) with them in the schema.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The absence of this mark means disagreement.</div>',1),
(1304,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The expression of agreement and disagreement with the truth possibilities of elementary propositions expresses the truth-conditions of a proposition.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A proposition is the expression of its truth-conditions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Thus Frege was quite right to use them as a starting point when he explained the signs of his conceptual notation. But the explanation of the concept of truth that Frege gives is mistaken: if ‘the true’ and ‘the false’ were really objects, and were the arguments in <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var> etc., then Frege’s method of determining the sense of ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ would leave it absolutely undetermined.)</div>',1),
(1305,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The sign that results from correlating the mark ‘T’ with truth-possibilities is a propositional sign.</div>',1),
(1306,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is clear that a complex of the signs ‘F’ and ‘T’ has no object (or complex of objects) corresponding to it, just as there is none corresponding to the horizontal and vertical lines or to the brackets.—There are no ‘logical objects’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Of course the same applies to all signs that express what the schemata of ‘T’s’ and ‘F’s’ express.</div>',1),
(1307,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">For example, the following is a propositional sign:</div>',1),
(1308,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">For <var>n</var> elementary propositions there are <span class=\"mathrm\"><var>L</var></span><sub><var>n</var></sub> possible groups of truth-conditions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The groups of truth-conditions that are obtainable from the truth-possibilities of a given number of elementary propositions can be arranged in a series.</div>',1),
(1309,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Among the possible groups of truth-conditions there are two extreme cases.</div><div class=\"pmc\">In one of these cases the proposition is true for all the truth-possibilities of the elementary propositions. We say that the truth-conditions are <em>tautological</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">In the second case the proposition is false for all the truth-possibilities: the truth-conditions are <em>contradictory</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">In the first case we call the proposition a tautology; in the second, a contradiction.</div>',1),
(1310,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Propositions show what they say: tautologies and contradictions show that they say nothing.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A tautology has no truth-conditions, since it is unconditionally true: and a contradiction is true on no condition.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Tautologies and contradictions lack sense.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Like a point from which two arrows go out in opposite directions to one another.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">(For example, I know nothing about the weather when I know that it is either raining or not raining.)</div>',1),
(1311,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Tautologies and contradictions are not, however, nonsensical. They are part of the symbolism, much as ‘0’ is part of the symbolism of arithmetic.</div>',1),
(1312,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Tautologies and contradictions are not pictures of reality. They do not represent any possible situations. For the former admit <em>all</em> possible situations, and latter <em>none</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">In a tautology the conditions of agreement with the world—the representational relations—cancel one another, so that it does not stand in any representational relation to reality.</div>',1),
(1313,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The truth-conditions of a proposition determine the range that it leaves open to the facts.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(A proposition, a picture, or a model is, in the negative sense, like a solid body that restricts the freedom of movement of others, and, in the positive sense, like a space bounded by solid substance in which there is room for a body.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">A tautology leaves open to reality the whole—the infinite whole—of logical space: a contradiction fills the whole of logical space leaving no point of it for reality. Thus neither of them can determine reality in any way.</div>',1),
(1314,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A tautology’s truth is certain, a proposition’s possible, a contradiction’s impossible.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Certain, possible, impossible: here we have the first indication of the scale that we need in the theory of probability.)</div>',1),
(1315,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The logical product of a tautology and a proposition says the same thing as the proposition. This product, therefore, is identical with the proposition. For it is impossible to alter what is essential to a symbol without altering its sense.</div>',1),
(1316,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What corresponds to a determinate logical combination of signs is a determinate logical combination of their meanings. It is only to the uncombined signs that <em>absolutely any</em> combination corresponds.</div><div class=\"pmc\">In other words, propositions that are true for every situation cannot be combinations of signs at all, since, if they were, only determinate combinations of objects could correspond to them.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(And what is not a logical combination has <em>no</em> combination of objects corresponding to it.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">Tautology and contradiction are the limiting cases—indeed the disintegration—of the combination of signs.</div>',1),
(1317,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Admittedly the signs are still combined with one another even in tautologies and contradictions—i.e. they stand in certain relations to one another: but these relations have no meaning, they are not essential to the <em>symbol</em>.</div>',1),
(1318,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It now seems possible to give the most general propositional form: that is, to give a description of the propositions of <em>any</em> sign-language <em>whatsoever</em> in such a way that every possible sense can be expressed by a symbol satisfying the description, and every symbol satisfying the description can express a sense, provided that the meanings of the names are suitably chosen.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It is clear that <em>only</em> what is essential to the most general propositional form may be included in its description—for otherwise it would not be the most general form.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The existence of a general propositional form is proved by the fact that there cannot be a proposition whose form could not have been foreseen (i.e. constructed). The general form of a proposition is: This is how things stand.</div>',1),
(1319,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Suppose that I am given <em>all</em> elementary propositions: then I can simply ask what propositions I can construct out of them. And there I have <em>all</em> propositions, and <em>that</em> fixes their limits.</div>',1),
(1320,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Propositions comprise all that follows from the totality of all elementary propositions (and, of course, from its being the <em>totality</em> of them <em>all</em>). (Thus, in a certain sense, it could be said that <em>all</em> propositions were generalizations of elementary propositions.)</div>',1),
(1321,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The general propositional form is a variable.</div>',1),
(1322,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition is a truth-function of elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(An elementary proposition is a truth-function of itself.)</div>',1),
(1323,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Elementary propositions are the truth-arguments of propositions.</div>',1),
(1324,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The arguments of functions are readily confused with the affixes of names. For both arguments and affixes enable me to recognize the meaning of the signs containing them.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For example, when Russell writes ‘+<sub><var>c</var></sub>’, the ‘<sub><var>c</var></sub>’ is an affix which indicates that the sign as a whole is the addition-sign for cardinal numbers. But the use of this sign is the result of arbitrary convention and it would be quite possible to choose a simple sign instead of ‘+<sub><var>c</var></sub>’; in ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’, however, ‘<var>p</var>’ is not an affix but an argument: the sense of ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ <em>cannot</em> be understood unless the sense of ‘<var>p</var>’ has been understood already. (In the name <NAME> ‘Julius’ is an affix. An affix is always part of a description of the object to whose name we attach it: e.g. <em>the</em> Caesar of the Julian gens.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">If I am not mistaken, Frege’s theory about the meaning of propositions and functions is based on the confusion between an argument and an affix. Frege regarded the propositions of logic as names, and their arguments as the affixes of those names.</div>',1),
(1325,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Truth-functions can be arranged in series.</div><div class=\"pmc\">That is the foundation of the theory of probability.</div>',1),
(1326,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The truth-functions of a given number of elementary propositions can always be set out in a schema of the following kind:</div>',1),
(1327,'2011-10-03 12:15:39','2011-10-03 12:15:39',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If all the truth-grounds that are common to a number of propositions are at the same time truth-grounds of a certain proposition, then we say that the truth of that proposition follows from the truth of the others.</div>',1),
(1328,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In particular, the truth of a proposition ‘<var>p</var>’ follows from the truth of another proposition ‘<var>q</var>’ if all the truth-grounds of the latter are truth-grounds of the former.</div>',1),
(1329,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The truth-grounds of the one are contained in those of the other: <var>p</var> follows from <var>q</var>.</div>',1),
(1330,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If <var>p</var> follows from <var>q</var>, the sense of ‘<var>p</var>’ is contained in the sense of ‘<var>q</var>’.</div>',1),
(1331,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If a god creates a world in which certain propositions are true, then by that very act he also creates a world in which all the propositions that follow from them come true. And similarly he could not create a world in which the proposition ‘<var>p</var>’ was true without creating all its objects.</div>',1),
(1332,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition affirms every proposition that follows from it.</div>',1),
(1333,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>q</var>’ is one of the propositions that affirm ‘<var>p</var>’ and at the same time one of the propositions that affirm ‘<var>q</var>’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Two propositions are opposed to one another if there is no proposition with a sense, that affirms them both.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Every proposition that contradicts another negates it.</div>',1),
(1334,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">When the truth of one proposition follows from the truth of others, we can see this from the structure of the propositions.</div>',1),
(1335,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If the truth of one proposition follows from the truth of others, this finds expression in relations in which the forms of the propositions stand to one another: nor is it necessary for us to set up these relations between them, by combining them with one another in a single proposition; on the contrary, the relations are internal, and their existence is an immediate result of the existence of the propositions.</div>',1),
(1336,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">When we infer <var>q</var> from <var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var> and <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, the relation between the propositional forms of ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>’ and ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ is masked, in this case, by our mode of signifying. But if instead of ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>’ we write, for example, ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.|.</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>q</var>’, and instead of ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’, ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>p</var>’ (<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>neither <var>p</var> nor <var>q</var>), then the inner connexion becomes obvious.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(The possibility of inference from <span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var> to <var>fa</var> shows that the symbol <span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var> itself has generality in it.)</div>',1),
(1337,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If <var>p</var> follows from <var>q</var>, I can make an inference from <var>q</var> to <var>p</var>, deduce <var>p</var> from <var>q</var>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The nature of the inference can be gathered only from the two propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">They themselves are the only possible justification of the inference.</div><div class=\"pmc\">‘Laws of inference’, which are supposed to justify inferences, as in the works of Frege and Russell, have no sense, and would be superfluous.</div>',1),
(1338,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">All deductions are made <em>a priori</em>.</div>',1),
(1339,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">One elementary proposition cannot be deduced form another.</div>',1),
(1340,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There is no possible way of making an inference from the existence of one situation to the existence of another, entirely different situation.</div>',1),
(1341,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There is no causal nexus to justify such an inference.</div>',1),
(1342,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We <em>cannot</em> infer the events of the future from those of the present.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Belief in the causal nexus is <em>superstition</em>.</div>',1),
(1343,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The freedom of the will consists in the impossibility of knowing actions that still lie in the future. We could know them only if causality were an <em>inner</em> necessity like that of logical inference.—The connexion between knowledge and what is known is that of logical necessity.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(‘A knows that <var>p</var> is the case’, has no sense if <var>p</var> is a tautology.)</div>',1),
(1344,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If the truth of a proposition does not <em>follow</em> from the fact that it is self-evident to us, then its self-evidence in no way justifies our belief in its truth.</div>',1),
(1345,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If one proposition follows from another, then the latter says more than the former, and the former less than the latter.</div>',1),
(1346,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If <var>p</var> follows from <var>q</var> and <var>q</var> from <var>p</var>, then they are one and the same proposition.</div>',1),
(1347,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A tautology follows from all propositions: it says nothing.</div>',1),
(1348,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Contradiction is that common factor of propositions which <em>no</em> proposition has in common with another. Tautology is the common factor of all propositions that have nothing in common with one another. </div><div class=\"pmc\">Contradiction, one might say, vanishes outside all propositions: tautology vanishes inside them.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Contradiction is the outer limit of propositions: tautology is the unsubstantial point at their centre.</div>',1),
(1349,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>r</var></sub> is the number of the truth-grounds of a proposition ‘<var>r</var>’, and if <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub> is the number of the truth-grounds of a proposition ‘<var>s</var>’ that are at the same time truth-grounds of ‘<var>r</var>’, then we call the ratio <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub> : <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>r</var></sub> the degree of probability that the proposition ‘<var>r</var>’ gives to the proposition ‘<var>s</var>’.</div>',1),
(1350,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In a schema like the one above in 5.101, let <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>r</var></sub> be the number of ‘T’s’ in the proposition <var>r</var>, and let <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub>, be the number of ‘T’s’ in the proposition <var>s</var> that stand in columns in which the proposition <var>r</var> has ‘T’s’. Then the proposition <var>r</var> gives to the proposition <var>s</var> the probability <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub> : <span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><sub><var>r</var></sub>.</div>',1),
(1351,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There is no special object peculiar to probability propositions.</div>',1),
(1352,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">When propositions have no truth-arguments in common with one another, we call them independent of one another.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Two elementary propositions give one another the probability ½.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If <var>p</var> follows from <var>q</var>, then the proposition ‘<var>q</var>’ gives to the proposition ‘<var>p</var>’ the probability 1. The certainty of logical inference is a limiting case of probability.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Application of this to tautology and contradiction.)</div>',1),
(1353,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In itself, a proposition is neither probable nor improbable. Either an event occurs or it does not: there is no middle way.</div>',1),
(1354,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Suppose that an urn contains black and white balls in equal numbers (and none of any other kind). I draw one ball after another, putting them back into the urn. By this experiment I can establish that the number of black balls drawn and the number of white balls drawn approximate to one another as the draw continues.</div><div class=\"pmc\">So <em>this</em> is not a mathematical truth.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Now, if I say, ‘The probability of my drawing a white ball is equal to the probability of my drawing a black one’, this means that all the circumstances that I know of (including the laws of nature assumed as hypotheses) give no <em>more</em> probability to the occurrence of the one event than to that of the other. That is to say, they give each the probability ½, as can easily be gathered from the above definitions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">What I confirm by the experiment is that the occurrence of the two events is independent of the circumstances of which I have no more detailed knowledge.</div>',1),
(1355,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The minimal unit for a probability proposition is this: The circumstances—of which I have no further knowledge—give such and such a degree of probability to the occurrence of a particular event.</div>',1),
(1356,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is in this way that probability is a generalization.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It involves a general description of a propositional form.</div><div class=\"pmc\">We use probability only in default of certainty—if our knowledge of a fact is not indeed complete, but we do know <em>something</em> about its form.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(A proposition may well be an incomplete picture of a certain situation, but it is always a complete picture of <em>something</em>.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">A probability proposition is a sort of excerpt from other propositions.</div>',1),
(1357,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The structures of propositions stand in internal relations to one another.</div>',1),
(1358,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In order to give prominence to these internal relations we can adopt the following mode of expression: we can represent a proposition as the result of an operation that produces it out of other propositions (which are the bases of the operation).</div>',1),
(1359,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">An operation is the expression of a relation between the structures of its result and of its bases.</div>',1),
(1360,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The operation is what has to be done to the one proposition in order to make the other out of it.</div>',1),
(1361,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">And that will, of course, depend on their formal properties, on the internal similarity of their forms.</div>',1),
(1362,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The internal relation by which a series is ordered is equivalent to the operation that produces one term from another.</div>',1),
(1363,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Operations cannot make their appearance before the point at which one proposition is generated out of another in a logically meaningful way; i.e. the point at which the logical construction of propositions begins.</div>',1),
(1364,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Truth-functions of elementary propositions are results of operations with elementary propositions as bases. (These operations I call truth-operations.)</div>',1),
(1365,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The sense of a truth-function of <var>p</var> is a function of the sense of <var>p</var>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Negation, logical addition, logical multiplication, etc. etc. are operations.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Negation reverses the sense of a proposition.)</div>',1),
(1366,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">An operation manifests itself in a variable; it shows how we can get from one form of proposition to another.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It gives expression to the difference between the forms.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(And what the bases of an operation and its result have in common is just the bases themselves.)</div>',1),
(1367,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">An operation is not the mark of a form, but only of a difference between forms.</div>',1),
(1368,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The operation that produces ‘<var>q</var>’ from ‘<var>p</var>’ also produces ‘<var>r</var>’ from ‘<var>q</var>’, and so on. There is only one way of expressing this: ‘<var>p</var>’, ‘<var>q</var>’, ‘<var>r</var>’, etc. have to be variables that give expression in a general way to certain formal relations.</div>',1),
(1369,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The occurrence of an operation does not characterize the sense of a proposition.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Indeed, no statement is made by an operation, but only by its result, and this depends on the bases of the operation.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Operations and functions must not be confused with each other.)</div>',1),
(1370,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A function cannot be its own argument, whereas an operation can take one of its own results as its base.</div>',1),
(1371,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is only in this way that the step from one term of a series of forms to another is possible (from one type to another in the hierarchies of Russell and Whitehead). (Russell and Whitehead did not admit the possibility of such steps, but repeatedly availed themselves of it.)</div>',1),
(1372,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If an operation is applied repeatedly to its own results, I speak of successive applications of it. (‘<span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>a</var>’ is the result of three successive applications of the operation ‘<span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>’ to ‘<var>a</var>’.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">In a similar sense I speak of successive applications of <em>more than one</em> operation to a number of propositions.</div>',1),
(1373,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Accordingly I use the sign ‘[<var>a</var>, <var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>x</var>]’ for the general term of the series of forms <var>a</var>, <span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>a</var>, <span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>a</var>,<span class=\"mathrel\">…</span>. This bracketed expression is a variable: the first term of the bracketed expression is the beginning of the series of forms, the second is the form of a term <var>x</var> arbitrarily selected from the series, and the third is the form of the term that immediately follows <var>x</var> in the series.</div>',1),
(1374,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The concept of successive applications of an operation is equivalent to the concept ‘and so on’.</div>',1),
(1375,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">One operation can counteract the effect of another. Operations can cancel one another.</div>',1),
(1376,'2011-10-03 12:15:40','2011-10-03 12:15:40',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">An operation can vanish (e.g. negation in ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’: <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>p</var>).</div>',1),
(1377,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">All propositions are results of truth-operations on elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A truth-operation is the way in which a truth-function is produced out of elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It is of the essence of truth-operations that, just as elementary propositions yield a truth-function of themselves, so too in the same way truth-functions yield a further truth-function. When a truth-operation is applied to truth-functions of elementary propositions, it always generates another truth-function of elementary propositions, another proposition. When a truth-operation is applied to the results of truth-operations on elementary propositions, there is always a <em>single</em> operation on elementary propositions that has the same result.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Every proposition is the result of truth-operations on elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(1378,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The schemata in 4.31 have a meaning even when ‘<var>p</var>’, ‘<var>q</var>’, ‘<var>r</var>’, etc. are not elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And it is easy to see that the propositional sign in 4.442 expresses a single truth-function of elementary propositions even when ‘<var>p</var>’ and ‘<var>q</var>’ are truth-functions of elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(1379,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">All truth-functions are results of successive applications to elementary propositions of a finite number of truth-operations.</div>',1),
(1380,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">At this point it becomes manifest that there are no ‘logical objects’ or ‘logical constants’ (in Frege’s and Russell’s sense).</div>',1),
(1381,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The reason is that the results of truth-operations on truth-functions are always identical whenever they are one and the same truth-function of elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(1382,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is self-evident that <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span>, <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span>, etc. are not relations in the sense in which right and left etc. are relations.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The interdefinability of Frege’s and Russell’s ‘primitive signs’ of logic is enough to show that they are not primitive signs, still less signs for relations.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And it is obvious that the ‘<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>’ defined by means of ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>’ and ‘<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>’ is identical with the one that figures with ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>’ in the definition of ‘<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>’; and that the second ‘<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>’ is identical with the first one; and so on.</div>',1),
(1383,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Even at first sight it seems scarcely credible that there should follow from one fact <var>p</var> infinitely many <em>others</em>, namely <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, etc. And it is no less remarkable that the infinite number of propositions of logic (mathematics) follow from half a dozen ‘primitive propositions’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">But in fact all the propositions of logic say the same thing, to wit nothing.</div>',1),
(1384,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Truth-functions are not material functions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For example, an affirmation can be produced by double negation: in such a case does it follow that in some sense negation is contained in affirmation? Does ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ negate <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, or does it affirm <var>p</var>—or both?</div><div class=\"pmc\">The proposition ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ is not about negation, as if negation were an object: on the other hand, the possibility of negation is already written into affirmation.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And if there were an object called ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>’, it would follow that ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ said something different from what ‘<var>p</var>’ said, just because the one proposition would then be about <span class=\"mathop\">~</span> and the other would not.</div>',1),
(1385,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">This vanishing of the apparent logical constants also occurs in the case of ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>fx</var>’, which says the same as ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>’, and in the case of ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>’, which says the same as ‘<var>fa</var>’.</div>',1),
(1386,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If we are given a proposition, then <em>with it</em> we are also given the results of all truth-operations that have it as their base.</div>',1),
(1387,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If there are primitive logical signs, then any logic that fails to show clearly how they are placed relatively to one another and to justify their existence will be incorrect. The construction of logic <em>out of</em> its primitive signs must be made clear.</div>',1),
(1388,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If logic has primitive ideas, they must be independent of one another. If a primitive idea has been introduced, it must have been introduced in all the combinations in which it ever occurs. It cannot, therefore, be introduced first for <em>one</em> combination and later reintroduced for another. For example, once negation has been introduced, we must understand it both in propositions of the form ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ and in propositions like ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>)’, ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>fx</var>’, etc. We must not introduce it first for the one class of cases and then for the other, since it would then be left in doubt whether its meaning were the same in both cases, and no reason would have been given for combining the signs in the same way in both cases.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(In short, Frege’s remarks about introducing signs by means of definitions (in <i>The Fundamental Laws of Arithmetic</i>) also apply, <em>mutatis mutandis</em>, to the introduction of primitive signs.)</div>',1),
(1389,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The introduction of any new device into the symbolism of logic is necessarily a momentous event. In logic a new device should not be introduced in brackets or in a footnote with what one might call a completely innocent air.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Thus in Russell and Whitehead’s <i>Principia Mathematica</i> there occur definitions and primitive propositions expressed in words. Why this sudden appearance of words? It would require a justification, but none is given, or could be given, since the procedure is in fact illicit.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">But if the introduction of a new device has proved necessary at a certain point, we must immediately ask ourselves, ‘At what points is the employment of this device now <em>unavoidable</em>?’ and its place in logic must be made clear.</div>',1),
(1390,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">All numbers in logic stand in need of justification.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Or rather, it must become evident that there are no numbers in logic.</div><div class=\"pmc\">There are no privileged numbers.</div>',1),
(1391,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In logic there is no co-ordinate status, and there can be no classification.</div><div class=\"pmc\">In logic there can be no distinction between the general and the specific.</div>',1),
(1392,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The solutions of the problems of logic must be simple, since they set the standard of simplicity.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Men have always had a presentiment that there must be a realm in which the answers to questions are symmetrically combined—<em>a priori</em>—to form a self-contained system.</div><div class=\"pmc\">A realm subject to the law: <em>Simplex sigillum veri</em>.</div>',1),
(1393,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If we introduced logical signs properly, then we should also have introduced at the same time the sense of all combinations of them; i.e. not only ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>’ but ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>q</var>)’ as well, etc. etc. We should also have introduced at the same time the effect of all possible combinations of brackets. And thus it would have been made clear that the real general primitive signs are not ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>’, ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>’, etc. but the most general form of their combinations.</div>',1),
(1394,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Though it seems unimportant, it is in fact significant that the pseudo-relations of logic, such as <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span> and <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span>, need brackets—unlike real relations.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Indeed, the use of brackets with these apparently primitive signs is itself an indication that they are not primitive signs. And surely no one is going to believe brackets have an independent meaning.</div>',1),
(1395,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Signs for logical operations are punctuation-marks.</div>',1),
(1396,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is clear that whatever we can say <em>in advance</em> about the form of all propositions, we must be able to say <em>all at once</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">An elementary proposition really contains all logical operations in itself. For ‘<var>fa</var>’ says the same thing as</div><div class=\"pmc\"><div class=\"displaymath\">‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>’.</div></div><div class=\"pmc\">Wherever there is compositeness, argument and function are present, and where these are present, we already have all the logical constants.</div><div class=\"pmc\">One could say that the sole logical constant was what <em>all</em> propositions, by their very nature, had in common with one another.</div><div class=\"pmc\">But that is the general propositional form.</div>',1),
(1397,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The general propositional form is the essence of a proposition.</div>',1),
(1398,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">To give the essence of a proposition means to give the essence of all description, and thus the essence of the world.</div>',1),
(1399,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The description of the most general propositional form is the description of the one and only general primitive sign in logic.</div>',1),
(1400,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Logic must look after itself.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If a sign is <em>possible</em>, then it is also capable of signifying. Whatever is possible in logic is also permitted. (The reason why ‘Socrates is identical’ means nothing is that there is no property called ‘identical’. The proposition is nonsensical because we have failed to make an arbitrary determination, and not because the symbol, in itself, would be illegitimate.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">In a certain sense, we cannot make mistakes in logic.</div>',1),
(1401,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Self-evidence, which Russell talked about so much, can become dispensable in logic, only because language itself prevents every logical mistake.—What makes logic <em>a priori</em> is the <em>impossibility</em> of illogical thought.</div>',1),
(1402,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We cannot give a sign the wrong sense.</div>',1),
(1403,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Occam’s maxim is, of course, not an arbitrary rule, nor one that is justified by its success in practice: its point is that <em>unnecessary</em> units in a sign-language mean nothing.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Signs that serve <em>one</em> purpose are logically equivalent, and signs that serve <em>none</em> are logically meaningless.</div>',1),
(1404,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Frege says that any legitimately constructed proposition must have a sense. And I say that any possible proposition is legitimately constructed, and, if it has no sense, that can only be because we have failed to give a <em>meaning</em> to some of its constituents.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Even if we think that we have done so.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">Thus the reason why ‘Socrates is identical’ says nothing is that we have <em>not</em> given any <em>adjectival</em> meaning to the word ‘identical’. For when it appears as a sign for identity, it symbolizes in an entirely different way—the signifying relation is a different one—therefore the symbols also are entirely different in the two cases: the two symbols have only the sign in common, and that is an accident.</div>',1),
(1405,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The number of fundamental operations that are necessary depends <em>solely</em> on our notation.</div>',1),
(1406,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">All that is required is that we should construct a system of signs with a particular number of dimensions—with a particular mathematical multiplicity.</div>',1),
(1407,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is clear that this is not a question of a <em>number of primitive ideas</em> that have to be signified, but rather of the expression of a rule.</div>',1),
(1408,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Every truth-function is a result of successive applications to elementary propositions of the operation ‘<span class=\"mathop\">(-----<span class=\"mathrm\">T</span>)</span>(<var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, . . . . .)’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">This operation negates all the propositions in the right-hand pair of brackets, and I call it the negation of those propositions.</div>',1),
(1409,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">When a bracketed expression has propositions as its terms—and the order of the terms inside the brackets is indifferent—then I indicate it by a sign of the form ‘(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)’. ‘<var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>’ is a variable whose values are terms of the bracketed expression and the bar over the variable indicates that it is the representative of all its values in the brackets.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(E.g. if <var>ξ</var> has the three values P, Q, R, then (<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>(P, Q, R). )</div><div class=\"pmc\">What the values of the variable are is something that is stipulated.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The stipulation is a description of the propositions that have the variable as their representative. </div><div class=\"pmc\">How the description of the terms of the bracketed expression is produced is not essential.</div><div class=\"pmc\">We <em>can</em> distinguish three kinds of description: 1. direct enumeration, in which case we can simply substitute for the variable the constants that are its values; 2. giving a function <var>fx</var> whose values for all values of <var>x</var> are the propositions to be described; 3. giving a formal law that governs the construction of the propositions, in which case the bracketed expression has as its members all the terms of a series of forms.</div>',1),
(1410,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">So instead of ‘<span class=\"mathop\">(-----<span class=\"mathrm\">T</span>)</span>(<var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, . . . . .)’, I write ‘<span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)’.</div><div class=\"pmc\"><span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>) is the negation of all the values of the propositional variable <var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>.</div>',1),
(1411,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is obvious that we can easily express how propositions may be constructed with this operation, and how they may not be constructed with it; so it must be possible to find an exact expression for this.</div>',1),
(1412,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If <var>ξ</var> has only one value, then <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var> (not <var>p</var>); if it has two values, then <span class=\"nop\">N</span> (<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>q</var> (neither <var>p</var> nor <var>q</var>).</div>',1),
(1413,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">How can logic—all-embracing logic, which mirrors the world—use such peculiar crotchets and contrivances? Only because they are all connected with one another in an infinitely fine network, the great mirror.</div>',1),
(1414,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ is true if ‘<var>p</var>’ is false. Therefore, in the proposition ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’, when it is true, ‘<var>p</var>’ is a false proposition. How then can the stroke ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>’ make it agree with reality?</div><div class=\"pmc\">But in ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ it is not ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>’ that negates, it is rather what is common to all the signs of this notation that negate <var>p</var>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">That is to say the common rule that governs the construction of ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’, ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’, ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’, ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’, etc. etc. (ad inf.). And this common factor mirrors negation.</div>',1),
(1415,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We might say that what is common to all symbols that affirm both <var>p</var> and <var>q</var> is the proposition ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>q</var>’; and that what is common to all symbols that affirm either <var>p</var> or <var>q</var> is the proposition ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And similarly we can say that two propositions are opposed to one another if they have nothing in common with one another, and that every proposition has only one negative, since there is only one proposition that lies completely outside it.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Thus in Russell’s notation too it is manifest that ‘<var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ says the same thing as ‘<var>q</var>’, that ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ says nothing.</div>',1),
(1416,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Once a notation has been established, there will be in it a rule governing the construction of all propositions that negate <var>p</var>, a rule governing the construction of all propositions that affirm <var>p</var>, and a rule governing the construction of all propositions that affirm <var>p</var> or <var>q</var>; and so on. These rules are equivalent to the symbols; and in them their sense is mirrored.</div>',1),
(1417,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It must be manifest in our symbols that it can only be propositions that are combined with one another by ‘<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>’, ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>’, etc.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And this is indeed the case, since the symbol in ‘<var>p</var>’ and ‘<var>q</var>’ itself presupposes ‘<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>’, ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>’, etc. If the sign ‘<var>p</var>’ in ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>’ does not stand for a complex sign, then it cannot have sense by itself: but in that case the signs ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>p</var>’, ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>p</var>’, etc., which have the same sense as <var>p</var>, must also lack sense. But if ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>p</var>’ has no sense, then ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>’ cannot have a sense either.</div>',1),
(1418,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Must the sign of a negative proposition be constructed with that of the positive proposition? Why should it not be possible to express a negative proposition by means of a negative fact? (E.g. suppose that ‘<var>a</var>’ does not stand in a certain relation to ‘<var>b</var>’; then this might be used to say that <var>aRb</var> was not the case.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">But really even in this case the negative proposition is constructed by an indirect use of the positive.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The positive <em>proposition</em> necessarily presupposes the existence of the negative <em>proposition</em> and <em>vice versa</em>.</div>',1),
(1419,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If <var>ξ</var> has as its values all the values of a function <var>fx</var> for all values of <var>x</var>, then <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>.</div>',1),
(1420,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">I dissociate the concept <em>all</em> from truth-functions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Frege and Russell introduced generality in association with logical product or logical sum. This made it difficult to understand the propositions ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>’ and ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>’, in which both ideas are embedded.</div>',1),
(1421,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What is peculiar to the generality-sign is first, that it indicates a logical prototype, and secondly, that it gives prominence to constants.</div>',1),
(1422,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The generality-sign occurs as an argument.</div>',1),
(1423,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If objects are given, then at the same time we are given <em>all</em> objects.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If elementary propositions are given, then at the same time <em>all</em> elementary propositions are given.</div>',1),
(1424,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is incorrect to render the proposition ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>’ in the words, ‘<var>fx</var> is <em>possible</em>’ as Russell does.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The certainty, possibility, or impossibility of a situation is not expressed by a proposition, but by an expression’s being a tautology, a proposition with a sense, or a contradiction.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The precedent to which we are constantly inclined to appeal must reside in the symbol itself.</div>',1),
(1425,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We can describe the world completely by means of fully generalized propositions, i.e. without first correlating any name with a particular object.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Then, in order to arrive at the customary mode of expression, we simply need to add, after an expression like, ‘There is one and only one <var>x</var> such that …’, the words, ‘and that <var>x</var> is <var>a</var>’.</div>',1),
(1426,'2011-10-03 12:15:41','2011-10-03 12:15:41',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A fully generalized proposition, like every other proposition, is composite. (This is shown by the fact that in ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>, <var>ϕ</var>).</span><var>ϕx</var>’ we have to mention ‘<var>ϕ</var>’ and ‘<var>x</var>’ separately. They both, independently, stand in signifying relations to the world, just as is the case in ungeneralized propositions.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">It is a mark of a composite symbol that it has something in common with <em>other</em> symbols.</div>',1),
(1427,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The truth or falsity of <em>every</em> proposition does make some alteration in the general construction of the world. And the range that the totality of elementary propositions leaves open for its construction is exactly the same as that which is delimited by entirely general propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(If an elementary proposition is true, that means, at any rate, one <em>more</em> true elementary proposition.)</div>',1),
(1428,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Identity of object I express by identity of sign, and not by using a sign for identity. Difference of objects I express by difference of signs.</div>',1),
(1429,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is self-evident that identity is not a relation between objects. This becomes very clear if one considers, for example, the proposition ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>):</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>.</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>’. What this proposition says is simply that <em>only</em> <var>a</var> satisfies the function <var>f</var>, and not that only things that have a certain relation to <var>a</var> satisfy the function <var>f</var>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Of course, it might then be said that <em>only</em> <var>a</var> did have this relation to <var>a</var>; but in order to express that, we should need the identity-sign itself.</div>',1),
(1430,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Russell’s definition of ‘=’ is inadequate, because according to it we cannot say that two objects have all their properties in common. (Even if this proposition is never correct, it still has <em>sense</em>.)</div>',1),
(1431,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Roughly speaking, to say of <em>two</em> things that they are identical is nonsense, and to say of <em>one</em> thing that it is identical with itself is to say nothing at all.</div>',1),
(1432,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Thus I do not write ‘<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>b</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>’, but ‘<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>a</var>)’ (or ‘<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>b</var>,<var>b</var>)’); and not ‘<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>b</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>’, but ‘<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>b</var>)’.</div>',1),
(1433,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">And analogously I do not write ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>y</var>’, but ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>x</var>)’; and not ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>y</var>’, but ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(So Russell’s ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)’ becomes ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>.</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>x</var>)’.)</div>',1),
(1434,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Thus, for example, instead of ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>):</span><var>fx</var> <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>’ we write ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>.</span><var>fa</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>fy</var>’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And the proposition, ‘<em>Only one</em> <var>x</var> satisfies <var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>( )’, will read ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>.</span><var>fa</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>fy</var>’.</div>',1),
(1435,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The identity-sign, therefore, is not an essential constituent of conceptual notation.</div>',1),
(1436,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">And now we see that in a correct conceptual notation pseudo-propositions like ‘<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>’, ‘<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>b</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>c</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>c</var>’, ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>x</var>’, ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>’, etc. cannot even be written down.</div>',1),
(1437,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">This also disposes of all the problems that were connected with such pseudo-propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">All the problems that Russell’s ‘axiom of infinity’ brings with it can be solved at this point.</div><div class=\"pmc\">What the axiom of infinity is intended to say would express itself in language through the existence of infinitely many names with different meanings.</div>',1),
(1438,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There are certain cases in which one is tempted to use expressions of the form ‘<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>’ or ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>p</var>’ and the like. In fact, this happens when one wants to talk about prototypes, e.g. about proposition, thing, etc. Thus in Russell’s <i>Principles of Mathematics</i> ‘<var>p</var> is a proposition’—which is nonsense—was given the symbolic rendering ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>p</var>’ and placed as an hypothesis in front of certain propositions in order to exclude from their argument-places everything but propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(It is nonsense to place the hypothesis ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>p</var>’ in front of a proposition, in order to ensure that its arguments shall have the right form, if only because with a non-proposition as argument the hypothesis becomes not false but nonsensical, and because arguments of the wrong kind make the proposition itself nonsensical, so that it preserves itself from wrong arguments just as well, or as badly, as the hypothesis without sense that was appended for that purpose.)</div>',1),
(1439,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In the same way people have wanted to express, ‘There are no <em>things</em>’, by writing ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>x</var>’. But even if this were a proposition, would it not be equally true if in fact ‘there were things’ but they were not identical with themselves?</div>',1),
(1440,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In the general propositional form propositions occur in other propositions only as bases of truth-operations.</div>',1),
(1441,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">At first sight it looks as if it were also possible for one proposition to occur in another in a different way.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Particularly with certain forms of proposition in psychology, such as ‘A believes that <var>p</var> is the case’ and A has the thought <var>p</var>’, etc.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For if these are considered superficially, it looks as if the proposition <var>p</var> stood in some kind of relation to an object A.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(And in modern theory of knowledge (Russell, Moore, etc.) these propositions have actually been construed in this way.)</div>',1),
(1442,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is clear, however, that ‘A believes that <var>p</var>’, ‘A has the thought <var>p</var>’, and ‘A says <var>p</var>’ are of the form ‘“<var>p</var>” says <var>p</var>’: and this does not involve a correlation of a fact with an object, but rather the correlation of facts by means of the correlation of their objects.</div>',1),
(1443,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">This shows too that there is no such thing as the soul—the subject, etc.—as it is conceived in the superficial psychology of the present day.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Indeed a composite soul would no longer be a soul.</div>',1),
(1444,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The correct explanation of the form of the proposition, ‘A makes the judgement <var>p</var>’, must show that it is impossible for a judgement to be a piece of nonsense. (Russell’s theory does not satisfy this requirement.)</div>',1),
(1445,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">To perceive a complex means to perceive that its constituents are related to one another in such and such a way.</div><div class=\"pmc\">This no doubt also explains why there are two possible ways of seeing the figure <div class=\"centered\"><img src=\"http://hacks.michelepasin.org/media/hacks/custom/tractatusapp/img/thecube.svg\" alt=\"Cube with a face and b face\" class=\"thecubepng\" /></div> as a cube; and all similar phenomena. For we really see two different facts.(If I look in the first place at the corners marked <em>a</em> and only glance at <em>b</em>'s, then the <em>a</em>'s appear to be in front, and <em>vice versa</em>).</div>',1),
(1446,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We now have to answer <i>a priori</i> the question about all the possible forms of elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Elementary propositions consist of names. Since, however, we are unable to give the number of names with different meanings, we are also unable to give the composition of elementary propositions.</div>',1),
(1447,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Our fundamental principle is that whenever a question can be decided by logic at all it must be possible to decide it without more ado.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(And if we get into a position where we have to look at the world for an answer to such a problem, that shows that we are on a completely wrong track.)</div>',1),
(1448,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The ‘experience’ that we need in order to understand logic is not that something or other is the state of things, but that something <em>is</em>: that, however, is <em>not</em> an experience.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Logic is <em>prior</em> to every experience—that something <em>is so</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It is prior to the question ‘How?’, not prior to the question ‘What?’</div>',1),
(1449,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">And if this were not so, how could we apply logic? We might put it in this way: if there would be a logic even if there were no world, how then could there be a logic given that there is a world?</div>',1),
(1450,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Russell said that there were simple relations between different numbers of things (individuals). But between what numbers? And how is this supposed to be decided?—By experience?</div><div class=\"pmc\">(There is no privileged number.)</div>',1),
(1451,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It would be completely arbitrary to give any specific form.</div>',1),
(1452,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is supposed to be possible to answer <em>a priori</em> the question whether I can get into a position in which I need the sign for a 27-termed relation in order to signify something.</div>',1),
(1453,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">But is it really legitimate even to ask such a question? Can we set up a form of sign without knowing whether anything can correspond to it?</div><div class=\"pmc\">Does it make sense to ask what there must <em>be</em> in order that something can be the case?</div>',1),
(1454,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Clearly we have some concept of elementary propositions quite apart from their particular logical forms. </div><div class=\"pmc\">But when there is a system by which we can create symbols, the system is what is important for logic and not the individual symbols.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And anyway, is it really possible that in logic I should have to deal with forms that I can invent? What I have to deal with must be that which makes it possible for me to invent them.</div>',1),
(1455,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There cannot be a hierarchy of the forms of elementary propositions. We can foresee only what we ourselves construct.</div>',1),
(1456,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Empirical reality is limited by the totality of objects. The limit also makes itself manifest in the totality of elementary propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Hierarchies are and must be independent of reality.</div>',1),
(1457,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If we know on purely logical grounds that there must be elementary propositions, then everyone who understands propositions in their unanalyzed form must know it.</div>',1),
(1458,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In fact, all the propositions of our everyday language, just as they stand, are in perfect logical order.—That utterly simple thing, which we have to formulate here, is not an image of the truth, but the truth itself in its entirety.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Our problems are not abstract, but perhaps the most concrete that there are.)</div>',1),
(1459,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The <em>application</em> of logic decides what elementary propositions there are.</div><div class=\"pmc\">What belongs to its application, logic cannot anticipate.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It is clear that logic must not clash with its application.</div><div class=\"pmc\">But logic has to be in contact with its application.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Therefore logic and its application must not overlap.</div>',1),
(1460,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If I cannot say <em>a priori</em> what elementary propositions there are, then the attempt to do so must lead to obvious nonsense.</div>',1),
(1461,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\"><em>The limits of my language</em> mean the limits of my world.</div>',1),
(1462,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Logic pervades the world: the limits of the world are also its limits.</div><div class=\"pmc\">So we cannot say in logic, ‘The world has this in it, and this, but not that.’</div><div class=\"pmc\">For that would appear to presuppose that we were excluding certain possibilities, and this cannot be the case, since it would require that logic should go beyond the limits of the world; for only in that way could it view those limits from the other side as well.</div><div class=\"pmc\">We cannot think what we cannot think; so what we cannot think we cannot <em>say</em> either.</div>',1),
(1463,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">This remark provides the key to the problem, how much truth there is in solipsism.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For what the solipsist <em>means</em> is quite correct; only it cannot be <em>said</em>, but makes itself manifest.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The world is <em>my</em> world: this is manifest in the fact that the limits of <em>language</em> (of that language which alone I understand) mean the limits of <em>my</em> world.</div>',1),
(1464,'2011-10-03 12:15:42','2011-10-03 12:15:42',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The world and life are one.</div>',1),
(1465,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">I am my world. (The microcosm.)</div>',1),
(1466,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There is no such thing as the subject that thinks or entertains ideas.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If I wrote a book called <em>The World as I found it</em>, I should have to include a report on my body, and should have to say which parts were subordinate to my will, and which were not, etc., this being a method of isolating the subject, or rather of showing that in an important sense there is no subject; for it alone could <em>not</em> be mentioned in that book.—</div>',1),
(1467,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The subject does not belong to the world: rather, it is a limit of the world.</div>',1),
(1468,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Where <em>in</em> the world is a metaphysical subject to be found?</div><div class=\"pmc\">You will say that this is exactly like the case of the eye and the visual field. But really you do <em>not</em> see the eye.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And nothing <em>in the visual field</em> allows you to infer that it is seen by an eye.</div>',1),
(1469,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">For the form of the visual field is surely not like this <div class=\"centered\"><span class=\"sfmiddle\"><span class=\"lowered\">Eye —</span><img src=\"http://hacks.michelepasin.org/media/hacks/custom/tractatusapp/img/theeye.svg\" alt=\"Eye image\" class=\"theeyepng\" /></div></div>',1),
(1470,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">This is connected with the fact that no part of our experience is at the same time <i>a priori</i>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Whatever we see could be other than it is.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Whatever we can describe at all could be other than it is.</div><div class=\"pmc\">There is no <i>a priori</i> order of things.</div>',1),
(1471,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Here it can be seen that solipsism, when its implications are followed out strictly, coincides with pure realism. The self of solipsism shrinks to a point without extension, and there remains the reality co-ordinated with it.</div>',1),
(1472,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Thus there really is a sense in which philosophy can talk about the self in a non-psychological way.</div><div class=\"pmc\">What brings the self into philosophy is the fact that ‘the world is my world’.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The philosophical self is not the human being, not the human body, or the human soul, with which psychology deals, but rather the metaphysical subject, the limit of the world—not a part of it.</div>',1),
(1473,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The general form of a truth-function is [<span class=\"overlined\"><var>p</var></span>, <span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>, <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)].</div><div class=\"pmc\">This is the general form of a proposition.</div>',1),
(1474,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What this says is just that every proposition is a result of successive applications to elementary propositions of the operation <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>).</div>',1),
(1475,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If we are given the general form according to which propositions are constructed, then with it we are also given the general form according to which one proposition can be generated out of another by means of an operation.</div>',1),
(1476,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Therefore the general form of an operation <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var>η</var></span>) is <span class=\"mathop\">[<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>, <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)]’</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var>η</var></span>) (<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>[<span class=\"overlined\"><var>η</var></span>, <span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>, <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)]).</div><div class=\"pmc\">This is the most general form of transition from one proposition to another.</div>',1),
(1477,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">And <em>this</em> is how we arrive at numbers. I give the following definitions</div><div class=\"pmc\"><div class=\"centered\"><table class=\"alignedmath\"><tbody><tr><td class=\"righttight\"><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span></td><td class=\"lefttight\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0</sup>’</span><var>x</var> Def.,</td></tr><tr><td class=\"righttight\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span></td><td class=\"lefttight\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var>+1</sup>’</span><var>x</var> Def.</td></tr></tbody></table></div></div><div class=\"pmc\">So, in accordance with these rules, which deal with signs, we write the series</div><div class=\"pmc\"><div class=\"displaymath\"><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var>,<span class=\"mathrel\">…</span></div></div><div class=\"pmc\">in the following way</div><div class=\"pmc\"><div class=\"displaymath\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0+1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0+1+1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>,<span class=\"mathrel\">…</span></div></div><div class=\"pmc\">Therefore, instead of ‘[<var>x</var>, <var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>]’,</div><div class=\"pmc\"><div class=\"displaymath\">I write ‘[<span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var><span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>]’.</div></div><div class=\"pmc\">And I give the following definitions</div><div class=\"pmc\"><div class=\"centered\"><table class=\"alignedmath\"><tbody><tr><td class=\"righttight\">0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span></td><td class=\"lefttight\">1 Def.,</td></tr><tr><td class=\"righttight\">0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span></td><td class=\"lefttight\">2 Def.,</td></tr><tr><td class=\"righttight\">0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span></td><td class=\"lefttight\">3 Def.,</td></tr><tr><td class=\"centertight\" colspan=\"2\">(and so on).</td></tr></tbody></table></div></div>',1),
(1478,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A number is the exponent of an operation.</div>',1),
(1479,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The concept of number is simply what is common to all numbers, the general form of a number.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The concept of number is the variable number.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And the concept of numerical equality is the general form of all particular cases of numerical equality.</div>',1),
(1480,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The general form of an integer is [0, <var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, <var>ξ</var><span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1].</div>',1),
(1481,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The theory of classes is completely superfluous in mathematics.</div><div class=\"pmc\">This is connected with the fact that the generality required in mathematics is not <em>accidental</em> generality.</div>',1),
(1482,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The propositions of logic are tautologies.</div>',1),
(1483,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Therefore the propositions of logic say nothing. (They are the analytic propositions.)</div>',1),
(1484,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">All theories that make a proposition of logic appear to have content are false. One might think, for example, that the words ‘true’ and ‘false’ signified two properties among other properties, and then it would seem to be a remarkable fact that every proposition possessed one of these properties. On this theory it seems to be anything but obvious, just as, for instance, the proposition, ‘All roses are either yellow or red’, would not sound obvious even if it were true. Indeed, the logical proposition acquires all the characteristics of a proposition of natural science and this is the sure sign that it has been construed wrongly.</div>',1),
(1485,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The correct explanation of the propositions of logic must assign to them a unique status among all propositions.</div>',1),
(1486,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is the peculiar mark of logical propositions that one can recognize that they are true from the symbol alone, and this fact contains in itself the whole philosophy of logic. And so too it is a very important fact that the truth or falsity of non-logical propositions <em>cannot</em> be recognized from the propositions alone.</div>',1),
(1487,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The fact that the propositions of logic are tautologies <em>shows</em> the formal—logical—properties of language and the world.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The fact that a tautology is yielded by <em>this particular way</em> of connecting its constituents characterizes the logic of its constituents.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If propositions are to yield a tautology when they are connected in a certain way, they must have certain structural properties. So their yielding a tautology when combined <em>in this way</em> shows that they possess these structural properties.</div>',1),
(1488,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">For example, the fact that the propositions ‘<var>p</var>’ and ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>’ in the combination ‘<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>)’ yield a tautology shows that they contradict one another. The fact that the propositions ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var>’, ‘<var>p</var>’, and ‘<var>q</var>’, combined with one another in the form ‘(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span>(<var>p</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">:<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>:</span>(<var>q</var>)’, yield a tautology shows that <var>q</var> follows from <var>p</var> and <var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var>. The fact that ‘<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>:</span><var>fa</var>’ is a tautology shows that <var>fa</var> follows from <span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>. Etc. etc.</div>',1),
(1489,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is clear that one could achieve the same purpose by using contradictions instead of tautologies.</div>',1),
(1490,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In order to recognize an expression as a tautology, in cases where no generality-sign occurs in it, one can employ the following intuitive method: instead of ‘<var>p</var>’, ‘<var>q</var>’, ‘<var>r</var>’, etc. I write ‘<span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><var class=\"doublepushvar\">p</var><span class=\"mathrm\">F</span>’, ‘<span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><var class=\"doublepushvar\">q</var><span class=\"mathrm\">F</span>’, ‘<span class=\"mathrm\">T</span><var class=\"doublepushvar\">r</var><span class=\"mathrm\">F</span>’, etc. Truth-combinations I express by means of brackets, e.g.</div>',1),
(1491,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The propositions of logic demonstrate the logical properties of propositions by combining them so as to form propositions that say nothing.</div><div class=\"pmc\">This method could also be called a zero-method. In a logical proposition, propositions are brought into equilibrium with one another, and the state of equilibrium then indicates what the logical constitution of these propositions must be.</div>',1),
(1492,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It follows from this that we can actually do without logical propositions; for in a suitable notation we can in fact recognize the formal properties of propositions by mere inspection of the propositions themselves.</div>',1),
(1493,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If, for example, two propositions ‘<var>p</var>’ and ‘<var>q</var>’ in the combination ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var>’ yield a tautology, then it is clear that <var>q</var> follows from <var>p</var>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For example, we see from the two propositions themselves that ‘<var>q</var>’ follows from ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>p</var>’, but it is also possible to show it in <em>this</em> way: we combine them to form ‘<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>:</span><var>q</var>’, and then show that this is a tautology.</div>',1),
(1494,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">This throws some light on the question why logical propositions cannot be confirmed by experience any more than they can be refuted by it. Not only must a proposition of logic be irrefutable by any possible experience, but it must also be unconfirmable by any possible experience.</div>',1),
(1495,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Now it becomes clear why people have often felt as if it were for us to ‘<em>postulate</em>’ the ‘truths of logic’. The reason is that we can postulate them in so far as we can postulate an adequate notation.</div>',1),
(1496,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It also becomes clear now why logic was called the theory of forms and of inference.</div>',1),
(1497,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Clearly the laws of logic cannot in their turn be subject to laws of logic.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(There is not, as Russell thought, a special law of contradiction for each ‘type’; one law is enough, since it is not applied to itself.)</div>',1),
(1498,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The mark of a logical proposition is <em>not</em> general validity.</div><div class=\"pmc\">To be general means no more than to be accidentally valid for all things. An ungeneralized proposition can be tautological just as well as a generalized one.</div>',1),
(1499,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The general validity of logic might be called essential, in contrast with the accidental general validity of such propositions as ‘All men are mortal’. Propositions like Russell’s ‘axiom of reducibility’ are not logical propositions, and this explains our feeling that, even if they were true, their truth could only be the result of a fortunate accident.</div>',1),
(1500,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is possible to imagine a world in which the axiom of reducibility is not valid. It is clear, however, that logic has nothing to do with the question whether our world really is like that or not.</div>',1),
(1501,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The propositions of logic describe the scaffolding of the world, or rather they represent it. They have no ‘subject-matter’. They presuppose that names have meaning and elementary propositions sense; and that is their connexion with the world. It is clear that something about the world must be indicated by the fact that certain combinations of symbols—whose essence involves the possession of a determinate character—are tautologies. This contains the decisive point. We have said that some things are arbitrary in the symbols that we use and that some things are not. In logic it is only the latter that express: but that means that logic is not a field in which <em>we</em> express what we wish with the help of signs, but rather one in which the nature of the natural and inevitable signs speaks for itself. If we know the logical syntax of any sign-language, then we have already been given all the propositions of logic.</div>',1),
(1502,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is possible—indeed possible even according to the old conception of logic—to give in advance a description of all ‘true’ logical propositions.</div>',1),
(1503,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Hence there can <em>never</em> be surprises in logic.</div>',1),
(1504,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">One can calculate whether a proposition belongs to logic, by calculating the logical properties of the <em>symbol</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And this is what we do when we ‘prove’ a logical proposition. For, without bothering about sense or meaning, we construct the logical proposition out of others using only <em>rules that deal with signs</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The proof of logical propositions consists in the following process: we produce them out of other logical propositions by successively applying certain operations that always generate further tautologies out of the initial ones. (And in fact only tautologies <em>follow</em> from a tautology.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">Of course this way of showing that the propositions of logic are tautologies is not at all essential to logic, if only because the propositions from which the proof starts must show without any proof that they are tautologies.</div>',1),
(1505,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">In logic process and result are equivalent. (Hence the absence of surprise.)</div>',1),
(1506,'2011-10-03 12:15:43','2011-10-03 12:15:43',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Proof in logic is merely a mechanical expedient to facilitate the recognition of tautologies in complicated cases.</div>',1),
(1507,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Indeed, it would be altogether too remarkable if a proposition that had sense could be proved <em>logically</em> from others, and <em>so too</em> could a logical proposition. It is clear from the start that a logical proof of a proposition that has sense and a proof <em>in</em> logic must be two entirely different things.</div>',1),
(1508,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition that has sense states something, which is shown by its proof to be so. In logic every proposition is the form of a proof.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Every proposition of logic is a <em>modus ponens</em> represented in signs. (And one cannot express the <em>modus ponens</em> by means of a proposition.)</div>',1),
(1509,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is always possible to construe logic in such a way that every proposition is its own proof.</div>',1),
(1510,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">All the propositions of logic are of equal status: it is not the case that some of them are essentially derived propositions.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Every tautology itself shows that it is a tautology.</div>',1),
(1511,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is clear that the number of the ‘primitive propositions of logic’ is arbitrary, since one could derive logic from a single primitive proposition, e.g. by simply constructing the logical product of Frege’s primitive propositions. (Frege would perhaps say that we should then no longer have an immediately self-evident primitive proposition. But it is remarkable that a thinker as rigorous as Frege appealed to the degree of self-evidence as the criterion of a logical proposition.)</div>',1),
(1512,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Logic is not a body of doctrine, but a mirror-image of the world.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Logic is transcendental.</div>',1),
(1513,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Mathematics is a logical method.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The propositions of mathematics are equations, and therefore pseudo-propositions.</div>',1),
(1514,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">A proposition of mathematics does not express a thought.</div>',1),
(1515,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Indeed in real life a mathematical proposition is never what we want. Rather, we make use of mathematical propositions <em>only</em> in inferences from propositions that do not belong to mathematics to others that likewise do not belong to mathematics.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(In philosophy the question, ‘What do we actually use this word or this proposition for?’ repeatedly leads to valuable insights.)</div>',1),
(1516,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The logic of the world, which is shown in tautologies by the propositions of logic, is shown in equations by mathematics.</div>',1),
(1517,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If two expressions are combined by means of the sign of equality, that means that they can be substituted for one another. But it must be manifest in the two expressions themselves whether this is the case or not.</div><div class=\"pmc\">When two expressions can be substituted for one another, that characterizes their logical form.</div>',1),
(1518,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is a property of affirmation that it can be construed as double negation.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It is a property of ‘1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1’ that it can be construed as ‘(1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1)<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>(1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1)’.</div>',1),
(1519,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Frege says that the two expressions have the same meaning but different senses.</div><div class=\"pmc\">But the essential point about an equation is that it is not necessary in order to show that the two expressions connected by the sign of equality have the same meaning, since this can be seen from the two expressions themselves.</div>',1),
(1520,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">And the possibility of proving the propositions of mathematics means simply that their correctness can be perceived without its being necessary that what they express should itself be compared with the facts in order to determine its correctness.</div>',1),
(1521,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is impossible to <em>assert</em> the identity of meaning of two expressions. For in order to be able to assert anything about their meaning, I must know their meaning, and I cannot know their meaning without knowing whether what they mean is the same or different.</div>',1),
(1522,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">An equation merely marks the point of view from which I consider the two expressions: it marks their equivalence in meaning.</div>',1),
(1523,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The question whether intuition is needed for the solution of mathematical problems must be given the answer that in this case language itself provides the necessary intuition.</div>',1),
(1524,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The process of <em>calculating</em> serves to bring about that intuition.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Calculation is not an experiment.</div>',1),
(1525,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Mathematics is a method of logic.</div>',1),
(1526,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is the essential characteristic of mathematical method that it employs equations. For it is because of this method that every proposition of mathematics must go without saying.</div>',1),
(1527,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The method by which mathematics arrives at its equations is the method of substitution.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For equations express the substitutability of two expressions and, starting from a number of equations, we advance to new equations by substituting different expressions in accordance with the equations.</div>',1),
(1528,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Thus the proof of the proposition 2<span class=\"mathrel\">×</span>2<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>4 runs as follows:</div><div class=\"pmc\"><div class=\"centered\">\n<span class=\"mathop\">(Ω<sup><var>ν</var></sup>)<sup><var>μ</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var><span class=\"mathrel\">×</span><var>μ</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var> Def.<br />\n<span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>2<span class=\"mathrel\">×</span>2</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω<sup>2</sup>)<sup>2</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω<sup>2</sup>)<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>2</sup>’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>2</sup>’</span><var>x</var><br />\n = <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω’Ω)’</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω’Ω)’</span><var>x</var><br />\n= <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>4</sup>’</span><var>x</var>.<br />\n</div></div>',1),
(1529,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The exploration of logic means the exploration of <em>everything that is subject to law</em>. And outside logic everything is accidental.</div>',1),
(1530,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The so-called law of induction cannot possibly be a law of logic, since it is obviously a proposition with sense.—Nor, therefore, can it be an <em>a priori</em> law.</div>',1),
(1531,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The law of causality is not a law but the form of a law.</div>',1),
(1532,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">‘Law of causality’—that is a general name. And just as in mechanics, for example, there are ‘minimum-principles’, such as the law of least action, so too in physics there are causal laws, laws of the causal form.</div>',1),
(1533,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Indeed people even surmised that there must be a ‘law of least action’ before they knew exactly how it went. (Here, as always, what is certain <em>a priori</em> proves to be something purely logical.)</div>',1),
(1534,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We do not have an <em>a priori belief</em> in a law of conservation, but rather <em>a priori knowledge</em> of the possibility of a logical form.</div>',1),
(1535,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">All such propositions, including the principle of sufficient reason, the laws of continuity in nature and of least effort in nature, etc. etc.—all these are <em>a priori</em> insights about the forms in which the propositions of science can be cast.</div>',1),
(1536,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Newtonian mechanics, for example, imposes a unified form on the description of the world. Let us imagine a white surface with irregular black spots on it. We then say that whatever kind of picture these make, I can always approximate as closely as I wish to the description of it by covering the surface with a sufficiently fine square mesh, and then saying of every square whether it is black or white. In this way I shall have imposed a unified form on the description of the surface. The form is optional, since I could have achieved the same result by using a net with a triangular or hexagonal mesh. Possibly the use of a triangular mesh would have made the description simpler: that is to say, it might be that we could describe the surface more accurately with a coarse triangular mesh than with a fine square mesh (or conversely), and so on. The different nets correspond to different systems for describing the world. Mechanics determines one form of description of the world by saying that all propositions used in the description of the world must be obtained in a given way from a given set of propositions—the axioms of mechanics. It thus supplies the bricks for building the edifice of science, and it says, ‘Any building that you want to erect, whatever it may be, must somehow be constructed with these bricks, and with these alone.’</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Just as with the number-system we must be able to write down any number we wish, so with the system of mechanics we must be able to write down any proposition of physics that we wish.)</div>',1),
(1537,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">And now we can see the relative position of logic and mechanics. (The net might also consist of more than one kind of mesh: e.g. we could use both triangles and hexagons.) The possibility of describing a picture like the one mentioned above with a net of a given form tells us <em>nothing</em> about the picture. (For that is true of all such pictures.) But what <em>does</em> characterize the picture is that it can be described <em>completely</em> by a particular net with a <em>particular</em> size of mesh.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Similarly the possibility of describing the world by means of Newtonian mechanics tells us nothing about the world: but what does tell us something about it is the precise <em>way</em> in which it is possible to describe it by these means. We are also told something about the world by the fact that it can be described more simply with one system of mechanics than with another.</div>',1),
(1538,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Mechanics is an attempt to construct according to a single plan all the <em>true</em> propositions that we need for the description of the world.</div>',1),
(1539,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The laws of physics, with all their logical apparatus, still speak, however indirectly, about the objects of the world.</div>',1),
(1540,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We ought not to forget that any description of the world by means of mechanics will be of the completely general kind. For example, it will never mention <em>particular</em> point-masses: it will only talk about <em>any point-masses whatsoever</em>.</div>',1),
(1541,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Although the spots in our picture are geometrical figures, nevertheless geometry can obviously say nothing at all about their actual form and position. The network, however, is <em>purely</em> geometrical; all its properties can be given <em>a priori</em>.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Laws like the principle of sufficient reason, etc. are about the net and not about what the net describes.</div>',1),
(1542,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If there were a law of causality, it might be put in the following way: There are laws of nature.</div><div class=\"pmc\">But of course that cannot be said: it makes itself manifest.</div>',1),
(1543,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">One might say, using Hertz’s terminology, that only connexions that are <em>subject to law</em> are <em>thinkable</em>.</div>',1),
(1544,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We cannot compare a process with ‘the passage of time’—there is no such thing—but only with another process (such as the working of a chronometer).</div><div class=\"pmc\">Hence we can describe the lapse of time only by relying on some other process.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Something exactly analogous applies to space: e.g. when people say that neither of two events (which exclude one another) can occur, because there is <em>nothing to cause</em> the one to occur rather than the other, it is really a matter of our being unable to describe <em>one</em> of the two events unless there is some sort of asymmetry to be found. And <em>if</em> such an asymmetry <em>is</em> to be found, we can regard it as the <em>cause</em> of the occurrence of the one and the non-occurrence of the other.</div>',1),
(1545,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Kant’s problem about the right hand and the left hand, which cannot be made to coincide, exists even in two dimensions. Indeed, it exists in one-dimensional space</div>',1),
(1546,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What can be described can happen too: and what the law of causality is meant to exclude cannot even be described.</div>',1),
(1547,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The procedure of induction consists in accepting as true the <em>simplest</em> law that can be reconciled with our experiences.</div>',1),
(1548,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">This procedure, however, has no logical justification but only a psychological one.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It is clear that there are no grounds for believing that the simplest eventuality will in fact be realized.</div>',1),
(1549,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is an hypothesis that the sun will rise tomorrow: and this means that we do not <em>know</em> whether it will rise.</div>',1),
(1550,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There is no compulsion making one thing happen because another has happened. The only necessity that exists is <em>logical</em> necessity</div>',1),
(1551,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The whole modern conception of the world is founded on the illusion that the so-called laws of nature are the explanations of natural phenomena.</div>',1),
(1552,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Thus people today stop at the laws of nature, treating them as something inviolable, just as God and Fate were treated in past ages.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And in fact both are right and both wrong: though the view of the ancients is clearer in so far as they have a clear and acknowledged terminus, while the modern system tries to make it look as if <em>everything</em> were explained.</div>',1),
(1553,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The world is independent of my will.</div>',1),
(1554,'2011-10-03 12:15:44','2011-10-03 12:15:44',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Even if all that we wish for were to happen, still this would only be a favour granted by fate, so to speak: for there is no <em>logical</em> connexion between the will and the world, which would guarantee it, and the supposed physical connexion itself is surely not something that we could will.</div>',1),
(1555,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Just as the only necessity that exists is <em>logical</em> necessity, so too the only impossibility that exists is <em>logical</em> impossibility.</div>',1),
(1556,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">For example, the simultaneous presence of two colours at the same place in the visual field is impossible, in fact logically impossible, since it is ruled out by the logical structure of colour.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Let us think how this contradiction appears in physics: more or less as follows—a particle cannot have two velocities at the same time; that is to say, it cannot be in two places at the same time; that is to say, particles that are in different places at the same time cannot be identical.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(It is clear that the logical product of two elementary propositions can neither be a tautology nor a contradiction. The statement that a point in the visual field has two different colours at the same time is a contradiction.)</div>',1),
(1557,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">All propositions are of equal value.</div>',1),
(1558,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The sense of the world must lie outside the world. In the world everything is as it is, and everything happens as it does happen: <em>in</em> it no value exists—and if it did exist, it would have no value.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If there is any value that does have value, it must lie outside the whole sphere of what happens and is the case. For all that happens and is the case is accidental.</div><div class=\"pmc\">What makes it non-accidental cannot lie <em>within</em> the world, since if it did it would itself be accidental.</div><div class=\"pmc\">It must lie outside the world.</div>',1),
(1559,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">So too it is impossible for there to be propositions of ethics.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Propositions can express nothing that is higher.</div>',1),
(1560,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is clear that ethics cannot be put into words.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Ethics is transcendental.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Ethics and aesthetics are one and the same.)</div>',1),
(1561,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">When an ethical law of the form, ‘Thou shalt …’ is laid down, one’s first thought is, ‘And what if I do not do it?’ It is clear, however, that ethics has nothing to do with punishment and reward in the usual sense of the terms. So our question about the <em>consequences</em> of an action must be unimportant.—At least those consequences should not be events. For there must be something right about the question we posed. There must indeed be some kind of ethical reward and ethical punishment, but they must reside in the action itself.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(And it is also clear that the reward must be something pleasant and the punishment something unpleasant.)</div>',1),
(1562,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is impossible to speak about the will in so far as it is the subject of ethical attributes.</div><div class=\"pmc\">And the will as a phenomenon is of interest only to psychology.</div>',1),
(1563,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">If the good or bad exercise of the will does alter the world, it can alter only the limits of the world, not the facts—not what can be expressed by means of language.</div><div class=\"pmc\">In short the effect must be that it becomes an altogether different world. It must, so to speak, wax and wane as a whole.</div><div class=\"pmc\">The world of the happy man is a different one from that of the unhappy man.</div>',1),
(1564,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">So too at death the world does not alter, but comes to an end.</div>',1),
(1565,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Death is not an event in life: we do not live to experience death.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If we take eternity to mean not infinite temporal duration but timelessness, then eternal life belongs to those who live in the present.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Our life has no end in just the way in which our visual field has no limits.</div>',1),
(1566,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Not only is there no guarantee of the temporal immortality of the human soul, that is to say of its eternal survival after death; but, in any case, this assumption completely fails to accomplish the purpose for which it has always been intended. Or is some riddle solved by my surviving for ever? Is not this eternal life itself as much of a riddle as our present life? The solution of the riddle of life in space and time lies <em>outside</em> space and time.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(It is certainly not the solution of any problems of natural science that is required.)</div>',1),
(1567,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\"><em>How</em> things are in the world is a matter of complete indifference for what is higher. God does not reveal himself <em>in</em> the world.</div>',1),
(1568,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The facts all contribute only to setting the problem, not to its solution.</div>',1),
(1569,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">It is not <em>how</em> things are in the world that is mystical, but <em>that</em> it exists.</div>',1),
(1570,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">To view the world sub specie aeterni is to view it as a whole—a limited whole.</div><div class=\"pmc\">Feeling the world as a limited whole—it is this that is mystical.</div>',1),
(1571,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">When the answer cannot be put into words, neither can the question be put into words.</div><div class=\"pmc\"><em>The riddle</em> does not exist.</div><div class=\"pmc\">If a question can be framed at all, it is also <em>possible</em> to answer it.</div>',1),
(1572,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">Scepticism is <em>not</em> irrefutable, but obviously nonsensical, when it tries to raise doubts where no questions can be asked.</div><div class=\"pmc\">For doubt can exist only where a question exists, a question only where an answer exists, and an answer only where something <em>can be said</em>.</div>',1),
(1573,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">We feel that even when <em>all possible</em> scientific questions have been answered, the problems of life remain completely untouched. Of course there are then no questions left, and this itself is the answer.</div>',1),
(1574,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The solution of the problem of life is seen in the vanishing of the problem.</div><div class=\"pmc\">(Is not this the reason why those who have found after a long period of doubt that the sense of life became clear to them have then been unable to say what constituted that sense?)</div>',1),
(1575,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">There are, indeed, things that cannot be put into words. They <em>make themselves manifest</em>. They are what is mystical.</div>',1),
(1576,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">The correct method in philosophy would really be the following: to say nothing except what can be said, i.e. propositions of natural science—i.e. something that has nothing to do with philosophy—and then, whenever someone else wanted to say something metaphysical, to demonstrate to him that he had failed to give a meaning to certain signs in his propositions. Although it would not be satisfying to the other person—he would not have the feeling that we were teaching him philosophy—<em>this</em> method would be the only strictly correct one.</div>',1),
(1577,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">My propositions serve as elucidations in the following way: anyone who understands me eventually recognizes them as nonsensical, when he has used them—as steps—to climb up beyond them. (He must, so to speak, throw away the ladder after he has climbed up it.)</div><div class=\"pmc\">He must transcend these propositions, and then he will see the world aright.</div>',1),
(1578,'2011-10-03 12:15:45','2011-10-03 12:15:45',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"pmc\">What we cannot speak about we must pass over in silence.</div>',1),
(1579,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Welt ist alles, was der Fall ist.</div>',2),
(1580,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Welt ist die Gesamtheit der Tatsachen, nicht der Dinge.</div>',2),
(1581,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Welt ist durch die Tatsachen bestimmt und dadurch, dass es <em class=\"germph\">alle</em> Tatsachen sind.</div>',2),
(1582,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Denn, die Gesamtheit der Tatsachen bestimmt, was der Fall ist und auch, was alles nicht der Fall ist.</div>',2),
(1583,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Tatsachen im logischen Raum sind die Welt.</div>',2),
(1584,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Welt zerfällt in Tatsachen.</div>',2),
(1585,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Eines kann der Fall sein oder nicht der Fall sein und alles übrige gleich bleiben.</div>',2),
(1586,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Was der Fall ist, die Tatsache, ist das Bestehen von Sachverhalten.</div>',2),
(1587,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Sachverhalt ist eine Verbindung von Gegenständen. (Sachen, Dingen.)</div>',2),
(1588,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist dem Ding wesentlich, der Bestandteil eines Sachverhaltes sein zu können.</div>',2),
(1589,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">In der Logik ist nichts zufällig: Wenn das Ding im Sachverhalt vorkommen <em class=\"germph\">kann</em>, so muss die Möglichkeit des Sachverhaltes im Ding bereits präjudiziert sein.</div>',2),
(1590,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es erschiene gleichsam als Zufall, wenn dem Ding, das allein für sich bestehen könnte, nachträglich eine Sachlage passen würde.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wenn die Dinge in Sachverhalten vorkommen können, so muss dies schon in ihnen liegen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Etwas Logisches kann nicht nur-möglich sein. Die Logik handelt von jeder Möglichkeit und alle Möglichkeiten sind ihre Tatsachen.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Wie wir uns räumliche Gegenstände überhaupt nicht außerhalb des Raumes, zeitliche nicht außerhalb der Zeit denken können, so können wir uns <em class=\"germph\">keinen</em> Gegenstand außerhalb der Möglichkeit seiner Verbindung mit anderen denken.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wenn ich mir den Gegenstand im Verbande des Sachverhalts denken kann, so kann ich ihn nicht außerhalb der <em class=\"germph\">Möglichkeit</em> dieses Verbandes denken.</div>',2),
(1591,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Ding ist selbständig, insofern es in allen <em class=\"germph\">möglichen</em> Sachlagen vorkommen kann, aber diese Form der Selbständigkeit ist eine Form des Zusammenhangs mit dem Sachverhalt, eine Form der Unselbständigkeit. (Es ist unmöglich, dass Worte in zwei verschiedenen Weisen auftreten, allein und im Satz.)</div>',2),
(1592,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wenn ich den Gegenstand kenne, so kenne ich auch sämtliche Möglichkeiten seines Vorkommens in Sachverhalten.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Jede solche Möglichkeit muss in der Natur des Gegenstandes liegen.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Es kann nicht nachträglich eine neue Möglichkeit gefunden werden.</div>',2),
(1593,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Um einen Gegenstand zu kennen, muss ich zwar nicht seine externen—aber ich muss alle seine internen Eigenschaften kennen.</div>',2),
(1594,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Sind alle Gegenstände gegeben, so sind damit auch alle <em class=\"germph\">möglichen</em> Sachverhalte gegeben.</div>',2),
(1595,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Jedes Ding ist, gleichsam, in einem Raume möglicher Sachverhalte. Diesen Raum kann ich mir leer denken, nicht aber das Ding ohne den Raum.</div>',2),
(1596,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der räumliche Gegenstand muss im unendlichen Raume liegen. (Der Raumpunkt ist eine Argumentstelle.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Fleck im Gesichtsfeld muss zwar nicht rot sein, aber eine Farbe muss er haben: er hat sozusagen den Farbenraum um sich. Der Ton muss <em class=\"germph\">eine</em> Höhe haben, der Gegenstand des Tastsinnes <em class=\"germph\">eine</em> Härte, usw.</div>',2),
(1597,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Gegenstände enthalten die Möglichkeit aller Sachlagen.</div>',2),
(1598,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Möglichkeit seines Vorkommens in Sachverhalten, ist die Form des Gegenstandes.</div>',2),
(1599,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Gegenstand ist einfach.</div>',2),
(1600,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Jede Aussage über Komplexe lässt sich in eine Aussage über deren Bestandteile und in diejenigen Sätze zerlegen, welche die Komplexe vollständig beschreiben.</div>',2),
(1601,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Gegenstände bilden die Substanz der Welt. Darum können sie nicht zusammengesetzt sein.</div>',2),
(1602,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Hätte die Welt keine Substanz, so würde, ob ein Satz Sinn hat, davon abhängen, ob ein anderer Satz wahr ist.</div>',2),
(1603,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es wäre dann unmöglich, ein Bild der Welt (wahr oder falsch) zu entwerfen.</div>',2),
(1604,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist offenbar, dass auch eine von der wirklichen noch so verschieden gedachte Welt Etwas—eine Form—mit der wirklichen gemein haben muss.</div>',2),
(1605,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Diese feste Form besteht eben aus den Gegenständen.</div>',2),
(1606,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Substanz der Welt <em class=\"germph\">kann</em> nur eine Form und keine materiellen Eigenschaften bestimmen. Denn diese werden erst durch die Sätze dargestellt—erst durch die Konfiguration der Gegenstände gebildet.</div>',2),
(1607,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Beiläufig gesprochen: Die Gegenstände sind farblos.</div>',2),
(1608,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Zwei Gegenstände von der gleichen logischen Form sind—abgesehen von ihren externen Eigenschaften—von einander nur dadurch unterschieden, dass sie verschieden sind.</div>',2),
(1609,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Entweder ein Ding hat Eigenschaften, die kein anderes hat, dann kann man es ohneweiteres durch eine Beschreibung aus den anderen herausheben, und darauf hinweisen; oder aber, es gibt mehrere Dinge, die ihre sämtlichen Eigenschaften gemeinsam haben, dann ist es überhaupt unmöglich auf eines von ihnen zu zeigen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Denn, ist das Ding durch nichts hervorgehoben, so kann ich es nicht hervorheben, denn sonst ist es eben hervorgehoben.</div>',2),
(1610,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Substanz ist das, was unabhängig von dem was der Fall ist, besteht.</div>',2),
(1611,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Sie ist Form und Inhalt.</div>',2),
(1612,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Raum, Zeit und Farbe (Färbigkeit) sind Formen der Gegenstände.</div>',2),
(1613,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nur wenn es Gegenstände gibt, kann es eine feste Form der Welt geben.</div>',2),
(1614,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Feste, das Bestehende und der Gegenstand sind Eins.</div>',2),
(1615,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Gegenstand ist das Feste, Bestehende; die Konfiguration ist das Wechselnde, Unbeständige.</div>',2),
(1616,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Konfiguration der Gegenstände bildet den Sachverhalt.</div>',2),
(1617,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Im Sachverhalt hängen die Gegenstände ineinander, wie die Glieder einer Kette.</div>',2),
(1618,'2011-10-03 12:16:57','2011-10-03 12:16:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Im Sachverhalt verhalten sich die Gegenstände in bestimmter Art und Weise zueinander.</div>',2),
(1619,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Art und Weise, wie die Gegenstände im Sachverhalt zusammenhängen, ist die Struktur des Sachverhaltes.</div>',2),
(1620,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Form ist die Möglichkeit der Struktur.</div>',2),
(1621,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Struktur der Tatsache besteht aus den Strukturen der Sachverhalte.</div>',2),
(1622,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Gesamtheit der bestehenden Sachverhalte ist die Welt.</div>',2),
(1623,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Gesamtheit der bestehenden Sachverhalte bestimmt auch, welche Sachverhalte nicht bestehen.</div>',2),
(1624,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bestehen und Nichtbestehen von Sachverhalten ist die Wirklichkeit.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Das Bestehen von Sachverhalten nennen wir auch eine positive, das Nichtbestehen eine negative Tatsache.)</div>',2),
(1625,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Sachverhalte sind von einander unabhängig.</div>',2),
(1626,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Aus dem Bestehen oder Nichtbestehen eines Sachverhaltes kann nicht auf das Bestehen oder Nichtbestehen eines anderen geschlossen werden.</div>',2),
(1627,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die gesamte Wirklichkeit ist die Welt.</div>',2),
(1628,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wir machen uns Bilder der Tatsachen.</div>',2),
(1629,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild stellt die Sachlage im logischen Raume, das Bestehen und Nichtbestehen von Sachverhalten vor.</div>',2),
(1630,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild ist ein Modell der Wirklichkeit.</div>',2),
(1631,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Den Gegenständen entsprechen im Bilde die Elemente des Bildes.</div>',2),
(1632,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Elemente des Bildes vertreten im Bild die Gegenstände.</div>',2),
(1633,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild besteht darin, dass sich seine Elemente in bestimmter Art und Weise zu einander verhalten.</div>',2),
(1634,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild ist eine Tatsache.</div>',2),
(1635,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass sich die Elemente des Bildes in bestimmter Art und Weise zu einander verhalten, stellt vor, dass sich die Sachen so zu einander verhalten.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dieser Zusammenhang der Elemente des Bildes heiße seine Struktur und ihre Möglichkeit seine Form der Abbildung.</div>',2),
(1636,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Form der Abbildung ist die Möglichkeit, dass sich die Dinge so zu einander verhalten, wie die Elemente des Bildes.</div>',2),
(1637,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild ist <em class=\"germph\">so</em> mit der Wirklichkeit verknüpft—es reicht bis zu ihr.</div>',2),
(1638,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist wie ein Maßstab an die Wirklichkeit angelegt.</div>',2),
(1639,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nur die äußersten Punkte der Teilstriche <em class=\"germph\">berühren</em> den zu messenden Gegenstand.</div>',2),
(1640,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nach dieser Auffassung gehört also zum Bilde auch noch die abbildende Beziehung, die es zum Bild macht.</div>',2),
(1641,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die abbildende Beziehung besteht aus den Zuordnungen der Elemente des Bildes und der Sachen.</div>',2),
(1642,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Diese Zuordnungen sind gleichsam die Fühler der Bildelemente, mit denen das Bild die Wirklichkeit berührt.</div>',2),
(1643,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Tatsache muss, um Bild zu sein, etwas mit dem Abgebildeten gemeinsam haben.</div>',2),
(1644,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">In Bild und Abgebildetem muss etwas identisch sein, damit das eine überhaupt ein Bild des anderen sein kann.</div>',2),
(1645,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Was das Bild mit der Wirklichkeit gemein haben muss, um sie auf seine Art und Weise—richtig oder falsch—abbilden zu können, ist seine Form der Abbildung.</div>',2),
(1646,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild kann jede Wirklichkeit abbilden, deren Form es hat.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das räumliche Bild alles Räumliche, das farbige alles Farbige, etc.</div>',2),
(1647,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Seine Form der Abbildung aber, kann das Bild nicht abbilden; es weist sie auf.</div>',2),
(1648,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild stellt sein Objekt von außerhalb dar (sein Standpunkt ist seine Form der Darstellung), darum stellt das Bild sein Objekt richtig oder falsch dar.</div>',2),
(1649,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild kann sich aber nicht außerhalb seiner Form der Darstellung stellen.</div>',2),
(1650,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Was jedes Bild, welcher Form immer, mit der Wirklichkeit gemein haben muss, um sie überhaupt—richtig oder falsch—abbilden zu können, ist die logische Form, das ist, die Form der Wirklichkeit.</div>',2),
(1651,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ist die Form der Abbildung die logische Form, so heißt das Bild das logische Bild.</div>',2),
(1652,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Jedes Bild ist <em class=\"germph\">auch</em> ein logisches. (Dagegen ist z. B. nicht jedes Bild ein räumliches.)</div>',2),
(1653,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das logische Bild kann die Welt abbilden.</div>',2),
(1654,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild hat mit dem Abgebildeten die logische Form der Abbildung gemein.</div>',2),
(1655,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild bildet die Wirklichkeit ab, indem es eine Möglichkeit des Bestehens und Nichtbestehens von Sachverhalten darstellt.</div>',2),
(1656,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild stellt eine mögliche Sachlage im logischen Raume dar.</div>',2),
(1657,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild enthält die Möglichkeit der Sachlage, die es darstellt.</div>',2),
(1658,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild stimmt mit der Wirklichkeit überein oder nicht; es ist richtig oder unrichtig, wahr oder falsch.</div>',2),
(1659,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bild stellt dar, was es darstellt, unabhängig von seiner Wahr- oder Falschheit, durch die Form der Abbildung.</div>',2),
(1660,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Was das Bild darstellt, ist sein Sinn.</div>',2),
(1661,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">In der Übereinstimmung oder Nichtübereinstimmung seines Sinnes mit der Wirklichkeit, besteht seine Wahrheit oder Falschheit.</div>',2),
(1662,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Um zu erkennen, ob das Bild wahr oder falsch ist, müssen wir es mit der Wirklichkeit vergleichen.</div>',2),
(1663,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Aus dem Bild allein ist nicht zu erkennen, ob es wahr oder falsch ist.</div>',2),
(1664,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ein a priori wahres Bild gibt es nicht.</div>',2),
(1665,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das logische Bild der Tatsachen ist der Gedanke.</div>',2),
(1666,'2011-10-03 12:16:58','2011-10-03 12:16:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">„Ein Sachverhalt ist denkbar“ heißt: Wir können uns ein Bild von ihm machen.</div>',2),
(1667,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Gesamtheit der wahren Gedanken sind ein Bild der Welt.</div>',2),
(1668,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Gedanke enthält die Möglichkeit der Sachlage, die er denkt. Was denkbar ist, ist auch möglich.</div>',2),
(1669,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wir können nichts Unlogisches denken, weil wir sonst unlogisch denken müssten.</div>',2),
(1670,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Man sagte einmal, dass Gott alles schaffen könne, nur nichts, was den logischen Gesetzen zuwider wäre.—Wir können nämlich von einer „unlogischen“ Welt nicht <em class=\"germph\">sagen</em>, wie sie aussähe.</div>',2),
(1671,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Etwas „der Logik widersprechendes“ in der Sprache darstellen, kann man ebensowenig, wie in der Geometrie eine den Gesetzen des Raumes widersprechende Figur durch ihre Koordinaten darstellen; oder die Koordinaten eines Punktes angeben, welcher nicht existiert.</div>',2),
(1672,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wohl können wir einen Sachverhalt räumlich darstellen, welcher den Gesetzen der Physik, aber keinen, der den Gesetzen der Geometrie zuwiderliefe.</div>',2),
(1673,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ein a priori richtiger Gedanke wäre ein solcher, dessen Möglichkeit seine Wahrheit bedingte.</div>',2),
(1674,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nur so könnten wir a priori wissen, dass ein Gedanke wahr ist, wenn aus dem Gedanken selbst (ohne Vergleichsobjekt) seine Wahrheit zu erkennen wäre.</div>',2),
(1675,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Im Satz drückt sich der Gedanke sinnlich wahrnehmbar aus.</div>',2),
(1676,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wir benützen das sinnlich wahrnehmbare Zeichen (Laut- oder Schriftzeichen etc.) des Satzes als Projektion der möglichen Sachlage.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Projektionsmethode ist das Denken des Satz-Sinnes.</div>',2),
(1677,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Zeichen, durch welches wir den Gedanken ausdrücken, nenne ich das Satzzeichen. Und der Satz ist das Satzzeichen in seiner projektiven Beziehung zur Welt.</div>',2),
(1678,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Zum Satz gehört alles, was zur Projektion gehört; aber nicht das Projizierte.</div><div class=\"ger\">Also die Möglichkeit des Projizierten, aber nicht dieses selbst.</div><div class=\"ger\">Im Satz ist also sein Sinn noch nicht enthalten, wohl aber die Möglichkeit, ihn auszudücken.</div><div class=\"ger\">(„Der Inhalt des Satzes“ heißt der Inhalt des sinnvollen Satzes.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Im Satz ist die Form seines Sinnes enthalten, aber nicht dessen Inhalt.</div>',2),
(1679,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Satzzeichen besteht darin, dass sich seine Elemente, die Wörter, in ihm auf bestimmte Art und Weise zu einander verhalten.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das Satzzeichen ist eine Tatsache.</div>',2),
(1680,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz ist kein Wörtergemisch.—(Wie das musikalische Thema kein Gemisch von Tönen.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Satz ist artikuliert.</div>',2),
(1681,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nur Tatsachen können einen Sinn ausdrücken, eine Klasse von Namen kann es nicht.</div>',2),
(1682,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass das Satzzeichen eine Tatsache ist, wird durch die gewöhnliche Ausdrucksform der Schrift oder des Druckes verschleiert.</div><div class=\"ger\">Denn im gedruckten Satz z. B. sieht das Satzzeichen nicht wesentlich verschieden aus vom Wort.</div><div class=\"ger\">(So war es möglich, dass Frege den Satz einen zusammengesetzten Namen nannte.)</div>',2),
(1683,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Sehr klar wird das Wesen des Satzzeichens, wenn wir es uns, statt aus Schriftzeichen, aus räumlichen Gegenständen (etwa Tischen, Stühlen, Büchern) zusammengesetzt denken.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die gegenseitige räumliche Lage dieser Dinge drückt dann den Sinn des Satzes aus.</div>',2),
(1684,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nicht: „Das komplexe Zeichen ‚<var>aRb</var>‘ sagt, dass <var>a</var> in der Beziehung <var>R</var> zu <var>b</var> steht“, sondern: <em class=\"germph\">Dass</em> „<var>a</var>“ in einer gewissen Beziehung zu „<var>b</var>“ steht, sagt, <em class=\"germph\">dass</em> <var>aRb</var>.</div>',2),
(1685,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Sachlagen kann man beschreiben, nicht <em class=\"germph\">benennen</em>.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Namen gleichen Punkten, Sätze Pfeilen, sie haben Sinn.)</div>',2),
(1686,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Im Satze kann der Gedanke so ausgedrückt sein, dass den Gegenständen des Gedankens Elemente des Satzzeichens entsprechen.</div>',2),
(1687,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Diese Elemente nenne ich „einfache Zeichen“ und den Satz „vollständig analysiert“.</div>',2),
(1688,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die im Satze angewandten einfachen Zeichen heißen Namen.</div>',2),
(1689,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Name bedeutet den Gegenstand. Der Gegenstand ist seine Bedeutung. („<var>A</var>“ ist dasselbe Zeichen wie „<var>A</var>“.)</div>',2),
(1690,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Konfiguration der einfachen Zeichen im Satzzeichen entspricht die Konfiguration der Gegenstände in der Sachlage.</div>',2),
(1691,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Name vertritt im Satz den Gegenstand.</div>',2),
(1692,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Gegenstände kann ich nur <em class=\"germph\">nennen</em>. Zeichen vertreten sie. Ich kann nur <em class=\"germph\">von</em> ihnen sprechen, <em class=\"germph\">sie aussprechen</em> kann ich nicht. Ein Satz kann nur sagen, <em class=\"germph\">wie</em> ein Ding ist, nicht <em class=\"germph\">was</em> es ist.</div>',2),
(1693,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Forderung der Möglichkeit der einfachen Zeichen ist die Forderung der Bestimmtheit des Sinnes.</div>',2),
(1694,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz, welcher vom Komplex handelt, steht in interner Beziehung zum Satze, der von dessen Bestandteil handelt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Komplex kann nur durch seine Beschreibung gegeben sein, und diese wird stimmen oder nicht stimmen. Der Satz, in welchem von einem Komplex die Rede ist, wird, wenn dieser nicht existiert, nicht unsinnig, sondern einfach falsch sein.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dass ein Satzelement einen Komplex bezeichnet, kann man aus einer Unbestimmtheit in den Sätzen sehen, worin es vorkommt. Wir <em class=\"germph\">wissen</em>, durch diesen Satz ist noch nicht alles bestimmt. (Die Allgemeinheitsbezeichnung <em class=\"germph\">enthält</em> ja ein Urbild.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Zusammenfassung des Symbols eines Komplexes in ein einfaches Symbol kann durch eine Definition ausgedrückt werden.</div>',2),
(1695,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es gibt eine und nur eine vollständige Analyse des Satzes.</div>',2),
(1696,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz drückt auf bestimmte, klar angebbare Weise aus, was er ausdrückt: Der Satz ist artikuliert.</div>',2),
(1697,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Name ist durch keine Definition weiter zu zergliedern: er ist ein Urzeichen.</div>',2),
(1698,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Jedes difinierte Zeichen bezeichnet <em class=\"germph\">über</em> jene Zeichen, durch welche es definier wurde; und die Definitionen weisen den Weg.</div><div class=\"ger\">Zwei Zeichen, ein Urzeichen, und ein durch Urzeichen definiertes, können nicht auf dieselbe Art und Weise bezeichnen. Namen <em class=\"germph\">kann</em> man nicht durch Definitionen auseinanderlegen. (Kein Zeichen, welches allein, selbständig eine Bedeutung hat.)</div>',2),
(1699,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Was in den Zeichen nicht zum Ausdruck kommt, das zeigt ihre Anwendung. Was die Zeichen verschlucken, das spricht ihre Anwendung aus.</div>',2),
(1700,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Bedeutung von Urzeichen können durch Erläuterungen erklärt werden. Erläuterungen sind Sätze, welche die Urzeichen enthalten. Sie können also nur verstanden werden, wenn die Bedeutungen dieser Zeichen bereits bekannt sind.</div>',2),
(1701,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nur der Satz hat Sinn; nur im Zusammenhang des Satzes hat ein Name Bedeutung.</div>',2),
(1702,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Jeden Teil des Satzes, der seinen Sinn charakterisiert, nenne ich einen Ausdruck (ein Symbol).</div><div class=\"ger\">(Der Satz selbst ist ein Ausdruck.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Ausdruck ist alles, für den Sinn des Satzes wesentliche, was Sätze miteinander gemein haben können.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Ausdruck kennzeichnet eine Form und einen Inhalt.</div>',2),
(1703,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Ausdruck setzt die Formen aller Sätze voraus, in welchem er vorkommen kann. Er ist das gemeinsame charakteristische Merkmal einer Klasse von Sätzen.</div>',2),
(1704,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Er wird also dargestellt durch die allgemeine Form der Sätze, die er charakterisiert.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und zwar wird in dieser Form der Ausdruck <em class=\"germph\">konstant</em> und alles übrige <em class=\"germph\">variabel</em> sein.</div>',2),
(1705,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Ausdruck wird also durch eine Variable dargestellt, deren Werte die Sätze sind, die den Ausdruck enthalten.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Im Grenzfall wird die Variable zur Konstanten, der Ausdruck zum Satz.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Ich nenne eine solche Variable „Satzvariable“.</div>',2),
(1706,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Ausdruck hat nur im Satz Bedeutung. Jede Variable lässt sich als Satzvariable auffassen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Auch der variable Name.)</div>',2),
(1707,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Verwandeln wir einen Bestandteil eines Satzes in eine Variable, so gibt es eine Klasse von Sätzen, welche sämtlich Werte des so entstandenen variablen Satzes sind. Diese Klasse hängt im allgemeinen noch davon ab, was wir, nach willkürlicher Übereinkunft, mit Teilen jenes Satzes meinen. Verwandeln wir aber alle jene Zeichen, deren Bedeutung willkürlich bestimmt wurde, in Variable, so gibt es nun noch immer eine solche Klasse. Diese aber ist nun von keiner Übereinkunft abhängig, sondern nur noch von der Natur des Satzes. Sie entspricht einer logischen Form—einem logischen Urbild.</div>',2),
(1708,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Welche Werte die Satzvariable annehmen darf, wird festgesetzt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Festsetzung der Werte <em class=\"germph\">ist</em> die Variable.</div>',2),
(1709,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Festsetzung der Werte der Satzvariablen ist die <em class=\"germph\">Angabe der Sätze</em>, deren gemeinsames Merkmal die Variable ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Festsetzung ist eine Beschreibung dieser Sätze.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Festsetzung wird also nur von Symbolen, nicht von deren Bedeutung handeln.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und <em class=\"germph\">nur</em> dies ist der Festsetzung wesentlich, <em class=\"germph\">dass sie nur eine Beschreibung von Symbolen ist und nicht über das Bezeichnete aussagt</em>.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wie die Beschreibung der Sätze geschieht, ist unwesentlich.</div>',2),
(1710,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Den Satz fasse ich—wie Frege und Russell—als Funktion der in ihm enthaltenen Ausdrücke auf.</div>',2),
(1711,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Zeichen ist das sinnlich Wahrnehmbare am Symbol.</div>',2),
(1712,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Zwei verschiedene Symbole können also das Zeichen (Schriftzeichen oder Lautzeichen etc.) miteinander gemein haben—sie bezeichnen dann auf verschiedene Art und Weise.</div>',2),
(1713,'2011-10-03 12:16:59','2011-10-03 12:16:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es kann nie das gemeinsame Merkmal zweier Gegenstände anzeigen, dass wir sie mit demselben Zeichen, aber durch zwei verschiedene <em class=\"germph\">Bezeichnungsweisen</em> bezeichnen. Denn das Zeichen ist ja willkürlich. Man könnte also auch zwei verschiedene Zeichen wählen, und wo bliebe dann das Gemeinsame in der Bezeichnung?</div>',2),
(1714,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">In der Umgangssprache kommt es ungemein häufig vor, dass dasselbe Wort auf verschiedene Art und Weise bezeichnet—also verschiedene Symbolen angehört—, oder, dass zwei Wörter, die auf verschiedene Art und Weise bezeichnen, äußerlich in der gleichen Weise im Satz angewandt werden.</div><div class=\"ger\">So erscheint das Wort „ist“ als Kopula, als Gleichheitszeichen und als Ausdruck der Existenz; „existieren“ als intransitives Zeitwort wie „gehen“; „identisch“ als Eigenschaftswort; wir reden von <em class=\"germph\">Etwas</em>, aber auch davon, dass <em class=\"germph\">etwas</em> geschieht.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Im Satze „Grün ist grün“—wo das erste Wort ein Personenname, das letzte ein Eigenschaftswort ist—haben diese Worte nicht einfach verschiedene Bedeutung, sondern es sind <em class=\"germph\">verschiedene Symbole</em>.)</div>',2),
(1715,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">So entstehen leicht die fundamentalsten Verwechselungen (deren die ganze Philosophie voll ist).</div>',2),
(1716,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Um diesen Irrtümern zu entgehen, müssen wir eine Zeichensprache verwenden, welche sie ausschließt, indem sie nicht das gleiche Zeichen in verschiednen Symbolen, und Zeichen, welche auf verschiedene Art bezeichnen, nicht äußerlich auf die gleiche Art verwendet. Eine Zeichensprache also, die der <em class=\"germph\">logischen</em> Grammatik—der logischen Syntax—gehorcht.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Die Begriffsschrift Freges und Russells ist eine solche Sprache, die allerdings noch nicht alle Fehler ausschließt.)</div>',2),
(1717,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Um das Symbol am Zeichen zu erkennen, muss man auf den sinnvollen Gebrauch achten.</div>',2),
(1718,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Zeichen bestimmt erst mit seiner logisch-syntaktischen Verwendung zusammen eine logische Form.</div>',2),
(1719,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wird ein Zeichen <em class=\"germph\">nicht gebraucht</em>, so ist es bedeutungslos. Das ist der Sinn der Devise Occams.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Wenn sich alles so verhält als hätte ein Zeichen Bedeutung, dann hat es auch Bedeutung.)</div>',2),
(1720,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">In der logischen Syntax darf nie die Bedeutung eines Zeichens eine Rolle spielen; sie muss sich aufstellen lassen, ohne dass dabei von der <em class=\"germph\">Bedeutung</em> eines Zeichens die Rede wäre, sie darf <em class=\"germph\">nur</em> die Beschreibung der Ausdrücke voraussetzen.</div>',2),
(1721,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Von dieser Bemerkung sehen wir in Russells „Theory of types“ hinüber: Der Irrtum Russells zeigt sich darin, dass er bei der Aufstellung der Zeichenregeln von der Bedeutung der Zeichen reden musste.</div>',2),
(1722,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Kein Satz kann etwas über sich selbst aussagen, weil das Satzzeichen nicht in sich selbst enthalten sein kann (das ist die ganze „Theory of types“).</div>',2),
(1723,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Eine Funktion kann darum nicht ihr eigenes Argument sein, weil das Funktionszeichen bereits das Urbild seines Arguments enthält und es sich nicht selbst enthalten kann.</div><div class=\"ger\">Nehmen wir nämlich an, die Funktion <var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>fx</var>) könnte ihr eigenes Argument sein; dann gäbe es also einen Satz: „<var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>fx</var>))“ und in diesem müssen die äußere Funktion <var>F</var> und die innere Funtion <var>F</var> verschiedene Bedeutungen haben, denn die innere hat die Form <var>ϕ</var>(<var>fx</var>), die äußere die Form <var>ψ</var>(<var>ϕ</var>(<var>fx</var>)). Gemeinsam ist den beiden Funktionen nur der Buchstabe „<var>F</var>“, der aber allein nichts bezeichnet.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dies wird sofort klar, wenn wir statt „<var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>F</var><var>u</var>)“ schreiben „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>ϕ</var>):</span><var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>ϕu</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>ϕu</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>Fu</var>“.</div><div class=\"ger\">Hiermit erledigt sich <NAME>.</div>',2),
(1724,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Regeln der logischen Syntax müssen sich von selbst verstehen, wenn man nur weiß, wie ein jedes Zeichen bezeichnet.</div>',2),
(1725,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz besitzt wesentliche und zufällige Züge.</div><div class=\"ger\">Zufällig sind die Züge, die von der besonderen Art der Hervorbringung des Satzzeichens herrühren. Wesentlich diejenigen, welche allein den Satz befähigen, seinen Sinn auszudrücken.</div>',2),
(1726,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Wesentliche am Satz ist also das, was allen Sätzen, welche den gleichen Sinn ausdrücken können, gemeinsam ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und ebenso ist allgemein das Wesentliche am Symbol das, was alle Symbole, die denselben Zweck erfüllen können, gemeinsam haben.</div>',2),
(1727,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Man könnte also sagen: Der eigentliche Name ist das, was alle Symbole, die den Gegenstand bezeichnen, gemeinsam haben. Es würde sich so successive ergeben, dass keinerlei Zusammensetzung für den Namen wesentlich ist.</div>',2),
(1728,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">An unseren Notationen ist zwar etwas willkürlich, aber <em class=\"germph\">das</em> ist nicht willkürlich: Dass, <em class=\"germph\">wenn</em> wir etwas willkürlich bestimmt haben, dann etwas anderes der Fall sein muss. (Dies hängt von dem <em class=\"germph\">Wesen</em> der Notation ab.)</div>',2),
(1729,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Eine besondere Bezeichnungsweise mag unwichtig sein, aber wichtig ist es immer, dass diese eine <em class=\"germph\">mögliche</em> Bezeichnungsweise ist. Und so verhält es sich in der Philosophie überhaupt: Das Einzelne erweist sich immer wieder als unwichtig, aber die Möglichkeit jedes Einzelnen gibt uns einen Aufschluss über das Wesen der Welt.</div>',2),
(1730,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Definitionen sind Regeln der Übersetzung von einer Sprache in eine andere. Jede richtige Zeichensprache muss sich in jede andere nach solchen Regeln übersetzen lassen: <em class=\"germph\">Dies</em> ist, was sie alle gemeinsam haben.</div>',2),
(1731,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das, was am Symbol bezeichnet, ist das Gemeinsame aller jener Symbole, durch die das erste den Regeln der logischen Syntax zufolge ersetzt werden kann.</div>',2),
(1732,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Man kann z. B. das Gemeinsame aller Notationen für die Wahrheitsfunktionen so ausdrücken: Es ist ihnen gemeinsam, dass sich alle—z. B.—durch die Notation von „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ („nicht <var>p</var>“) und „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>“ („<var>p</var> oder <var>q</var>“) <em class=\"germph\">ersetzen lassen</em>.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Hiermit ist die Art und Weise gekennzeichnet, wie eine spezielle mögliche Notation uns allgemeine Aufschlüsse geben kann.)</div>',2),
(1733,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Zeichen des Komplexes löst sich auch bei der Analyse nicht willkürlich auf, so dass etwa seine Auflösung in jedem Satzgefüge eine andere wäre.</div>',2),
(1734,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz bestimmt einen Ort im logischen Raum. Die Existenz dieses logischen Ortes ist durch die Existenz der Bestandteile allein verbürgt, durch die Existenz des sinnvollen Satzes.</div>',2),
(1735,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Satzzeichen und die logischen Koordinaten: Das ist der logische Ort.</div>',2),
(1736,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der geometrische und der logische Ort stimmen darin überein, dass beide die Möglichkeit einer Existenz sind.</div>',2),
(1737,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Obwohl der Satz nur einen Ort des logischen Raumes bestimmen darf, so muss doch durch ihn schon der ganze logische Raum gegeben sein.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Sonst würden durch die Verneinung, die logische Summe, das logische Produkt, etc. immer neue Elemente—in Koordinaten—eingeführt.)</div><div class=\"ger\">(Das logische Gerüst um das Bild herum bestimmt den logischen Raum. Der Satz durchgreift den ganzen logischen Raum.)</div>',2),
(1738,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das angewandte, gedachte Satzeichen ist der Gedanke.</div>',2),
(1739,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Gedanke ist der sinnvolle Satz.</div>',2),
(1740,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Gesamtheit der Sätze ist die Sprache.</div>',2),
(1741,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Mensch besitzt die Fähigkeit Sprachen zu bauen, womit sich jeder Sinn ausdrücken lässt, ohne eine Ahnung davon zu haben, wie und was jedes Wort bedeutet.—Wie man auch spricht, ohne zu wissen, wie die einzelnen Laute hervorgebracht werden.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Umgangssprache ist ein Teil des menschlichen Organismus und nicht weniger kompliziert als dieser.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es ist menschenunmöglich, die Sprachlogik aus ihr unmittelbar zu entnehmen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Sprache verkleidet den Gedanken. Und zwar so, dass man nach der äußeren Form des Kleides, nicht auf deie Form des bekleideten Gedankens schließen kann; weil die äußere Form des Kleides nach ganz anderen Zwecken gebildet ist als danach, die Form des Körpers erkennen zu lassen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die stillschweigenden Abmachungen zum Verständnis der Umgangssprache sind enorm kompliziert.</div>',2),
(1742,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die meisten Sätze und Fragen, welche über philosophische Dinge geschrieben worden sind, sind nicht falsch, sondern unsinnig. Wir können daher Fragen dieser Art überhaupt nicht beantworten, sondern nur ihre Unsinnigkeit feststellen. Die meisten Fragen und Sätze der Philosophen beruhen darauf, dass wir unsere Sprachlogik nicht verstehen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Sie sind von der Art der Frage, ob das Gute mehr oder weniger identisch sei als das Schöne.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Und es ist nicht verwunderlich, dass die tiefsten Probleme eigentlich <em class=\"germph\">keine</em> Probleme sind.</div>',2),
(1743,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Alle Philosophie ist „Sprachkritik“. (Allerdings nicht im Sinne Mauthners.) Russells Verdienst ist es, gezeigt zu haben, dass die scheinbar logische Form des Satzes nicht seine wirkliche sein muss.</div>',2),
(1744,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz ist ein Bild der Wirklichkeit.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Satz ist ein Modell der Wirklichkeit, so wie wir sie uns denken.</div>',2),
(1745,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Auf den ersten Blick scheint der Satz—wie er etwa auf dem Papier gedruckt steht—kein Bild der Wirklichkeit zu sein, von der er handelt. Aber auch die Notenschrift scheint auf den ersten Blick kein Bild der Musik zu sein, und unsere Lautzeichen-(Buchstaben-)Schrift kein Bild unserer Lautsprache.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und doch erweisen sich diese Zeichensprachen auch im gewöhnlichen Sinne als Bilder dessen, was sie darstellen.</div>',2),
(1746,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Offenbar ist, dass wir einen Satz von der Form „<var>aRb</var>“ als Bild empfinden. Hier ist das Zeichen offenbar ein Gleichnis des Bezeichneten.</div>',2),
(1747,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Und wenn wir in das Wesentliche dieser Bildhaftigkeit eindringen, so sehen wir, dass dieselbe durch <em class=\"germph\">scheinbare Unregelmäßigkeiten</em> (wie die Verwendung von <span class=\"symbol\">♯</span> und <span class=\"symbol\">♭</span> in der Notenschrift) <em class=\"germph\">nicht</em> gestört wird.</div><div class=\"ger\">Denn auch diese Unregelmäßigkeiten bilden das ab, was sie ausdrücken sollen; nur auf eine andere Art und Weise.</div>',2),
(1748,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Grammophonplatte, der musikalische Gedanke, die Notenschrift, die Schallwellen, stehen alle in jener abbildenden internen Beziehung zu einander, die zwischen Sprache und Welt besteht.</div><div class=\"ger\">Ihnen allen ist der logische Bau gemeinsam.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Wie im Märchen die zwei Jünglinge, ihre zwei Pferde und ihre Lilien. Sie sind alle in gewissem Sinne Eins.)</div>',2),
(1749,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass es eine allgemeine Regel gibt, durch die der Musiker aus der Partitur die Symphonie entnehmen kann, durch welche man aus der Linie auf der Grammophonplatte die Symphonie und nach der ersten Regel wieder die Partitur ableiten kann, darin besteht eben die innere Ähnlichkeit dieser scheinbar so ganz verschiedenen Gebilde. Und jene Regel ist das Gesetz der Projektion, welches die Symphonie in die Notensprache projiziert. Sie ist die Regel der Übersetzung der Notensprache in die Sprache der Grammophonplatte.</div>',2),
(1750,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Möglichkeit aller Gleichnisse, der ganzen Bildhaftigkeit unserer Ausdrucksweise, ruht in der Logik der Abbildung.</div>',2),
(1751,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Um das Wesen des Satzes zu verstehen, denken wir an die Hieroglyphenschrift, welche die Tatsachen die sie beschreibt abbildet.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und aus ihr wurde die Buchstabenschrift, ohne das Wesentliche der Abbildung zu verlieren.</div>',2),
(1752,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dies sehen wir daraus, dass wir den Sinn des Satzzeichens verstehen, ohne dass er uns erklärt wurde.</div>',2),
(1753,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz ist ein Bild der Wirklichkeit: Denn ich kenne die von ihm dargestelle Sachlage, wenn ich den Satz verstehe. Und den Satz verstehe ich, ohne dass mir sein Sinn erklärt wurde.</div>',2),
(1754,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz <em class=\"germph\">zeigt</em> seinen Sinn.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Satz <em class=\"germph\">zeigt</em>, wie es sich verhält, <em class=\"germph\">wenn</em> er wahr ist. Und er <em class=\"germph\">sagt</em>, <em class=\"germph\">dass</em> es sich so verhält.</div>',2),
(1755,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wirklichkeit muss durch den Satz auf ja oder nein fixiert sein.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dazu muss sie durch ihn vollständig beschrieben werden.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Satz ist die Beschreibung eines Sachverhaltes.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wie die Beschreibung einen Gegenstand nach seinen externen Eigenschaften, so beschreibt der Satz die Wirklichkeit nach ihren internen Eigenschaften.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Satz konstruiert eine Welt mit Hilfe eines logischen Gerüstes und darum kann man am Satz auch sehen, wie sich alles Logische verhält, <em class=\"germph\">wenn</em> er wahr ist. Man kann aus einem falschen Satz <em class=\"germph\">Schlüsse ziehen</em>.</div>',2),
(1756,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Einen Satz verstehen, heißt, wissen was der Fall ist, wenn er wahr ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Man kann ihn also verstehen, ohne zu wissen, ob er wahr ist.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Man versteht ihn, wenn man seine Bestandteile versteht.</div>',2),
(1757,'2011-10-03 12:17:00','2011-10-03 12:17:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Übersetzung einer Sprache in eine andere geht nicht so vor sich, dass man jeden <em class=\"germph\">Satz</em> der einen in einen <em class=\"germph\">Satz</em> der anderen übersetzt, sondern nur die Satzbestandteile werden übersetzt.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Und das Wörterbuch übersetzt nicht nur Substantiva, sondern auch Zeit-, Eigenschafts- und Bindewörter etc.; und es behandelt sie alle gleich.)</div>',2),
(1758,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Bedeutung der einfachen Zeichen (der Wörter) müssen uns erklärt werden, dass wir sie verstehen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Mit den Sätzen aber verständigen wir uns.</div>',2),
(1759,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es liegt im Wesen des Satzes, dass er uns einen <em class=\"germph\">neuen</em> Sinn mitteilen kann.</div>',2),
(1760,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ein Satz muss mit alten Ausdrücken einen neuen Sinn mitteilen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Satz teilt uns eine Sachlage mit, also muss er <em class=\"germph\">wesentlich</em> mit der Sachlage zusammenhängen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und der Zusammenhang ist eben, dass er ihr logisches Bild ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Satz sagt nur insoweit etwas aus, als er ein Bild ist.</div>',2),
(1761,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Im Satz wird gleichsam eine Sachlage probeweise zusammengestellt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Man kann geradezu sagen: statt, dieser Satz hat diesen und diesen Sinn; dieser Satz stellt diese und diese Sachlage dar.</div>',2),
(1762,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ein Name steht für ein Ding, ein anderer für ein anderes Ding und untereinander sind sie verbunden, so stellt das Ganze—wie ein lebendes Bild—den Sachverhalt vor.</div>',2),
(1763,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Möglichkeit des Satzes beruht auf dem Prinzip der Vertretung von Gegenständen durch Zeichen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Mein Grundgedanke ist, dass die „logischen Konstanten“ nicht vertreten. Dass sich die <em class=\"germph\">Logik</em> der Tatsachen nicht vertreten lässt.</div>',2),
(1764,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nur insoweit ist der Satz ein Bild der Sachlage, als er logisch gegliedert ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Auch der Satz: „ambulo“, ist zusammengesetzt, denn sein Stamm ergibt mit einer anderen Endung, und seine Endung mit einem anderen Stamm, einen anderen Sinn.)</div>',2),
(1765,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Am Satz muss gerade soviel zu unterscheiden sein, als an der Sachlage, die er darstellt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die beiden müssen die gleiche logische (mathematische) Mannigfaltigkeit besitzen. (Vergleiche Hertz’s „Mechanik“, über dynamische Modelle.)</div>',2),
(1766,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Diese mathematische Mannigfaltigkeit kann man natürlich nicht selbst wieder abbilden. Aus ihr kann man beim Abbilden nicht heraus.</div>',2),
(1767,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wollten wir z. B. das, was wir durch „<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>“ ausdrücken, durch Vorsetzen eines Indexes von „<var>fx</var>“ ausdrücken—etwa so: „<span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>Alg</var>.</span></span><var>fx</var>“—es würde nicht genügen—wir wüssten nicht, was verallgemeinert wurde. Wollten wir es durch einen Index „<sub><var>a</var></sub>“ anzeigen—etwa so: „<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var><sub><var>a</var></sub>)“—es würde auch nicht genügen—wir wüssten nicht den Bereich der Allgemeinheitsbezeichnung.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wollten wir es durch Einführung einer Marke in die Argumentstellen versuchen—etwa so: „<span class=\"mathop\">(<var>A</var>, <var>A</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">F</var>(<var>A</var>, <var>A</var>)“—es würde nicht genügen—wir könnten die Identität der Variablen nicht feststellen. U.s.w.</div><div class=\"ger\">Alle diese Bezeichnungsweisen genügen nicht, weil sie nicht die notwendige mathematische Mannigfaltigkeit haben.</div>',2),
(1768,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Aus demselben Grunde genügt die idealistische Erklärung des Sehens der räumlichen Beziehung durch die „Raumbrille“ nicht, weil sie nicht die Mannigfaltigkeit dieser Beziehungen erklären kann.</div>',2),
(1769,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wirklichkeit wird mit dem Satz verglichen.</div>',2),
(1770,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nur dadurch kann der Satz wahr oder falsch sein, indem er ein Bild der Wirklichkeit ist.</div>',2),
(1771,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Beachtet man nicht, dass der Satz einen von den Tatsachen unabhängigen Sinn hat, so kann man leicht glauben, dass wahr und falsch gleichberechtigte Beziehungen von Zeichen und Bezeichnetem sind.</div><div class=\"ger\">Man könnte dann z. B. sagen, dass „<var>p</var>“ auch die wahre Art bezeichnet, was „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ auf die falsche Art, etc.</div>',2),
(1772,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Kann man sich nicht mit falschen Sätzen, wie bisher mit wahren, verständigen? Solange man nur weiß, dass sie falsch gemeint sind. Nein! Denn, wahr ist ein Satz, wenn es sich so verhält, wie wir es durch ihn sagen; und wenn wir mit „<var>p</var>“ <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var> meinen, und es sich so verhält wie wir es meinen, so ist „<var>p</var>“ in der neuen Auffassung wahr und nicht falsch.</div>',2),
(1773,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass aber die Zeichen „<var>p</var>“ und „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ das gleiche sagen <em class=\"germph\">können</em>, ist wichtig. Denn es zeigt, dass dem Zeichen „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>“ in der Wirklichkeit nichts entspricht.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dass in einem Satz die Verneinung vorkommt, ist noch kein Merkmal seines Sinnes (<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>p</var>).</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Sätze „<var>p</var>“ und „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ haben entgegengesetzten Sinn, aber es entspricht ihnen eine und dieselbe Wirklichkeit.</div>',2),
(1774,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ein Bild zur Erklärung des Wahrheitsbegriffes: Schwarzer Fleck auf weißem Papier; die Form des Fleckes kann man beschreiben, indem man für jeden Punkt der Fläche angibt, ob er weiß oder schwarz ist. Der Tatsache, dass ein Punkt schwarz ist, entspricht eine positive—der, dass ein Punkt weiß (nicht schwarz) ist, eine negative Tatsache. Bezeichne ich einen Punkt der Fläche (einen Fregeschen Wahrheitswert), so entspricht dies der Annahme, die zur Beurteilung aufgestellt wird, etc. etc.</div><div class=\"ger\">Um aber sagen zu können, ein Punkt sei schwarz oder weiß, muss ich vorerst wissen, wann man einen Punkt schwarz und wann man ihn weiß nennt; um sagen zu können: „<var>p</var>“ ist wahr (oder falsch), muss ich bestimmt haben, unter welchen Umständen ich „<var>p</var>“ wahr nenne, und damit bestimme ich den Sinn des Satzes.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Punkt, an dem das Gleichnis hinkt ist nun der: Wir können auf einen Punkt des Papiers zeigen, auch ohne zu wissen, was weiß und schwarz ist; einem Satz ohne Sinn aber entspricht gar nichts, denn er bezeichnet kein Ding (Wahrheitswert) dessen Eigenschaften etwa „falsch“ oder „wahr“ hießen; das Verbum eines Satzes ist nicht „ist wahr“ oder „ist falsch“—wie Frege glaubte—, sondern das, was „wahr ist“, muss das Verbum schon enthalten.</div>',2),
(1775,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Jeder Satz muss <em class=\"germph\">schon</em> einen Sinn haben; die Bejahung kann ihn ihm nicht geben, denn sie bejaht ja gerade den Sinn. Und dasselbe gilt von der Verneinung, etc.</div>',2),
(1776,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Man könnte sagen: Die Verneinung bezieht sich schon auf den logischen Ort, den der verneinte Satz bestimmt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der verneinende Satz bestimmt einen <em class=\"germph\">anderen</em> logischen Ort als der verneinte.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der verneinende Satz bestimmt einen logischen Ort mit Hilfe des logischen Ortes des verneinten Satzes, indem er jenen als außerhalb diesem liegend beschreibt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dass man den verneinten Satz wieder verneinen kann, zeigt schon, dass das, was verneint wird, schon ein Satz und nicht erst die Vorbereitung zu einem Satze ist.</div>',2),
(1777,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz stellt das Bestehen und Nichtbestehen der Sachverhalte dar.</div>',2),
(1778,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Gesamtheit der wahren Sätze ist die gesamte Naturwissenschaft (oder die Gesamtheit der Naturwissenschaften).</div>',2),
(1779,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Philosophie ist keine der Naturwissenschaften.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Das Wort „Philosophie“ muss etwas bedeuten, was über oder unter, aber nicht neben den Naturwissenschaften steht.)</div>',2),
(1780,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Zweck der Philosophie ist die logische Klärung der Gedanken.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Philosophie ist keine Lehre, sondern eine Tätigkeit.</div><div class=\"ger\">Ein philosophisches Werk besteht wesentlich aus Erläuterungen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das Resultat der Philosophie sind nicht „philosophische Sätze“, sondern das Klarwerden von Sätzen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Philosophie soll die Gedanken, die sonst, gleichsam, trübe und verschwommen sind, klar machen und scharf abgrenzen.</div>',2),
(1781,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Psychologie ist der Philosophie nicht verwandter als irgend eine andere Naturwissenschaft.</div><div class=\"ger\">Erkenntnistheorie ist die Philosophie der Psychologie.</div><div class=\"ger\">Entspricht nicht mein Studium der Zeichensprache dem Studium der Denkprozesse, welches die Philosophen für die Philosophie der Logik für so wesentlich hielten? Nur verwickelten sie sich meistens in unwesentliche psychologische Untersuchungen und eine analoge Gefahr gibt es auch bei meiner Methode.</div>',2),
(1782,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Darwinsche Theorie hat mit der Philosophie nicht mehr zu schaffen als irgendeine andere Hypothese der Naturwissenschaft.</div>',2),
(1783,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Philosophie begrenzt das bestreitbare Gebiet der Naturwissenschaft.</div>',2),
(1784,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Sie soll das Denkbare abgrenzen und damit das Undenkbare.</div><div class=\"ger\">Sie soll das Undenkbare von innen durch das Denkbare begrenzen.</div>',2),
(1785,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Sie wird das Unsagbare bedeuten, indem sie das Sagbare klar darstellt.</div>',2),
(1786,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Alles was überhaupt gedacht werden kann, kann klar gedacht werden. Alles, was sich aussprechen läßt, läßt sich klar aussprechen.</div>',2),
(1787,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz kann die gesamte Wirklichkeit darstellen, aber er kann nicht das darstellen, was er mit der Wirklichkeit gemein haben muss, um sie darstellen zu können—die logische Form.</div><div class=\"ger\">Um die logische Form darstellen zu können, müssten wir uns mit dem Satze außerhalb der Logik aufstellen können, das heißt außerhalb der Welt.</div>',2),
(1788,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz kann die logische Form nicht darstellen, sie spiegelt sich in ihm.</div><div class=\"ger\">Was sich in der Sprache spiegelt, kann sie nicht darstellen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Was <em class=\"germph\">sich</em> in der Sprache ausdrückt, können <em class=\"germph\">wir</em> nicht durch sie ausdrücken.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Satz <em class=\"germph\">zeigt</em> die logische Form der Wirklichkeit.</div><div class=\"ger\">Er weist sie auf.</div>',2),
(1789,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">So zeigt ein Satz „<var>fa</var>“, dass in seinem Sinn der Gegenstand <var>a</var> vorkommt, zwei Sätze „<var>fa</var>“ und „<var>ga</var>“, dass in ihnen beiden von demselben Gegenstand die Rede ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wenn zwei Sätze einander widersprechen. So zeigt dies ihre Struktur; ebenso, wenn einer aus dem anderen folgt. U.s.w.</div>',2),
(1790,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Was gezeigt werden <em class=\"germph\">kann</em>, <em class=\"germph\">kann</em> nicht gesagt werden.</div>',2),
(1791,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Jetzt verstehen wir auch unser Gefühl: dass wir im Besitze einer richtigen logischen Auffassung seien, wenn nur einmal alles in unserer Zeichensprache stimmt.</div>',2),
(1792,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wir können in gewissem Sinne von formalen Eigenschaften der Gegenstände und Sachverhalte bezw. von Eigenschaften der Struktur der Tatsachen reden, und in demselben Sinne von formalen Relationen und Relationen von Strukturen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Statt Eigenschaft der Struktur sage ich auch „interne Eigenschaft“; statt Relation der Strukturen „interne Relation“.</div><div class=\"ger\">Ich führe diese Ausdrücke ein, um den Grund der bei den Philosophen sehr verbreiteten Verwechslung zwischen den internen Relationen und den eigentlichen (externen) Relationen zu zeigen.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Das Bestehen solcher interner Eigenschaften und Relationen kann aber nicht durch Sätze behauptet werden, sondern es zeigt sich in den Sätzen, welche jene Sachverhalte darstellen und von jenen Gegenständen handeln.</div>',2),
(1793,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Eine interne Eigenschaft einer Tatsache können wir auch einen Zug dieser Tatsache nennen. (In dem Sinn, in welchem wir etwa von Gesichtszügen sprechen.)</div>',2),
(1794,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Eine Eigenschaft ist intern, wenn es undenkbar ist, dass ihr Gegenstand sie nicht besitzt.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Diese blaue Farbe und jene stehen in der internen Relation von heller und dunkler eo ipso. Es ist undenkbar, dass <em class=\"germph\">diese</em> beiden Gegenstände nicht in dieser Relation stünden.)</div><div class=\"ger\">(Hier entspricht dem schwankenden Gebrauch der Worte „Eigenschaft“ und „Relation“ der schwankende Gebrauch des Wortes „Gegenstand“.)</div>',2),
(1795,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bestehen einer internen Eigenschaft einer möglichen Sachlage wird nicht durch einen Satz ausgedrückt, sondern es drückt sich in dem sie darstellenden Satz durch eine interne Eigenschaft dieses Satzes aus.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es wäre ebenso unsinnig, dem Satze eine formale Eigenschaft zuzusprechen, als sie ihm abzusprechen.</div>',2),
(1796,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Formen kann man nicht dadurch voneinander unterscheiden, dass man sagt, die eine habe diese, die andere aber jene Eigenschaft; denn dies setzt voraus, dass es einen Sinn habe, beide Eigenschaften von beiden Formen auszusagen.</div>',2),
(1797,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Bestehen einer internen Relation zwischen möglichen Sachlagen drückt sich sprachlich durch eine interne Relation zwischen den sie darstellenden Sätzen aus.</div>',2),
(1798,'2011-10-03 12:17:01','2011-10-03 12:17:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Hier erledigt sich nun die Streitfrage, „ob alle Relationen intern oder extern seien“.</div>',2),
(1799,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Reihen, welche durch <em class=\"germph\">interne</em> Relationen geordnet sind, nenne ich Formenreihen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Zahlenreihe ist nicht nach einer externen, sondern nach einer internen Relation geordnet.</div><div class=\"ger\">Ebenso die Reihe der Sätze „<var>aRb</var>“,</div><div class=\"ger\">„<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRb</var>“,</div><div class=\"ger\">„<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRy</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>yRb</var>“, u. s. f.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Steht <var>b</var> in einer dieser Beziehungen zu <var>a</var>, so nenne ich <var>b</var> einen Nachfolder von <var>a</var>.)</div>',2),
(1800,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">In dem Sinne, in welchem wir von formalen Eigenschaften sprechen, können wir nun auch von formalen Begriffen reden.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Ich führe diesen Ausdruck ein, um den Grund der Verwechslung der formalen Begriffe mit den eigentlichen Begriffen, welche die ganze alte Logik durchzieht, klar zu machen.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Dass etwas unter einen formalen Begriff als dessen Gegenstand fällt, kann nicht durch einen Satz ausgedrückt werden. Sondern es zeigt sich an dem Zeichen dieses Gegenstandes selbst. (Der Name zeigt, dass er einen Gegenstand bezeichnet, das Zahlenzeichen, dass es eine Zahl bezeichnet etc.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Die formalen Begriffe können ja nicht, wie die eigentlichen Begriffe, durch eine Funktion dargestellt werden.</div><div class=\"ger\">Denn ihre Merkmale, die formalen Eigenschaften, werden nicht durch Funktionen ausgedrückt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Ausdruck der formalen Eigenschaft ist ein Zug gewisser Symbole.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das Zeichen der Merkmale eines formalen Begriffes ist also ein charakteristischer Zug aller Symbole, deren Bedeutungen unter den Begriff fallen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Ausdruck des formalen Begriffes, also, eine Satzvariable, in welcher nur dieser charakteristische Zug konstant ist.</div>',2),
(1801,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Satzvariable bezeichnet den formalen Begriff und ihre Werte die Gegenstände, welche unter diesen Begriff fallen.</div>',2),
(1802,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Jede Variable ist das Zeichen eines formalen Begriffes.</div><div class=\"ger\">Denn jede Variable stellt eine konstante Form dar, welche alle ihre Werte besitzen, und die als formale Eigenschaft dieser Werte aufgefasst werden kann.</div>',2),
(1803,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">So ist der variable Name „<var>x</var>“ das eigentliche Zeichen des Scheinbegriffes <em class=\"germph\">Gegenstand</em>.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wo immer das Wort „Gegenstand“ („Ding“, „Sache“, etc.) richtig gebraucht wird, wird es in der Begriffsschrift durch den variablen Namen ausgedrückt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Zum Beispiel in dem Satz „es gibt 2 Gegenstände, welche …“ durch „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)</span>…“.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wo immer es anders, also als eigentliches Begriffswort gebraucht wird, entstehen unsinnige Scheinsätze.</div><div class=\"ger\">So kann man z. B. nicht sagen „Es gibt Gegenstände“, wie man etwa sagt: „Es gibt Bücher“. Und ebenso wenig: „Es gibt 100 Gegenstände“, oder „Es gibt <span class=\"symbol\">ℵ</span><sub>0</sub> Gegenstände“.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und es ist unsinnig, von der <em class=\"germph\">Anzahl aller Gegenstände</em> zu sprechen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dasselbe gilt von den Worten „Komplex“, „Tatsache“, „Funktion“, „Zahl“, etc.</div><div class=\"ger\">Sie alle bezeichnen formale Begriffe und werden in der Begriffsschrift durch Variable, nicht durch Funktionen oder Klassen dargestellt. (Wie Frege und Russell glaubten.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Ausdrücke wie „1 ist eine Zahl“, „Es gibt nur Eine Null“ und alle ähnlichen sind unsinnig.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Es ist ebenso unsinnig zu sagen: „Es gibt nur Eine 1“, als es unsinnig wäre, zu sagen: „2<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>2 ist um 3 Uhr gleich 4“.)</div>',2),
(1804,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der formale Begriff ist mit einem Gegenstand, der unter ihn fällt, bereits gegeben. Man kann also nicht Gegenstände eines formalen Begriffes <em class=\"germph\">und</em> den formalen Begriff selbst als Grundbegriffe einführen. Man kann also z. B. nicht den Begriff der Funktion, und auch spezielle Funktionen (wie Russell) als Grundbegriffe einführen; oder den Begriff der Zahl und bestimmte Zahlen.</div>',2),
(1805,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wollen wir den allgemeinen Satz: „<var>b</var> ist ein Nachfolger von <var>a</var>“ in der Begriffsschrift ausdrücken, so brauchen wir hierzu einen Ausdruck für das allgemeine Glied der Formenreihe: </div><div class=\"ger\"><div class=\"centered\"><var>aRb</var>,<br />\n<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRb</var>,<br />\n<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>):</span><var>aRx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>xRy</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>yRb</var>,<br />\n… .</div> </div>',2),
(1806,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Frage nach der Existenz eines formalen Begriffes ist unsinnig. Denn kein Satz kann eine solche Frage beantworten.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Man kann also z. B. nicht fragen: „Gibt es unanalysierbare Subjekt-Prädikatsätze?“)</div>',2),
(1807,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die logischen Formen sind zah<em class=\"germph\">llos</em>.</div><div class=\"ger\">Darum gibt es in der Logik keine ausgezeichneten Zahlen und darum gibt es keinen philosophischen Monismus oder Dualismus, etc.</div>',2),
(1808,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Sinn des Satzes ist seine Übereinstimmung und Nichtübereinstimmung mit den Möglichkeiten des Bestehens und Nichtbestehens der Sachverhalte.</div>',2),
(1809,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der einfachste Satz, der Elementarsatz, behauptet das Bestehen eines Sachverhaltes.</div>',2),
(1810,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ein Zeichen des Elementarsatzes ist es, dass kein Elementarsatz mit ihm in Widerspruch stehen kann.</div>',2),
(1811,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Elementarsatz besteht aus Namen. Er ist ein Zusammenhang, eine Verkettung, von Namen.</div>',2),
(1812,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist offenbar, dass wir bei der Analyse der Sätze auf Elementarsätze kommen müssen, die aus Namen in unmittelbarer Verbindung bestehen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es frägt sich hier, wie kommt der Satzverband zustande.</div>',2),
(1813,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Auch wenn die Welt unendlich komplex ist, so dass jede Tatsache aus unendlich vielen Sachverhalten besteht und jeder Sachverhalt aus unendlich vielen Gegenständen zusammengesetzt ist, auch dann müsste es Gegenstände und Sachverhalte geben.</div>',2),
(1814,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Name kommt im Satz nur im Zusammenhange des Elementarsatzes vor.</div>',2),
(1815,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Namen sind die einfachen Symbole, ich deute sie durch einzelne Buchstaben („<var>x</var>“, „<var>y</var>“, „<var>z</var>“) an.</div><div class=\"ger\">Den Elementarsatz schreibe ich als Funktion der Namen in der Form: „<var>fx</var>“, „<var>ϕ</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)“, etc.</div><div class=\"ger\">Oder ich deute ihn durch die Buchstaben <var>p</var>, <var>q</var>, <var>r</var> an.</div>',2),
(1816,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Gebrauche ich zwei Zeichen in ein und derselben Bedeutung, so drücke ich dies aus, indem ich zwischen beide das Zeichen „=“ setze.</div><div class=\"ger\">„<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>“ heißt also: das Zeichen „<var>a</var>“ ist durch das Zeichen „<var>b</var>“ ersetzbar.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Führe ich durch eine Gleichung ein neues Zeichen „<var>b</var>“ ein, indem ich bestimme, es solle ein bereits bekanntes Zeichen „<var>a</var>“ ersetzen, so schreibe ich die Gleichung—Definition—(wie Russell) in der Form „<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var> Def.“. Die Definition ist eine Zeichenregel.)</div>',2),
(1817,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ausdrücke von der Form „<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>“ sind also nur Behelfe der Darstellung; sie sagen nichts über die Bedeutung der Zeichen „<var>a</var>“, „<var>b</var>“ aus.</div>',2),
(1818,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Können wir zwei Namen verstehen, ohne zu wissen, ob sie dasselbe Ding oder zwei verschiedene Dinge bezeichnen?—Können wir einen Satz, worin zwei Namen vorkommen, verstehen, ohne zu wissen, ob sie Dasselbe oder Verschiedenes bedeuten?</div><div class=\"ger\">Kenne ich etwa die Bedeutung eines englischen und eines gleichbedeutenden deutschen Wortes, so ist es unmöglich, dass ich nicht weiß, dass die beiden gleichbedeutend sind; es ist unmöglich, dass ich sie nicht ineinander übersetzen kann.</div><div class=\"ger\">Ausdrücke wie „<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>“, oder von diesen abgeleitete, sind weder Elementarsätze, noch sonst sinnvolle Zeichen. (Dies wird sich später zeigen.)</div>',2),
(1819,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ist der Elementarsatz wahr, so besteht der Sachverhalt; ist der Elementarsatz falsch, so besteht der Sachverhalt nicht.</div>',2),
(1820,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Angabe aller wahren Elementarsätze beschreibt die Welt vollständig. Die Welt ist vollständig beschrieben durch die Angaben aller Elementarsätze plus der Angabe, welche von ihnen wahr und welche falsch sind.</div>',2),
(1821,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Bezüglich des Bestehens und Nichtbestehens von <var>n</var> Sachverhalten gibt es <table class=\"possibilities\"><tbody><tr><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middleright\">K<sub><var>n</var></sub> = </td><td class=\"summationtop\"><var class=\"smallvar\">n</var></td><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middleright\"><span class=\"largeparen\">(</span></td><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middlecenter\"><var>n</var><br /><var>ν</var></td><td rowspan=\"3\" class=\"middleleft\"><span class=\"largeparen\">)</span></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationmiddle\"><span class=\"largeop\">∑</span></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationbottom\"><span class=\"smallvar\"><var>ν</var> = 0</span></td></tr></tbody></table> Möglichkeiten.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es können alle Kombinationen der Sachverhalte bestehen, die andern nicht bestehen.</div>',2),
(1822,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Diesen Kombinationen entsprechen ebenso viele Möglichkeiten der Wahrheit—und Falschheit—von <var>n</var> Elementarsätzen.</div>',2),
(1823,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten der Elementarsätze bedeuten die Möglichkeiten des Bestehens und Nichtbestehens der Sachverhalte.</div>',2),
(1824,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten können wir durch Schemata folgender Art darstellen („W“ bedeutet „wahr“, „F“, „falsch“. Die Reihen der „W“ und „F“ unter der Reihe der Elementarsätze bedeuten in leichtverständlicher Symbolik deren Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten):</div><div class=\"ger\"><div class=\"centered\"><table class=\"truthtable\"><tbody><tr><th class=\"l\"><var>p</var></th><th class=\"m\"><var>q</var></th><th class=\"e\"><var>r</var></th></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">W</td><td class=\"m\">W</td><td class=\"e\">W</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">W</td><td class=\"e\">W</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">W</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">W</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">W</td><td class=\"m\">W</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">W</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">W</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">W</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"m\">F</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr></tbody></table><span class=\"padrthree\"></span><table class=\"truthtable\"><tbody><tr><th class=\"l\"><var>p</var></th><th class=\"e\"><var>q</var></th></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">W</td><td class=\"e\">W</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"e\">W</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">W</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr><tr><td class=\"l\">F</td><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr></tbody></table><span class=\"padrthree\"></span><table class=\"truthtable\"><tbody><tr><th class=\"e\"><var>p</var></th></tr><tr><td class=\"e\">W</td></tr><tr><td class=\"e\">F</td></tr></tbody></table></div></div>',2),
(1825,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz ist der Ausdruck der Übereinstimmung und Nichtübereinstimmung mit den Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten der Elementarsätze.</div>',2),
(1826,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten der Elementarsätze sind die Bedingungen der Wahrheit und Falschheit der Sätze.</div>',2),
(1827,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist von vornherein wahrscheinlich, dass die Einführung der Elementarsätze für das Verständnis aller anderen Satzarten grundlegend ist. Ja, das Verständnis der allgemeinen Sätze hängt <em class=\"germph\">fühlbar</em> von dem der Elementarsätze ab.</div>',2),
(1828,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Bezüglich der Übereinstimmung und Nichtüberein stimmung eines Satzes mit den Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten von <var>n</var> Elementarsätzen gibt es <table class=\"possibilities\"><tbody><tr><td class=\"summationtop\"><span class=\"smallvar\">K<sub><var>n</var></sub></span></td><td class=\"middleright\" rowspan=\"3\"><span class=\"largeparen\">(</span></td><td class=\"middlecenter\" rowspan=\"3\">K<sub><var>n</var></sub><br /><var>κ</var></td><td class=\"middleright\" rowspan=\"3\"><span class=\"largeparen\">)</span> = L<sub><var>n</var></sub></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationmiddle\"><span class=\"largeop\">∑</span></td></tr><tr><td class=\"summationmiddle\"><span class=\"smallvar\"><var>κ</var> = 0</span></td></tr></tbody></table> Möglichkeiten.</div>',2),
(1829,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Übereinstimmung mit den Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten können wir dadurch ausdrücken, indem wir ihnen im Schema etwa das Abzeichen „W“ (wahr) zuordnen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das Fehlen dieses Abzeichens bedeutet die Nichtübereinstimmung.</div>',2),
(1830,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Ausdruck der Übereinstimmung und Nichtübereinstimmung mit den Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten der Elementarsätze drückt die Wahrheitsbedingungen des Satzes aus.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Satz ist der Ausdruck seiner Wahrheitsbedingungen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Frege hat sie daher ganz richtig als Erklärung der Zeichen seiner Begriffsschrift vorausgeschickt. Nur ist die Erklärung des Wahrheitsbegriffes bei Frege falsch: Wären „das Wahre“ und „das Falsche“ wirklich Gegenstände und die Argumente in <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var> etc. dann wäre nach Freges Bestimmung der Sinn von „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ keineswegs bestimmt.)</div>',2),
(1831,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Zeichen, welches durch die Zuordnung jener Abzeichen „W“ und der Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten entsteht, ist ein Satzzeichen.</div>',2),
(1832,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist klar, dass dem Komplex der Zeichen „F“ und „W“ kein Gegenstand (oder Komplex von Gegenständen) entspricht; so wenig, wie den horizontalen und vertikalen Strichen oder den Klammern.—„Logische Gegenstände“ gibt es nicht.</div><div class=\"ger\">Analoges gilt natürlich für alle Zeichen, die dasselbe ausdrücken wie die Schemata der „W“ und „F“.</div>',2),
(1833,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist z. B.:</div>',2),
(1834,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Für <var>n</var> Elementarsätze gibt es <span class=\"mathrm\"><var>L</var></span><sub><var>n</var></sub> mögliche Gruppen von Wahrheitsbedingungen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Gruppen von Wahrheitsbedingungen, welche zu den Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten einer Anzahl von Elementarsätzen gehören, lassen sich in eine Reihe ordnen.</div>',2),
(1835,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Unter den möglichen Gruppen von Wahrheitsbedingungen gibt es zwei extreme Fälle.</div><div class=\"ger\">In dem einen Fall ist der Satz für sämtliche Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten der Elementarsätze wahr. Wir sagen, die Wahrheitsbedingungen sind <em class=\"germph\">tautologisch</em>.</div><div class=\"ger\">Im zweiten Fall ist der Satz für sämtliche Wahrheitsmöglichkeiten falsch: Die Wahrheitsbedingungen sind <em class=\"germph\">kontradiktorisch</em>.</div><div class=\"ger\">Im ersten Fall nennen wir den Satz eine Tautologie, im zweiten Fall eine Kontradiktion.</div>',2),
(1836,'2011-10-03 12:17:02','2011-10-03 12:17:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz zeigt was er sagt, die Tautologie und die Kontradiktion, dass sie nichts sagen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Tautologie hat keine Wahrheitsbedingungen, denn sie ist bedingungslos wahr; und die Kontradiktion ist unter keiner Bedingung wahr.</div><div class=\"ger\">Tautologie und Kontradiktion sind sinnlos.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Wie der Punkt, von dem zwei Pfeile in entgegengesetzter Richtung auseinandergehen.)</div><div class=\"ger\">(Ich weiß z. B. nichts über das Wetter, wenn ich weiß, dass es regnet oder nicht regnet.)</div>',2),
(1837,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Tautologie und Kontradiktion sind aber nicht unsinnig; sie gehören zum Symbolismus, und zwar ähnlich wie die „0“ zum Symbolismus der Arithmetik.</div>',2),
(1838,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Tautologie und Kontradiktion sind nicht Bilder der Wirklichkeit. Sie stellen keine mögliche Sachlage dar. Denn jene lässt <em class=\"germph\">jede</em> mögliche Sachlage zu, diese <em class=\"germph\">keine</em>.</div><div class=\"ger\">In der Tautologie heben die Bedingungen der Übereinstimmung mit der Welt—die darstellenden Beziehungen—einander auf, so dass sie in keiner darstellenden Beziehung zur Wirklichkeit steht.</div>',2),
(1839,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wahrheitsbedingungen bestimmen den Spielraum, der den Tatsachen durch den Satz gelassen wird.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Der Satz, das Bild, das Modell, sind im negativen Sinne wie ein fester Körper, der die Bewegungsfreiheit der anderen beschränkt; im positiven Sinne, wie der von fester Substanz begrenzte Raum, worin ein Körper Platz hat.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Tautologie lässt der Wirklichkeit den ganzen—unendlichen—logischen Raum; die Kontradiktion erfüllt den ganzen logischen Raum und lässt der Wirklichkeit keinen Punkt. Keine von beiden kann daher die Wirklichkeit irgendwie bestimmen.</div>',2),
(1840,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wahrheit der Tautologie ist gewiss, des Satzes möglich, der Kontradiktion unmöglich.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Gewiss, möglich, unmöglich: Hier haben wir das Anzeichen jener Gradation, die wir in der Wahrscheinlichkeitslehre brauchen.)</div>',2),
(1841,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das logische Produkt einer Tautologie und eines Satzes sagt dasselbe, wie der Satz. Also ist jenes Produkt identisch mit dem Satz. Denn man kann das Wesentliche des Symbols nicht ändern, ohne seinen Sinn zu ändern.</div>',2),
(1842,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Einer bestimmten logischen Verbindung von Zeichen entspricht eine bestimmte logische Verbindung ihrer Bedeutungen; <em class=\"germph\">jede beliebige</em> Verbindung entspricht nur den unverbundenen Zeichen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das heißt, Sätze, die für jede Sachlage wahr sind, können überhaupt keine Zeichenverbindungen sein, denn sonst könnten ihnen nur bestimmte Verbindungen von Gegenständen entsprechen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Und keiner logischen Verbindung entspricht <em class=\"germph\">keine</em> Verbindung der Gegenstände.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Tautologie und Kontradiktion sind die Grenzfälle der Zeichenverbindung, nämlich ihre Auflösung.</div>',2),
(1843,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Freilich sind auch in der Tautologie und Kontradiktion die Zeichen noch mit einander verbunden, d. h. sie stehen in Beziehungen zu einander, aber diese Beziehungen sind bedeutungslos, dem <em class=\"germph\">Symbol</em> unwesentlich.</div>',2),
(1844,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nun scheint es möglich zu sein, die allgemeinste Satzform anzugeben: das heißt, eine Beschreibung der Sätze <em class=\"germph\">irgend einer</em> Zeichensprache zu geben, so dass jeder mögliche Sinn durch ein Symbol, auf welches die Beschreibung passt, ausgedrückt werden kann, und dass jedes Symbol, worauf die Beschreibung passt, einen Sinn ausdrücken kann, wenn die Bedeutungen der Namen entsprechend gewählt werden.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es ist klar, dass bei der Beschreibung der allgemeinsten Satzform <em class=\"germph\">nur</em> ihr Wesentliches beschrieben werden darf,—sonst wäre sie nämlich nicht die allgemeinste.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dass es eine allgemeine Satzform gibt, wird dadurch bewiesen, dass es keinen Satz geben darf, dessen Form man nicht hätte voraussehen (d. h. konstruieren) können. Die allgemeine Form des Satzes ist: Es verhält sich so und so.</div>',2),
(1845,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Angenommen, mir wären <em class=\"germph\">alle</em> Elementarsätze gegeben: Dann lässt sich einfach fragen: Welche Sätze kann ich aus ihnen bilden? Und das sind <em class=\"germph\">alle</em> Sätze und <em class=\"germph\">so</em> sind sie begrenzt.</div>',2),
(1846,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Sätze sind alles, was aus der Gesamtheit aller Elementarsätze folgt (natürlich auch daraus, dass es die <em class=\"germph\">Gesamtheit aller</em> ist). (So könnte man in gewissem Sinne sagen, dass <em class=\"germph\">alle</em> Sätze Verallgemeinerungen der Elementarsätze sind.)</div>',2),
(1847,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die allgemeine Satzform ist eine Variable.</div>',2),
(1848,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz ist eine Wahrheitsfunktion der Elementarsätze.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Der Elementarsatz ist eine Wahrheitsfunktion seiner selbst.)</div>',2),
(1849,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Elementarsätze sind die Wahrheitsargumente des Satzes.</div>',2),
(1850,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es liegt nahe, die Argumente von Funktionen mit den Indices von Namen zu verwechseln. Ich erkenne nämlich sowohl am Argument wie am Index die Bedeutung des sie enthaltenden Zeichens.</div><div class=\"ger\">In Russells „+<sub><var>c</var></sub>“ ist z.B. „<sub><var>c</var></sub>“ ein Index, der darauf hinweist, dass das ganze Zeichen das Additionszeichen für Kardinalzahlen ist. Aber diese Bezeichnung beruht auf willkürlicher Übereinkunft und man könnte statt „+<sub><var>c</var></sub>“ auch ein einfaches Zeichen wählen; in „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ aber ist „<var>p</var>“ kein Index, sondern ein Argument: der Sinn von „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ <em class=\"germph\">kann nicht</em> verstanden werden, ohne dass vorher der Sinn von „<var>p</var>“ verstanden worden wäre. (Im Namen <NAME> ist „Julius“ ein Index. Der Index ist immer ein Teil einer Beschreibung des Gegenstandes, dessen Namen wir ihn anhängen. Z. B. <em class=\"germph\">der</em> Cäsar aus dem Geschlechte der Julier.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Verwechslung von Argument und Index liegt, wenn ich mich nicht irre, der Theorie Freges von der Bedeutung der Sätze und Funktionen zugrunde. Für Frege waren die Sätze der Logik Namen, und deren Argumente die Indices dieser Namen.</div>',2),
(1851,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wahrheitsfunktionen lassen sich in Reihen ordnen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das ist die Grundlage der Wahrscheinlichkeitslehre.</div>',2),
(1852,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wahrheitsfunktionen jeder Anzahl von Elementarsätzen lassen sich in einem Schema folgender Art hinschreiben:</div>',2),
(1853,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Sind die Wahrheitsgründe, die einer Anzahl von Sätzen gemeinsam sind, sämtlich auch Wahrheitsgründe eines bestimmten Satzes, so sagen wir, die Wahrheit dieses Satzes folge aus der Wahrheit jener Sätze.</div>',2),
(1854,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Insbesondere folgt die Wahrheit eines Satzes „<var>p</var>“ aus der Wahrheit eines anderen „<var>q</var>“, wenn alle Wahrheitsgründe des zweiten Wahrheitsgründe des ersten sind.</div>',2),
(1855,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wahrheitsgründe des einen sind in denen des anderen enthalten; <var>p</var> folgt aus <var>q</var>.</div>',2),
(1856,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Folgt <var>p</var> aus <var>q</var>, so ist der Sinn von „<var>p</var>“ im Sinne von „<var>q</var>“ enthalten.</div>',2),
(1857,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wenn ein Gott eine Welt erschafft, worin gewisse Sätze wahr sind, so schafft er damit auch schon eine Welt, in welcher alle ihre Folgesätze stimmen. Und ähnlich könnte er keine Welt schaffen, worin der Satz „<var>p</var>“ wahr ist, ohne seine sämtlichen Gegenstände zu schaffen.</div>',2),
(1858,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz bejaht jeden Satz, der aus ihm folgt.</div>',2),
(1859,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">„<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>q</var>“ ist einer der Sätze, welche „<var>p</var>“ bejahen, und zugleich einer der Sätze, welche „<var>q</var>“ bejahen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Zwei Sätze sind einander entgegengesetzt, wenn es keinen sinnvollen Satz gibt, der sie beide bejaht.</div><div class=\"ger\">Jeder Satz der einem anderen widerspricht, verneint ihn.</div>',2),
(1860,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass die Wahrheit eines Satzes aus der Wahrheit anderer Sätze folgt, ersehen wir aus der Struktur der Sätze.</div>',2),
(1861,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Folgt die Wahrheit eines Satzes aus der Wahrheit anderer, so drückt sich dies durch Beziehungen aus, in welchen die Formen jener Sätze zu einander stehen; und zwar brauchen wir sie nicht erst in jene Beziehungen zu setzen, indem wir sie in einem Satz miteinander verbinden, sondern diese Beziehungen sind intern und bestehen, sobald, und dadurch dass, jene Sätze bestehen.</div>',2),
(1862,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wenn wir von <var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var> und <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var> auf <var>q</var> schließen, so ist hier durch die Bezeichnungsweise die Beziehung der Satzformen von „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>“ und „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ verhüllt. Schreiben wir aber z. B. statt „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>“ „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.|.</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>q</var>“ und statt „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>p</var>“ (<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">|</span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>weder <var>p</var>, noch <var>q</var>), so wird der innere Zusammenhang offenbar.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Dass man aus <span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var> auf <var>fa</var> schließen kann, das zeigt, dass die Allgemeinheit auch im Symbol „<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>“ vorhanden ist.)</div>',2),
(1863,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Folgt <var>p</var> aus <var>q</var>, so kann ich von <var>q</var> auf <var>p</var> schließen; <var>p</var> aus <var>q</var> folgern.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Art des Schlusses ist allein aus den beiden Sätzen zu entnehmen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Nur sie selbst können den Schluss rechtfertigen.</div><div class=\"ger\">„Schlussgesetze“, welche—wie bei Frege und Russell—die Schlüsse rechtfertigen sollen, sind sinnlos, und wären überflüssig.</div>',2),
(1864,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Alles Folgern geschieht a priori.</div>',2),
(1865,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Aus einem Elementarsatz lässt sich kein anderer folgern.</div>',2),
(1866,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Auf keine Weise kann aus dem Bestehen irgend einer Sachlage auf das Bestehen einer von ihr gänzlich verschiedenen Sachlage geschlossen werden.</div>',2),
(1867,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Einen Kausalnexus, der einen solchen Schluss rechtfertigte, gibt es nicht.</div>',2),
(1868,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Ereignisse der Zukunft <em class=\"germph\">können</em> wir nicht aus den gegenwärtigen erschließen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Glaube an den Kausalnexus ist der <em class=\"germph\">Aberglaube</em>.</div>',2),
(1869,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Willensfreiheit besteht darin, dass zukünftige Handlungen jetzt nicht gewusst werden können. Nur dann könnten wir sie wissen, wenn die Kausalität eine <em class=\"germph\">innere</em> Notwendigkeit wäre, wie die des logischen Schlusses.—Der Zusammenhang von Wissen und Gewusstem ist der der logischen Notwendigkeit.</div><div class=\"ger\">(„A weiß, dass <var>p</var> der Fall ist“ ist sinnlos, wenn <var>p</var> eine Tautologie ist.)</div>',2),
(1870,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wenn daraus, dass ein Satz uns einleuchtet, nicht <em class=\"germph\">folgt</em>, dass er wahr ist, so ist das Einleuchten auch keine Rechtfertigung für unseren Glauben an seine Wahrheit.</div>',2),
(1871,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Folgt ein Satz aus einem anderen, so sagt dieser mehr als jener, jener weniger als dieser.</div>',2),
(1872,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Folgt <var>p</var> aus <var>q</var> und <var>q</var> aus <var>p</var>, so sind sie ein und derselbe Satz.</div>',2),
(1873,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Tautologie folgt aus allen Sätzen: sie sagt nichts.</div>',2),
(1874,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Kontradiktion ist das Gemeinsame der Sätze, was <em class=\"germph\">kein</em> Satz mit einem anderen gemein hat. Die Tautologie ist das Gemeinsame aller Sätze, welche nichts miteinander gemein haben.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Kontradiktion verschwindet sozusagen außerhalb, die Tautologie innerhalb aller Sätze.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Kontradiktion ist die äußere Grenze der Sätze, die Tautologie ihr substanzloser Mittelpunkt.</div>',2),
(1875,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ist <span class=\"mathrm\">W</span><sub><var>r</var></sub> die Anzahl der Wahrheitsgründe des Satzes „<var>r</var>“, <span class=\"mathrm\">W</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub> die Anzahl derjenigen Wahrheitsgründe des Satzes „<var>s</var>“, die zugleich Wahrheitsgründe von „<var>r</var>“ sind, dann nennen wir das Verhältnis: <span class=\"mathrm\">W</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub> : <span class=\"mathrm\">W</span><sub><var>r</var></sub> das Maß der <em class=\"germph\">Wahrscheinlichkeit</em>, welche der Satz „<var>r</var>“ dem Satz „<var>s</var>“ gibt.</div>',2),
(1876,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Sei in einem Schema wie dem obigen in No. 5.101 <span class=\"mathrm\">W</span><sub><var>r</var></sub> die Anzahl der „W“ im Satze <var>r</var>; <span class=\"mathrm\">W</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub> die Anzahl derjenigen „W“ im Satze <var>s</var>, die in gleichen Kolonnen mit „W“ des Satzes <var>r</var> stehen. Der Satz <var>r</var> gibt dann dem Satze <var>s</var> die Wahrscheinlichkeit: <span class=\"mathrm\">W</span><sub><var>rs</var></sub> : <span class=\"mathrm\">W</span><sub><var>r</var></sub>.</div>',2),
(1877,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es gibt keinen besonderen Gegenstand, der den Wahrscheinlichkeitssätzen eigen wäre.</div>',2),
(1878,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Sätze, welche keine Wahrheitsargumente mit einander gemein haben, nennen wir von einander unabhängig.</div><div class=\"ger\">Zwei Elementarsätze geben einander die Wahrscheinlichkeit ½.</div><div class=\"ger\">Folgt <var>p</var> aus <var>q</var>, so gibt der Satz „<var>q</var>“ dem Satz „<var>p</var>“ die Wahrscheinlichkeit 1. Die Gewissheit des logischen Schlusses ist ein Grenzfall der Wahrscheinlichkeit.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Anwendung auf Tautologie und Kontradiktion.)</div>',2),
(1879,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ein Satz ist an sich weder wahrscheinlich noch unwahrscheinlich. Ein Ereignis trifft ein, oder es trifft nicht ein, ein Mittelding gibt es nicht.</div>',2),
(1880,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">In einer Urne seien gleichviel weiße und schwarze Kugeln (und keine anderen). Ich ziehe eine Kugel nach der anderen und lege sie wieder in die Urne zurück. Dann kann ich durch den Versuch feststellen, dass sich die Zahlen der gezogenen schwarzen und weißen Kugeln bei fortgesetztem Ziehen einander nähern.</div><div class=\"ger\"><em class=\"germph\">Das</em> ist also kein mathematisches Faktum.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wenn ich nun sage: Es ist gleich wahrscheinlich, dass ich eine weiße Kugel wie eine schwarze ziehen werde, so heißt das: Alle mir bekannten Umstände (die hypothetisch angenommenen Naturgesetze mitinbegriffen) geben dem Eintreffen des einen Ereignisses nicht <em class=\"germph\">mehr</em> Wahrscheinlichkeit als dem Eintreffen des anderen. Das heißt, sie geben—wie aus den obigen Erklärungen leicht zu entnehmen ist—jedem die Wahrscheinlichkeit ½.</div><div class=\"ger\">Was ich durch den Versuch bestätige ist, dass das Eintreffen der beiden Ereignisse von den Umständen, die ich nicht näher kenne, unabhängig ist.</div>',2),
(1881,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Einheit des Wahrscheinlichkeitssatzes ist: Die Umstände—die ich sonst nicht weiter kenne—geben dem Eintreffen eines bestimmten Ereignisses den und den Grad der Wahrscheinlichkeit.</div>',2),
(1882,'2011-10-03 12:17:03','2011-10-03 12:17:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">So ist die Wahrscheinlichkeit eine Verallgemeinerung.</div><div class=\"ger\">Sie involviert eine allgemeine Beschreibung einer Satzform.</div><div class=\"ger\">Nur in Ermanglung der Gewissheit gebrauchen wir die Wahrscheinlichkeit.—Wenn wir zwar eine Tatsache nicht vollkommen kennen, wohl aber <em class=\"germph\">etwas</em> über ihre Form wissen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Ein Satz kann zwar ein unvollständiges Bild einer gewissen Sachlage sein, aber er ist immer <em class=\"germph\">ein</em> vollständiges Bild.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Wahrscheinlichkeitssatz ist gleichsam ein Auszug aus anderen Sätzen.</div>',2),
(1883,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Strukturen der Sätze stehen in internen Beziehungen zu einander.</div>',2),
(1884,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wir können diese internen Beziehungen dadurch in unserer Ausdrucksweise hervorheben, dass wir einen Satz als Resultat einer Operation darstellen, die ihn aus anderen Sätzen (den Basen der Operation) hervorbringt.</div>',2),
(1885,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Operation ist der Ausdruck einer Beziehung zwischen den Strukturen ihres Resultats und ihrer Basen.</div>',2),
(1886,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Operation ist das, was mit dem einen Satz geschehen muss, um aus ihm den anderen zu machen.</div>',2),
(1887,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Und das wird natürlich von ihren formalen Eigenschaften, von der internen Ähnlichkeit ihrer Formen abhängen.</div>',2),
(1888,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die interne Relation, die eine Reihe ordnet, ist äquivalent mit der Operation, durch welche ein Glied aus dem anderen entsteht.</div>',2),
(1889,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Operation kann erst dort auftreten, wo ein Satz auf logisch bedeutungsvolle Weise aus einem anderen entsteht. Also dort, wo die logische Konstruktion des Satzes anfängt.</div>',2),
(1890,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wahrheitsfunktionen der Elementarsätze sind Resultate von Operationen, die die Elementarsätze als Basen haben. (Ich nenne diese Operationen Wahrheitsoperationen.)</div>',2),
(1891,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Sinn einer Wahrheitsfunktion von <var>p</var> ist eine Funktion des Sinnes von <var>p</var>.</div><div class=\"ger\">Verneinung, logische Addition, logische Multiplikation, etc., etc. sind Operationen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Die Verneinung verkehrt den Sinn des Satzes.)</div>',2),
(1892,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Operation zeigt sich in einer Variablen; sie zeigt, wie man von einer Form von Sätzen zu einer anderen gelangen kann.</div><div class=\"ger\">Sie bringt den Unterschied der Formen zum Ausdruck.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Und das Gemeinsame zwischen den Basen und dem Resultat der Operation sind eben die Basen.)</div>',2),
(1893,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Operation kennzeichnet keine Form, sondern nur den Unterschied der Formen.</div>',2),
(1894,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dieselbe Operation, die „<var>q</var>“ aus „<var>p</var>“ macht, macht aus „<var>q</var>“ „<var>r</var>“ u. s. f. Dies kann nur darin ausgedrückt sein, dass „<var>p</var>“, „<var>q</var>“, „<var>r</var>“, etc. Variable sind, die gewisse formale Relationen allgemein zum Ausdruck bringen.</div>',2);
INSERT INTO `tractatusapp_textfragment` (`id`, `created_at`, `updated_at`, `editedrecord`, `review`, `internal_notes`, `created_by_id`, `updated_by_id`, `contents`, `language_id`)
VALUES
(1895,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Vorkommen der Operation charakterisiert den Sinn des Satzes nicht.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Operation sagt ja nichts aus, nur ihr Resultat, und dies hängt von den Basen der Operation ab.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Operation und Funktion dürfen nicht miteinander verwechselt werden.)</div>',2),
(1896,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Eine Funktion kann nicht ihr eigenes Argument sein, wohl aber kann das Resultat einer Operation ihre eigene Basis werden.</div>',2),
(1897,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nur so ist das Fortschreiten von Glied zu Glied in einer Formenreihe (von Type zu Type in den Hierarchien Russells und Whiteheads) möglich. (Russell und Whitehead haben die Möglichkeit dieses Fortschreitens nicht zugegeben, aber immer wieder von ihr Gebrauch gemacht.)</div>',2),
(1898,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die fortgesetzte Anwendung einer Operation auf ihr eigenes Resultat nenne ich ihre successive Anwendung („<span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>a</var>“ ist das Resultat der dreimaligen successiven Anwendung von „<span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>“ auf „<var>a</var>“).</div><div class=\"ger\">In einem ähnlichen Sinne rede ich von der successiven Anwendung <em class=\"germph\">mehrerer</em> Operationen auf eine Anzahl von Sätzen.</div>',2),
(1899,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das allgemeine Glied einer Formenreihe <var>a</var>, <span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>a</var>, <span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>a</var>,<span class=\"mathrel\">…</span> schreibe ich daher so: „[<var>a</var>, <var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"mathrm\"><var>O</var>’</span></span><var>x</var>]“. Dieser Klammerausdruck ist eine Variable. Das erste Glied des Klammerausdruckes ist der Anfang der Formenreihe, das zweite die Form eines beliebigen Gliedes <var>x</var> der Reihe und das dritte die Form desjenigen Gliedes der Reihe, welches auf <var>x</var> unmittelbar folgt.</div>',2),
(1900,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Begriff der successiven Anwendung der Operation ist äquivalent mit dem Begriff „und so weiter“.</div>',2),
(1901,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Eine Operation kann die Wirkung einer anderen rückgängig machen. Operationen können einander aufheben.</div>',2),
(1902,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Operation kann verschwinden (z. B. die Verneinung in „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“: <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>p</var>).</div>',2),
(1903,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Alle Sätze sind Resultate von Wahrheitsoperationen mit den Elementarsätzen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Wahrheitsoperation ist die Art und Weise, wie aus den Elementarsätzen die Wahrheitsfunktion entsteht.</div><div class=\"ger\">Nach dem Wesen der Wahrheitsoperation wird auf die gleiche Weise, wie aus den Elementarsätzen ihre Wahrheitsfunktion, aus Wahrheitsfunktionen eine neue. Jede Wahrheitsoperation erzeugt aus Wahrheitsfunktionen von Elementarsätzen wieder eine Wahrheitsfunktion von Elementarsätzen, einen Satz. Das Resultat jeder Wahrheitsoperation mit den Resultaten von Wahrheitsoperationen mit Elementarsätzen ist wieder das Resultat <em class=\"germph\">Einer</em> Wahrheitsoperation mit Elementarsätzen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Jeder Satz ist das Resultat von Wahrheitsoperationen mit Elementarsätzen.</div>',2),
(1904,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Schemata No. 4.31 haben auch dann eine Bedeutung, wenn „<var>p</var>“, „<var>q</var>“, „<var>r</var>“, etc. nicht Elementarsätze sind.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und es ist leicht zu sehen, dass das Satzzeichen in No. 4.442, auch wenn „<var>p</var>“ und „<var>q</var>“ Wahrheitsfunktionen von Elementarsätzen sind, Eine Wahrheitsfunktion von Elementarsätzen ausdrückt.</div>',2),
(1905,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Alle Wahrheitsfunktionen sind Resultate der successiven Anwendung einer endlichen Anzahl von Wahrheitsoperationen auf die Elementarsätze.</div>',2),
(1906,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Hier zeigt es sich, dass es „logische Gegenstände“, „logische Konstante“ (im Sinne Freges und Russells) nicht gibt.</div>',2),
(1907,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Denn: Alle Resultate von Wahrheitsoperationen mit Wahrheitsfunktionen sind identisch, welche eine und dieselbe Wahrheitsfunktion von Elementarsätzen sind.</div>',2),
(1908,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span>, <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span>, etc. nicht Beziehungen im Sinne von rechts und links etc. sind, leuchtet ein.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Möglichkeit des kreuzweisen Definierens der logischen „Urzeichen“ Freges und Russells zeigt schon, dass diese keine Urzeichen sind, und schon erst recht, dass sie keine Relationen bezeichnen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und es ist offenbar, dass das „<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>“, welches wir durch „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>“ und „<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>“ definieren, identisch ist mit dem, durch welches wir „<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>“ mit „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>“ definieren, und dass dieses „<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>“ mit dem ersten identisch ist. U. s. w.</div>',2),
(1909,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass aus einer Tatsache <var>p</var> unendlich viele <em class=\"germph\">andere</em> folgen sollten, nämlich <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, etc., ist doch von vornherein kaum zu glauben. Und nicht weniger merkwürdig ist, dass die unendliche Anzahl der Sätze der Logik (der Mathematik) aus einem halben Dutzend „Grundgesetzen“ folgen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Alle Sätze der Logik sagen aber dasselbe. Nämlich nichts.</div>',2),
(1910,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Wahrheitsfunktionen sind keine materiellen Funktionen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wenn man z. B. eine Bejahung durch doppelte Verneinung erzeugen kann, ist dann die Verneinung—in irgend einem Sinn—in der Bejahung enthalten? Verneint „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ <span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>, oder bejaht es <var>p</var>; oder beides?</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Satz „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ handelt nicht von der Verneinung wie von einem Gegenstand; wohl aber ist die Möglichkeit der Verneinung in der Bejahung bereits präjudiziert.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und gäbe es einen Gegenstand, der „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>“ hieße, so müsste „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ etwas anderes sagen als „<var>p</var>“. Denn der eine Satz würde dann eben von <span class=\"mathop\">~</span> handeln, der andere nicht.</div>',2),
(1911,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dieses Verschwinden der scheinbaren logischen Konstanten tritt auch ein, wenn „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>fx</var>“ dasselbe sagt wie „<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>“, oder „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>“ dasselbe wie „<var>fa</var>“.</div>',2),
(1912,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wenn uns ein Satz gegeben ist, so sind <em class=\"germph\">mit ihm</em> auch schon die Resultate aller Wahrheitsoperationen, die ihn zur Basis haben, gegeben.</div>',2),
(1913,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Gibt es logische Urzeichen, so muss eine richtige Logik ihre Stellung zueinander klar machen und ihr Dasein rechtfertigen. Der Bau der Logik <em class=\"germph\">aus</em> ihren Urzeichen muss klar werden.</div>',2),
(1914,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Hat die Logik Grundbegriffe, so müssen sie von einander unabhängig sein. Ist ein Grundbegriff eingeführt, so muss er in allen Verbindungen eingeführt sein, worin er überhaupt vorkommt. Man kann ihn also nicht zuerst für <em class=\"germph\">eine</em> Verbindung, dann noch einmal für eine andere einführen. Z. B.: Ist die Verneinung eingeführt, so müssen wir sie jetzt in Sätzen von der Form „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ ebenso verstehen, wie in Sätzen wie „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>)“, „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>fx</var>“ u. a. Wir dürfen sie nicht erst für die eine Klasse von Fällen, dann für die andere einführen, denn es bliebe dann zweifelhaft, ob ihre Bedeutung in beiden Fällen die gleiche wäre und es wäre kein Grund vorhanden, in beiden Fällen dieselbe Art der Zeichenverbindung zu benützen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Kurz, für die Einführung der Urzeichen gilt, mutatis mutandis, dasselbe, was Frege („Grundgesetze der Arithmetik“) für die Einführung von Zeichen durch Definitionen gesagt hat.)</div>',2),
(1915,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Einführung eines neuen Behelfes in den Symbolismus der Logik muss immer ein folgenschweres Ereignis sein. Kein neuer Behelf darf in die Logik—sozusagen, mit ganz unschuldiger Miene—in Klammern oder unter dem Striche eingeführt werden.</div><div class=\"ger\">(So kommen in den „Principia Mathematica“ von Russell und Whitehead Definitionen und Grundgesetze in Worten vor. Warum hier plötzlich Worte? Dies bedürfte einer Rechtfertigung. Sie fehlt und muss fehlen, da das Vorgehen tatsächlich unerlaubt ist.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Hat sich aber die Einführung eines neuen Behelfes an einer Stelle als nötig erwiesen, so muss man sich nun sofort fragen: Wo muss dieser Behelf nun <em class=\"germph\">immer</em> angewandt werden? Seine Stellung in der Logik muss nun erklärt werden.</div>',2),
(1916,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Alle Zahlen der Logik müssen sich rechtfertigen lassen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Oder vielmehr: Es muss sich herausstellen, dass es in der Logik keine Zahlen gibt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es gibt keine ausgezeichneten Zahlen.</div>',2),
(1917,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">In der Logik gibt es kein Nebeneinander, kann es keine Klassifikation geben.</div><div class=\"ger\">In der Logik kann es nicht Allgemeineres und Spezielleres geben.</div>',2),
(1918,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Lösungen der logischen Probleme müssen einfach sein, denn sie setzen den Standard der Einfachheit.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Menschen haben immer geahnt, dass es ein Gebiet von Fragen geben müsse, deren Antworten—a priori—symmetrisch, und zu einem abgeschlossenen, regelmäßigen Gebilde vereint liegen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Ein Gebiet, in dem der Satz gilt: simplex sigillum veri.</div>',2),
(1919,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wenn man die logischen Zeichen richtig einführte, so hätte man damit auch schon den Sinn aller ihrer Kombinationen eingeführt; also nicht nur „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>“ sondern auch schon „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>q</var>)“ etc. etc. Man hätte damit auch schon die Wirkung aller nur möglichen Kombinationen von Klammern eingeführt. Und damit wäre es klar geworden, dass die eigentlichen allgemeinen Urzeichen nicht die „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var> “, „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>“, etc. sind, sondern die allgemeinste Form ihrer Kombinationen.</div>',2),
(1920,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Bedeutungsvoll ist die scheinbar unwichtige Tatsache, dass die logischen Scheinbeziehungen, wie <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span> und <span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span>, der Klammern bedürfen—im Gegensatz zu den wirklichen Beziehungen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Benützung der Klammern mit jenen scheinbaren Urzeichen deutet ja schon darauf hin, dass diese nicht die wirklichen Urzeichen sind. Und es wird doch wohl niemand glauben, dass die Klammern eine selbständige Bedeutung haben.</div>',2),
(1921,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die logischen Operationszeichen sind Interpunktionen.</div>',2),
(1922,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist klar, dass alles, was sich überhaupt <em class=\"germph\">von vornherein</em> über die Form aller Sätze sagen lässt, sich <em class=\"germph\">auf einmal</em> sagen lassen muss.</div><div class=\"ger\">Sind ja schon im Elementarsatze alle logischen Operationen enthalten. Denn „<var>fa</var>“ sagt dasselbe wie</div><div class=\"ger\"><div class=\"displaymath\">„<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>“.</div></div><div class=\"ger\">Wo Zusammengesetztheit ist, da ist Argument und Funktion, und wo diese sind, sind bereits alle logischen Konstanten.</div><div class=\"ger\">Man könnte sagen: Die Eine logische Konstante ist das, was <em class=\"germph\">alle</em> Sätze, ihrer Natur nach, mit einander gemein haben.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das aber ist die allgemeine Satzform.</div>',2),
(1923,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die allgemeine Satzform ist das Wesen des Satzes.</div>',2),
(1924,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Wesen des Satzes angeben, heißt, das Wesen aller Beschreibung angeben, also das Wesen der Welt.</div>',2),
(1925,'2011-10-03 12:17:04','2011-10-03 12:17:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Beschreibung der allgemeinsten Satzform ist die Beschreibung des einen und einzigen allgemeinen Urzeichens der Logik.</div>',2),
(1926,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Logik muss für sich selber sorgen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Ein <em class=\"germph\">mögliches</em> Zeichen muss auch bezeichnen können. Alles was in der Logik möglich ist, ist auch erlaubt. („Sokrates ist identisch“ heißt darum nichts, weil es keine Eigenschaft gibt, die „identisch“ heißt. Der Satz ist unsinnig, weil wir eine willkürliche Bestimmung nicht getroffen haben, aber nicht darum, weil das Symbol an und für sich unerlaubt wäre.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Wir können uns, in gewissem Sinne, nicht in der Logik irren.</div>',2),
(1927,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Einleuchten, von dem Russell so viel sprach, kann nur dadurch in der Logik entbehrlich werden, dass die Sprache selbst jeden logischen Fehler verhindert.—Dass die Logik a priori ist, besteht darin, dass nicht unlogisch gedacht werden <em class=\"germph\">kann</em>.</div>',2),
(1928,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wir können einem Zeichen nicht den unrechten Sinn geben.</div>',2),
(1929,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Occams Devise ist natürlich keine willkürliche, oder durch ihren praktischen Erfolg gerechtfertigte Regel: Sie besagt, dass <em class=\"germph\">unnötige</em> Zeicheneinheiten nichts bedeuten.</div><div class=\"ger\">Zeichen, die <em class=\"germph\">Einen</em> Zweck erfüllen, sind logisch äquivalent, Zeichen, die <em class=\"germph\">keinen</em> Zweck erfüllen, logisch bedeutungslos.</div>',2),
(1930,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Frege sagt: Jeder rechtmäßig gebildete Satz muss einen Sinn haben; und ich sage: Jeder mögliche Satz ist rechtmäßig gebildet, und wenn er keinen Sinn hat, so kann das nur daran liegen, dass wir einigen seiner Bestandteile keine <em class=\"germph\">Bedeutung</em> gegeben haben.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Wenn wir auch glauben, es getan zu haben.)</div><div class=\"ger\">So sagt „Sokrates ist identisch“ darum nichts, weil wir dem Wort „identisch“ als <em class=\"germph\">Eigenschaftswort</em> <em class=\"germph\">keine</em> Bedeutung gegeben haben. Denn, wenn es als Gleichheitszeichen auftritt, so symbolisiert es auf ganz andere Art und Weise—die bezeichnende Beziehung ist eine andere,—also ist auch das Symbol in beiden Fällen ganz verschieden; die beiden Symbole haben nur das Zeichen zufällig miteinander gemein.</div>',2),
(1931,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Anzahl der nötigen Grundoperationen hängt <em class=\"germph\">nur</em> von unserer Notation ab.</div>',2),
(1932,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es kommt nur darauf an, ein Zeichensystem von einer bestimmten Anzahl von Dimensionen—von einer bestimmten mathematischen Mannigfaltigkeit—zu bilden.</div>',2),
(1933,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist klar, dass es sich hier nicht um eine <em class=\"germph\">Anzahl von Grundbegriffen</em> handelt, die bezeichnet werden müssen, sondern um den Ausdruck einer Regel.</div>',2),
(1934,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Jede Wahrheitsfunktion ist ein Resultat der successiven Anwendung der Operation <span class=\"mathop\">(-----<span class=\"mathrm\">W</span>)</span>(<var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, . . . . .) auf Elementarsätze.</div><div class=\"ger\">Diese Operation verneint sämtliche Sätze in der rechten Klammer, und ich nenne sie die Negation dieser Sätze.</div>',2),
(1935,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Einen Klammerausdruck, dessen Glieder Sätze sind, deute ich—wenn die Reihenfolge der Glieder in der Klammer gleichgültig ist—durch ein Zeichen von der Form „(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)“ an. „<var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>“ ist eine Variable, deren Werte die Glieder des Klammerausdruckes sind; und der Strich über der Variablen deutet an, dass sie ihre sämtlichen Werte in der Klammer vertritt.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Hat also <var>ξ</var> etwa die 3 Werte P, Q, R, so ist (<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>(P, Q, R).)</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Werte der Variablen werden festgesetzt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Festsetzung ist die Beschreibung der Sätze, welche die Variable vertritt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wie die Beschreibung der Glieder des Klammerausdruckes geschieht, ist unwesentlich.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wir <em class=\"germph\">können</em> drei Arten der Beschreibung unterscheiden: 1. Die direkte Aufzählung. In diesem Fall können wir statt der Variablen einfach ihre konstanten Werte setzen. 2. Die Angabe einer Funktion <var>fx</var>, deren Werte für alle Werte von <var>x</var> die zu beschreibenden Sätze sind. 3. Die Angabe eines formalen Gesetzes, nach welchem jene Sätze gebildet sind. In diesem Falle sind die Glieder des Klammerausdrucks sämtliche Glieder einer Formenreihe.</div>',2),
(1936,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ich schreibe also statt „<span class=\"mathop\">(-----<span class=\"mathrm\">W</span>)</span>(<var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, . . . . .)“ „<span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)“.</div><div class=\"ger\"><span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>) ist die Negation sämtlicher Werte der Satzvariablen <var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>.</div>',2),
(1937,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Da sich offenbar leicht ausdrücken läßt, wie mit dieser Operation Sätze gebildet werden können und wie Sätze mit ihr nicht zu bilden sind, so muss dies auch einen exakten Ausdruck finden können.</div>',2),
(1938,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Hat <var>ξ</var> nur einen Wert, so ist <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var> (nicht <var>p</var>), hat es zwei Werte, so ist <span class=\"nop\">N</span> (<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>q</var> (weder <var>p</var> noch <var>q</var>).</div>',2),
(1939,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wie kann die allumfassende, weltspiegelnde Logik so spezielle Haken und Manipulationen gebrauchen? Nur, indem sich alle diese zu einem unendlich feinen Netzwerk, zu dem großen Spiegel, verknüpfen.</div>',2),
(1940,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">„<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ ist wahr, wenn „<var>p</var>“ falsch ist. Also in dem wahren Satz „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ ist „<var>p</var>“ ein falscher Satz. Wie kann ihn nun der Strich „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>“ mit der Wirklichkeit zum Stimmen bringen?</div><div class=\"ger\">Das, was in „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ verneint, ist aber nicht das „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>“, sondern dasjenige, was allen Zeichen dieser Notation, welche <var>p</var> verneinen, gemeinsam ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">Also die gemeinsame Regel, nach welcher „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“, „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“, „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“, „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“, etc. etc. (ad inf.) gebildet werden. Und dies Gemeinsame spiegelt die Verneinung wieder.</div>',2),
(1941,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Man könnte sagen: Das Gemeinsame aller Symbole, die sowohl <var>p</var> als <var>q</var> bejahen, ist der Satz „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>q</var>“. Das Gemeinsame aller Symbole, die entweder <var>p</var> oder <var>q</var> bejahen, ist der Satz „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>“.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und so kann man sagen: Zwei Sätze sind einander entgegengesetzt, wenn sie nichts miteinander gemein haben, und: Jeder Satz hat nur ein Negativ, weil es nur einen Satz gibt, der ganz außerhalb seiner liegt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es zeigt sich so auch in Russells Notation, dass „<var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ dasselbe sagt wie „<var>q</var>“; dass „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ nichts sagt.</div>',2),
(1942,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ist eine Notation festgelegt, so gibt es in ihr eine Regel, nach der alle <var>p</var> verneinenden Sätze gebildet werden, eine Regel, nach der alle <var>p</var> bejahenden Sätze gebildet werden, eine Regel, nach der alle <var>p</var> oder <var>q</var> bejahenden Sätze gebildet werden, u. s. f. Diese Regeln sind den Symbolen äquivalent und in ihnen spiegelt sich ihr Sinn wieder.</div>',2),
(1943,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es muss sich an unseren Symbolen zeigen, dass das, was durch „<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>“, „<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span>“, etc. miteinander verbunden ist, Sätze sein müssen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und dies ist auch der Fall, denn das Symbol „<var>p</var>“ und „<var>q</var>“ setzt ja selbst das „<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>“, „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>“, etc. voraus. Wenn das Zeichen „<var>p</var>“ in „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>“ nicht für ein komplexes Zeichen steht, dann kann es allein nicht Sinn haben; dann können aber auch die mit „<var>p</var>“ gleichsinnigen Zeichen „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>p</var>“, „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>p</var>“, etc. keinen Sinn haben. Wenn aber „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>p</var>“ keinen Sinn hat, dann kann auch „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">∨</span></span><var>q</var>“ keinen Sinn haben.</div>',2),
(1944,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Muss das Zeichen des negativen Satzes mit dem Zeichen des positiven gebildet werden? Warum sollte man den negativen Satz nicht durch eine negative Tatsache ausdrücken können. (Etwa: Wenn „<var>a</var>“ nicht in einer bestimmten Beziehung zu „<var>b</var>“ steht, könnte das ausdrücken, dass <var>aRb</var> nicht der Fall ist.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Aber auch hier ist ja der negative Satz indirekt durch den positiven gebildet.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der positive <em class=\"germph\">Satz</em> muss die Existenz des negativen <em class=\"germph\">Satzes</em> voraussetzen und umgekehrt.</div>',2),
(1945,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Sind die Werte von <var>ξ</var> sämtliche Werte einer Funktion <var>fx</var> für alle Werte von <var>x</var>, so wird <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>.</div>',2),
(1946,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ich trenne den Begriff <em class=\"germph\">Alle</em> von der Wahrheitsfunktion.</div><div class=\"ger\">Frege und Russell haben die Allgemeinheit in Verbindung mit dem logischen Produkt oder der logischen Summe eingeführt. So wurde es schwer, die Sätze „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>“ und „<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>“, in welchen beide Ideen beschlossen liegen, zu verstehen.</div>',2),
(1947,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Eigentümliche der Allgemeinheitsbezeichnung ist erstens, dass sie auf ein logisches Urbild hinweist, und zweitens, dass sie Konstante hervorhebt.</div>',2),
(1948,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Allgemeinheitsbezeichnung tritt als Argument auf.</div>',2),
(1949,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wenn die Gegenstände gegeben sind, so sind uns damit auch schon <em class=\"germph\">alle</em> Gegenstände gegeben.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wenn die Elementarsätze gegeben sind, so sind damit auch <em class=\"germph\">alle</em> Elementarsätze gegeben.</div>',2),
(1950,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist unrichtig, den Satz „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var>“—wie Russell dies tut—in Worten durch „<var>fx</var> ist <em class=\"germph\">möglich</em>“ wiederzugeben.</div><div class=\"ger\">Gewißheit, Möglichkeit oder Unmöglichkeit einer Sachlage wird nicht durch einen Satz ausgedrückt, sondern dadurch, dass ein Ausdruck eine Tautologie, ein sinnvoller Satz oder eine Kontradiktion ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">Jener Präzedenzfall, auf den man sich immer berufen möchte, muss schon im Symbol selber liegen.</div>',2),
(1951,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Man kann die Welt vollständig durch vollkommen verallgemeinerte Sätze beschreiben, das heißt also, ohne irgendeinen Namen von vornherein einem bestimmten Gegenstand zuzuordnen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Um dann auf die gewöhnliche Ausdrucksweise zu kommen, muss man einfach nach einem Ausdruck: „Es gibt ein und nur ein <var>x</var>, welches …“ sagen: Und dies <var>x</var> ist <var>a</var>.</div>',2),
(1952,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ein vollkommen verallgemeinerter Satz ist, wie jeder andere Satz, zusammengesetzt. (Dies zeigt sich daran, dass wir in „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>, <var>ϕ</var>).</span><var>ϕx</var>“ „<var>ϕ</var>“ und „<var>x</var>“ getrennt erwähnen müssen. Beide stehen unabhängig in bezeichnenden Beziehungen zur Welt, wie im unverallgemeinerten Satz.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Kennzeichen des zusammengesetzten Symbols: Es hat etwas mit <em class=\"germph\">anderen</em> Symbolen gemeinsam.</div>',2),
(1953,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es verändert ja die Wahr- oder Falschheit <em class=\"germph\">jedes</em> Satzes etwas am allgemeinen Bau der Welt. Und der Spielraum, welcher ihrem Bau durch die Gesamtheit der Elementarsätze gelassen wird, ist eben derjenige, welchen die ganz allgemeinen Sätze begrenzen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Wenn ein Elementarsatz wahr ist, so ist damit doch jedenfalls Ein Elementarsatz <em class=\"germph\">mehr</em> wahr.)</div>',2),
(1954,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Gleichheit des Gegenstandes drücke ich durch Gleichheit des Zeichens aus, und nicht mit Hilfe eines Gleichheitszeichens. Verschiedenheit der Gegenstände durch Verschiedenheit der Zeichen.</div>',2),
(1955,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass die Identität keine Relation zwischen Gegenständen ist, leuchtet ein. Dies wird sehr klar, wenn man z. B. den Satz „<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>):</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>.</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>“ betrachtet. Was dieser Satz sagt, ist einfach, dass <em class=\"germph\">nur</em> <var>a</var> der Funktion <var>f</var> genügt, und nicht, dass nur solche Dinge der Funktion <var>f</var> genügen, welche eine gewisse Beziehung zu <var>a</var> haben.</div><div class=\"ger\">Man könnte nun freilich sagen, dass eben <em class=\"germph\">nur</em> <var>a</var> diese Beziehung zu <var>a</var> habe, aber, um dies auszudrücken, brauchten wir das Gleichheitszeichen selber.</div>',2),
(1956,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Russells Definition von „=“ genügt nicht; weil man nach ihr nicht sagen kann, dass zwei Gegenstände alle Eigenschaften gemeinsam haben. (Selbst wenn dieser Satz nie richtig ist, hat er doch <em class=\"germph\">Sinn</em>.)</div>',2),
(1957,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Beiläufig gesprochen: Von <em class=\"germph\">zwei</em> Dingen zu sagen, sie seien identisch, ist ein Unsinn, und von <em class=\"germph\">Einem</em> zu sagen, es sei identisch mit sich selbst, sagt gar nichts.</div>',2),
(1958,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ich schreibe also nicht „<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>b</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>“, sondern „<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>a</var>)“ (oder „<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>b</var>,<var>b</var>)“). Und nicht „<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>b</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var>“, sondern „<var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>a</var>,<var>b</var>)“.</div>',2),
(1959,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Und analog: Nicht „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>y</var>“, sondern „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>x</var>)“; und nicht „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>y</var>“, sondern „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)“.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Also statt des Russellschen „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)“: „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>y</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">∨</span>.</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>(<var>x</var>,<var>x</var>)“.)</div>',2),
(1960,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Statt „<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>):</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>“ schreiben wir also z. B. „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>.</span><var>fa</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>fy</var>“.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und der Satz: „<em class=\"germph\">nur</em> Ein <var>x</var> befriedigt <var class=\"pushvar\">f</var>( )“ lautet: „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>.</span><var>fa</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>,<var>y</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>fy</var>“.</div>',2),
(1961,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Gleichheitszeichen ist also kein wesentlicher Bestandteil der Begriffsschrift.</div>',2),
(1962,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Und nun sehen wir, dass Scheinsätze wie: „<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>“, „<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>b</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>b</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>c</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>c</var>“, „<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>x</var>“, „<span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>“, etc. sich in einer richtigen Begriffsschrift gar nicht hinschreiben lassen.</div>',2),
(1963,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Damit erledigen sich auch alle Probleme, die an solche Scheinsätze geknüpft waren.</div><div class=\"ger\">Alle Probleme, die Russells „Axiom of Infinity“ mit sich bringt, sind schon hier zu lösen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das, was das Axiom of Infinity sagen soll, würde sich in der Sprache dadurch ausdrücken, dass es unendlich viele Namen mit verschiedener Bedeutung gäbe.</div>',2),
(1964,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es gibt gewisse Fälle, wo man in Versuchung gerät, Ausdrücke von der Form „<var>a</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>a</var>“ oder „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>p</var>“ u. dgl. zu benützen. Und zwar geschieht dies, wenn man von dem Urbild: Satz, Ding, etc. reden möchte. So hat Russell in den „Principles of Mathematics“ den Unsinn „<var>p</var> ist ein Satz“ in Symbolen durch „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>p</var>“ wiedergegeben und als Hypothese vor gewisse Sätze gestellt, damit deren Argumentstellen nur von Sätzen besetzt werden könnten.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Es ist schon darum Unsinn, die Hypothese <var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>p</var> vor einen Satz zu stellen, um ihm Argumente der richtigen Form zu sichern, weil die Hypothese für einen Nicht-Satz als Argument nicht falsch, sondern unsinnig wird, und weil der Satz selbst durch die unrichtige Gattung von Argumenten unsinnig wird, also sich selbst ebenso gut, oder so schlecht, vor den unrechten Argumenten bewahrt wie die zu diesem Zweck angehängte sinnlose Hypothese.)</div>',2),
(1965,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ebenso wollte man „Es gibt keine <em class=\"germph\">Dinge</em>“ ausdrücken durch „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><span class=\"quant\">(<span class=\"symbol\">∃</span><var>x</var>).</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><var>x</var>“. Aber selbst wenn dies ein Satz wäre—wäre er nicht auch wahr, wenn es zwar „Dinge gäbe“, aber diese nicht mit sich selbst identisch wären?</div>',2),
(1966,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">In der allgemeinen Satzform kommt der Satz im Satze nur als Basis der Wahrheitsoperationen vor.</div>',2),
(1967,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Auf den ersten Blick scheint es, als könne ein Satz in einem anderen auch auf andere Weise vorkommen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Besonders in gewissen Satzformen der Psychologie, wie „A glaubt, dass <var>p</var> der Fall ist“, oder „A denkt <var>p</var>“, etc.</div><div class=\"ger\">Hier scheint es nämlich oberflächlich, als stünde der Satz <var>p</var> zu einem Gegenstand A in einer Art von Relation.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Und in der modernen Erkenntnistheorie (Russell, Moore, etc.) sind jene Sätze auch so aufgefasst worden.)</div>',2),
(1968,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist aber klar, dass „A glaubt, dass <var>p</var>“, „A denkt <var>p</var>“, „A sagt <var>p</var>“ von der Form „‚<var>p</var>‘ sagt <var>p</var>“ sind: Und hier handelt es sich nicht um eine Zuordnung von einer Tatsache und einem Gegenstand, sondern um die Zuordnung von Tatsachen durch Zuordnung ihrer Gegenstände.</div>',2),
(1969,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dies zeigt auch, dass die Seele—das Subjekt etc.—wie sie in der heutigen oberflächlichen Psychologie aufgefasst wird, ein Unding ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">Eine zusammengesetzte Seele wäre nämlich keine Seele mehr.</div>',2),
(1970,'2011-10-03 12:17:05','2011-10-03 12:17:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die richtige Erklärung der Form des Satzes „A urteilt <var>p</var>“ muss zeigen, dass es unmöglich ist, einen Unsinn zu urteilen. (Russells Theorie genügt dieser Bedingung nicht.)</div>',2),
(1971,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Einen Komplex wahrnehmen heißt wahrnehmen, dass sich seine Bestandteile so und so zu einander verhalten.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dies erklärt wohl auch, dass man die Figur <div class=\"centered\"><img src=\"http://hacks.michelepasin.org/media/hacks/custom/tractatusapp/img/thecube.svg\" alt=\"Cube with a face and b face\" class=\"thecubepng\" /></div>auf zweierlei Art als Würfel sehen kann; und alle ähnlichen Erscheinungen. Denn wir sehen eben wirklich zwei verschiedene Tatsachen. (Sehe ich erst auf die Ecken <em>a</em> und nur flüchtig auf <em>b</em>, so erscheint <em>a</em> vorne; und umgekehrt.)</div>',2),
(1972,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wir müssen nun die Frage nach allen möglichen Formen der Elementarsätze a priori beantworten.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Elementarsatz besteht aus Namen. Da wir aber die Anzahl der Namen von verschiedener Bedeutung nicht angeben können, so können wir auch nicht die Zusammensetzung des Elementarsatzes angeben.</div>',2),
(1973,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Unser Grundsatz ist, dass jede Frage, die sich überhaupt durch die Logik entscheiden läßt, sich ohne weiteres entscheiden lassen muss.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Und wenn wir in die Lage kommen, ein solches Problem durch Ansehen der Welt beantworten zu müssen, so zeigt dies, dass wir auf grundfalscher Fährte sind.)</div>',2),
(1974,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die „Erfahrung“, die wir zum Verstehen der Logik brauchen, ist nicht die, dass sich etwas so und so verhält, sondern, dass etwas <em class=\"germph\">ist</em>: aber das ist eben <em class=\"germph\">keine</em> Erfahrung.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Logik ist <em class=\"germph\">vor</em> jeder Erfahrung—dass etwas <em class=\"germph\">so</em> ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">Sie ist vor dem Wie, nicht vor dem Was.</div>',2),
(1975,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Und wenn dies nicht so wäre, wie könnten wir die Logik anwenden? Man könnte sagen: Wenn es eine Logik gäbe, auch wenn es keine Welt gäbe, wie könnte es dann eine Logik geben, da es eine Welt gibt?</div>',2),
(1976,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Russell sagte, es gäbe einfache Relationen zwischen verschiedenen Anzahlen von Dingen (Individuals). Aber zwischen welchen Anzahlen? Und wie soll sich das entscheiden?—Durch die Erfahrung?</div><div class=\"ger\">(Eine ausgezeichnete Zahl gibt es nicht.)</div>',2),
(1977,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Angabe jeder speziellen Form wäre vollkommen willkürlich.</div>',2),
(1978,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es soll sich a priori angeben lassen, ob ich z. B. in die Lage kommen kann, etwas mit dem Zeichen einer 27-stelligen Relation bezeichnen zu müssen.</div>',2),
(1979,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dürfen wir denn aber überhaupt so fragen? Können wir eine Zeichenform aufstellen und nicht wissen, ob ihr etwas entsprechen könne?</div><div class=\"ger\">Hat die Frage einen Sinn: Was muss <em class=\"germph\">sein</em>, damit etwas der-Fall-sein kann?</div>',2),
(1980,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist klar, wir haben vom Elementarsatz einen Begriff, abgesehen von seiner besonderen logischen Form.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wo man aber Symbole nach einem System bilden kann, dort ist dieses System das logisch wichtige und nicht die einzelnen Symbole.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und wie wäre es auch möglich, dass ich es in der Logik mit Formen zu tun hätte, die ich erfinden kann; sondern mit dem muss ich es zu tun haben, was es mir möglich macht, sie zu erfinden.</div>',2),
(1981,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Eine Hierarchie der Formen der Elementarsätze kann es nicht geben. Nur was wir selbst konstruieren, können wir voraussehen.</div>',2),
(1982,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die empirische Realität ist begrenzt durch die Gesamtheit der Gegenstände. Die Grenze zeigt sich wieder in der Gesamtheit der Elementarsätze.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Hierarchien sind, und müssen unabhängig von der Realität sein.</div>',2),
(1983,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wissen wir aus rein logischen Gründen, dass es Elementarsätze geben muss, dann muss es jeder wissen, der die Sätze in ihrer unanalysierten Form versteht.</div>',2),
(1984,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Alle Sätze unserer Umgangssprache sind tatsächlich, so wie sie sind, logisch vollkommen geordnet.—Jenes Einfachste, was wir hier angeben sollen, ist nicht ein Gleichnis der Wahrheit, sondern die volle Wahrheit selbst.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Unsere Probleme sind nicht abstrakt, sondern vielleicht die konkretesten, die es gibt.)</div>',2),
(1985,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die <em class=\"germph\">Anwendung</em> der Logik entscheidet darüber, welche Elementarsätze es gibt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Was in der Anwendung liegt, kann die Logik nicht vorausnehmen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das ist klar: Die Logik darf mit ihrer Anwendung nicht kollidieren.</div><div class=\"ger\">Aber die Logik muss sich mit ihrer Anwendung berühren.</div><div class=\"ger\">Also dürfen die Logik und ihre Anwendung einander nicht übergreifen.</div>',2),
(1986,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wenn ich die Elementarsätze nicht a priori angeben kann, dann muss es zu offenbarem Unsinn führen, sie angeben zu wollen.</div>',2),
(1987,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\"><em class=\"germph\">Die Grenzen meiner Sprache</em> bedeuten die Grenzen meiner Welt.</div>',2),
(1988,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Logik erfüllt die Welt; die Grenzen der Welt sind auch ihre Grenzen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wir können also in der Logik nicht sagen: Das und das gibt es in der Welt, jenes nicht.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das würde nämlich scheinbar voraussetzen, dass wir gewisse Möglichkeiten ausschließen, und dies kann nicht der Fall sein, da sonst die Logik über die Grenzen der Welt hinaus müsste; wenn sie nämlich diese Grenzen auch von der anderen Seite betrachten könnte.</div><div class=\"ger\">Was wir nicht denken können, das können wir nicht denken; wir können also auch nicht <em class=\"germph\">sagen</em>, was wir nicht denken können.</div>',2),
(1989,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Diese Bemerkung gibt den Schlüssel zur Entscheidung der Frage, inwieweit der Solipsismus eine Wahrheit ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">Was der Solipsismus nämlich <em class=\"germph\">meint</em>, ist ganz richtig, nur lässt es sich nicht <em class=\"germph\">sagen</em>, sondern es zeigt sich.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dass die Welt <em class=\"germph\">meine</em> Welt ist, das zeigt sich darin, dass die Grenzen <em class=\"germph\">der</em> Sprache (der Sprache, die allein ich verstehe) die Grenzen <em class=\"germph\">meiner</em> Welt bedeuten.</div>',2),
(1990,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Welt und das Leben sind Eins.</div>',2),
(1991,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ich bin meine Welt. (Der Mikrokosmos.)</div>',2),
(1992,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das denkende, vorstellende, Subjekt gibt es nicht.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wenn ich ein Buch schriebe „Die Welt, wie ich sie vorfand“, so wäre darin auch über meinen Leib zu berichten und zu sagen, welche Glieder meinem Willen unterstehen und welche nicht, etc., dies ist nämlich eine Methode, das Subjekt zu isolieren, oder vielmehr zu zeigen, dass es in einem wichtigen Sinne kein Subjekt gibt: Von ihm allein nämlich könnte in diesem Buche <em class=\"germph\">nicht</em> die Rede sein.—</div>',2),
(1993,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Subjekt gehört nicht zur Welt, sondern es ist eine Grenze der Welt.</div>',2),
(1994,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wo <em class=\"germph\">in</em> der Welt ist ein metaphysisches Subjekt zu merken?</div><div class=\"ger\">Du sagst, es verhält sich hier ganz wie mit Auge und Gesichtsfeld. Aber das Auge siehst du wirklich <em class=\"germph\">nicht</em>.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und nichts <em class=\"germph\">am Gesichtsfeld</em> lässt darauf schließen, dass es von einem Auge gesehen wird.</div>',2),
(1995,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Gesichtsfeld hat nämlich nicht etwa eine solche Form: <div class=\"centered\"><span class=\"sfmiddle\"><span class=\"lowered\">Auge —</span><img src=\"http://hacks.michelepasin.org/media/hacks/custom/tractatusapp/img/theeye.svg\" alt=\"Eye image\" class=\"theeyepng\" /></div></div>',2),
(1996,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das hängt damit zusammen, dass kein Teil unserer Erfahrung auch a priori ist.</div><div class=\"ger\">Alles, was wir sehen, könnte auch anders sein.</div><div class=\"ger\">Alles, was wir überhaupt beschreiben können, könnte auch anders sein.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es gibt keine Ordnung der Dinge a priori.</div>',2),
(1997,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Hier sieht man, dass der Solipsismus, streng durchgeführt, mit dem reinen Realismus zusammenfällt. Das Ich des Solipsismus schrumpft zum ausdehnungslosen Punkt zusammen, und es bleibt die ihm koordinierte Realität.</div>',2),
(1998,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es gibt also wirklich einen Sinn, in welchem in der Philosophie nichtpsychologisch vom Ich die Rede sein kann.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das Ich tritt in die Philosophie dadurch ein, dass „die Welt meine Welt ist“.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das philosophische Ich ist nicht der Mensch, nicht der menschliche Körper, oder die menschliche Seele, von der die Psychologie handelt, sondern das metaphysische Subjekt, die Grenze—nicht ein Teil—der Welt.</div>',2),
(1999,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die allgemeine Form der Wahrheitsfunktion ist: [<span class=\"overlined\"><var>p</var></span>, <span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>, <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)].</div><div class=\"ger\">Dies ist die allgemeine Form des Satzes.</div>',2),
(2000,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dies sagt nichts anderes, als dass jeder Satz ein Resultat der successiven Anwendung der Operation <span class=\"mathop\"><span class=\"nop\">N</span>’</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>) auf die Elementarsätze ist.</div>',2),
(2001,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ist die allgemeine Form gegeben, wie ein Satz gebaut ist, so ist damit auch schon die allgemeine Form davon gegeben, wie aus einem Satz durch eine Operation ein anderer erzeugt werden kann.</div>',2),
(2002,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die allgemeine Form der Operation <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var>η</var></span>) ist also: <span class=\"mathop\">[<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>, <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)]’</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var>η</var></span>) (<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>[<span class=\"overlined\"><var>η</var></span>, <span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>, <span class=\"nop\">N</span>(<span class=\"overlined\"><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var></span>)]).</div><div class=\"ger\">Das ist die allgemeinste Form des Überganges von einem Satz zum anderen.</div>',2),
(2003,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Und <em class=\"germph\">so</em> kommen wir zu den Zahlen: Ich definiere</div><div class=\"ger\"><div class=\"centered\"><table class=\"alignedmath\"><tbody><tr><td class=\"righttight\"><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span></td><td class=\"lefttight\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0</sup>’</span><var>x</var> Def. und</td></tr><tr><td class=\"righttight\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span></td><td class=\"lefttight\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var>+1</sup>’</span><var>x</var> Def.</td></tr></tbody></table></div></div><div class=\"ger\">Nach diesen Zeichenregeln schreiben wir also die Reihe</div><div class=\"ger\"><div class=\"displaymath\"><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var>,<span class=\"mathrel\">…</span></div></div><div class=\"ger\">so:</div><div class=\"ger\"><div class=\"displaymath\"><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0+1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0+1+1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>,<span class=\"mathrel\">…</span></div></div><div class=\"ger\">Also schreibe ich statt „[<var>x</var>, <var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>]“:</div><div class=\"ger\"><div class=\"displaymath\">„[<span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>0</sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var>, <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var><span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var>]“.</div></div><div class=\"ger\">Und definiere:</div><div class=\"ger\"><div class=\"centered\"><table class=\"alignedmath\"><tbody><tr><td class=\"lefttight\">0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>1 Def.</td></tr><tr><td class=\"lefttight\">0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>2 Def.</td></tr><tr><td class=\"lefttight\">0<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>3 Def.</td></tr><tr><td class=\"lefttight\">(u. s. f.)</td></tr></tbody></table></div></div>',2),
(2004,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Zahl ist der Exponent einer Operation.</div>',2),
(2005,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Zahlbegriff ist nichts anderes als das Gemeinsame aller Zahlen, die allgemeine Form der Zahl.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Zahlbegriff ist die variable Zahl.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und der Begriff der Zahlengleichheit ist die allgemeine Form aller speziellen Zahlengleichheiten.</div>',2),
(2006,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die allgemeine Form der ganzen Zahl ist: [0, <var class=\"pushvar\">ξ</var>, <var>ξ</var><span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1].</div>',2),
(2007,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Theorie der Klassen ist in der Mathematik ganz überflüssig.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dies hängt damit zusammen, dass die Allgemeinheit, welche wir in der Mathematik brauchen, nicht die <em class=\"germph\">zufällige</em> ist.</div>',2),
(2008,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Sätze der Logik sind Tautologien.</div>',2),
(2009,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Sätze der Logik sagen also nichts. (Sie sind die analytischen Sätze.)</div>',2),
(2010,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Theorien, die einen Satz der Logik gehaltvoll erscheinen lassen, sind immer falsch. Man könnte z. B. glauben, dass die Worte „wahr“ und „falsch“ zwei Eigenschaften unter anderen Eigenschaften bezeichnen, und da erschiene es als eine merkwürdige Tatsache, dass jeder Satz eine dieser Eigenschaften besitzt. Das scheint nun nichts weniger als selbstverständlich zu sein, ebensowenig selbstverständlich, wie etwa der Satz: „Alle Rosen sind entweder gelb oder rot“ klänge, auch wenn er wahr wäre. Ja, jener Satz bekommt nun ganz den Charakter eines naturwissenschaftlichen Satzes, und dies ist das sichere Anzeichen dafür, dass er falsch aufgefasst wurde.</div>',2),
(2011,'2011-10-03 12:17:06','2011-10-03 12:17:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die richtige Erklärung der logischen Sätze muss ihnen eine einzigartige Stellung unter allen Sätzen geben.</div>',2),
(2012,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist das besondere Merkmal der logischen Sätze, dass man am Symbol allein erkennen kann, dass sie wahr sind, und diese Tatsache schließt die ganze Philosophie der Logik in sich. Und so ist es auch eine derwichtigsten Tatsachen, dass sich die Wahrheit oder Falschheit der nichtlogischen Sätze <em class=\"germph\">nicht</em> am Satz allein erkennen lässt.</div>',2),
(2013,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass die Sätze der Logik Tautologien sind, das <em class=\"germph\">zeigt</em> die formalen—logischen—Eigenschaften der Sprache, der Welt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dass ihre Bestandteile <em class=\"germph\">so</em> verknüpft eine Tautologie ergeben, das charakterisiert die Logik ihrer Bestandteile.</div><div class=\"ger\">Damit Sätze, auf bestimmte Art und Weise verknüpft, eine Tautologie ergeben, dazu müssen sie bestimmte Eigenschaften der Struktur haben. Dass sie <em class=\"germph\">so</em> verbunden eine Tautologie ergeben, zeigt also, dass sie diese Eigenschaften der Struktur besitzen.</div>',2),
(2014,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass z. B. die Sätze „<var>p</var>“ und „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>“ in der Verbindung „<span class=\"mathop\">~</span>(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><span class=\"mathop\">~</span><var>p</var>)“ eine Tautologie ergeben, zeigt, dass sie einander widersprechen. Dass die Sätze „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var>“, „<var>p</var>“ und „<var>q</var>“ in der Form „(<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">.</span>(<var>p</var>)<span class=\"mathrel\">:<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>:</span>(<var>q</var>)“ miteinander verbunden eine Tautologie ergeben, zeigt, dass <var>q</var> aus <var>p</var> und <var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var> folgt. Dass „<span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>:</span><var>fa</var>“ eine Tautologie ist, dass <var>fa</var> aus <span class=\"quant\">(<var>x</var>).</span><var>fx</var> folgt. etc. etc.</div>',2),
(2015,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist klar, dass man zu demselben Zweck statt der Tautologien auch die Kontradiktionen verwenden könnte.</div>',2),
(2016,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Um eine Tautologie als solche zu erkennen, kann man sich, in den Fällen, in welchen in der Tautologie keine Allgemeinheitsbezeichnung vorkommt, folgender anschaulichen Methode bedienen: Ich schreibe statt „<var>p</var>“, „<var>q</var>“, „<var>r</var>“ etc. „<span class=\"mathrm\">W</span><var class=\"doublepushvar\">p</var><span class=\"mathrm\">F</span>“, „<span class=\"mathrm\">W</span><var class=\"doublepushvar\">q</var><span class=\"mathrm\">F</span>“, „<span class=\"mathrm\">W</span><var class=\"doublepushvar\">r</var><span class=\"mathrm\">F</span>“ etc. Die Wahrheitskombinationen drücke ich durch Klammern aus, z. B.:</div>',2),
(2017,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Sätze der Logik demonstrieren die logischen Eigenschaften der Sätze, indem sie sie zu nichtssagenden Sätzen verbinden.</div><div class=\"ger\">Diese Methode könnte man auch eine Nullmethode nennen. Im logischen Satz werden Sätze miteinander ins Gleichgewicht gebracht und der Zustand des Gleichgewichts zeigt dann an, wie diese Sätze logisch beschaffen sein müssen.</div>',2),
(2018,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Daraus ergibt sich, dass wir auch ohne die logischen Sätze auskommen können, da wir ja in einer entsprechenden Notation die formalen Eigenschaften der Sätze durch das bloße Ansehen dieser Sätze erkennen können.</div>',2),
(2019,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ergeben z. B. zwei Sätze „<var>p</var>“ und „<var>q</var>“ in der Verbindung „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var>“ eine Tautologie, so ist klar, dass <var>q</var> aus <var>p</var> folgt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Dass z. B. „<var>q</var>“ aus „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>p</var>“ folgt, ersehen wir aus diesen beiden Sätzen selbst, aber wir können es auch <em class=\"germph\">so</em> zeigen, indem wir sie zu „<var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\"><span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span></span><var>q</var><span class=\"mathrel\">.</span><var>p</var><span class=\"mathrel\">:<span class=\"symbol\">⊃</span>:</span><var>q</var>“ verbinden und nun zeigen, dass dies eine Tautologie ist.</div>',2),
(2020,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dies wirft ein Licht auf die Frage, warum die logischen Sätze nicht durch die Erfahrung bestätigt werden können, ebensowenig wie sie durch die Erfahrung widerlegt werden können. Nicht nur muss ein Satz der Logik durch keine mögliche Erfahrung widerlegt werden können, sondern er darf auch nicht durch eine solche bestätigt werden können.</div>',2),
(2021,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nun wird klar, warum man oft fühlte, als wären die „logischen Wahrheiten“ von uns zu „<em class=\"germph\">fordern</em>“: Wir können sie nämlich insofern fordern, als wir eine genügende Notation fordern können.</div>',2),
(2022,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es wird jetzt auch klar, warum die Logik die Lehre von den Formen und vom Schließen genannt wurde.</div>',2),
(2023,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist klar: Die logischen Gesetze dürfen nicht selbst wieder logischen Gesetzen unterstehen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Es gibt nicht, wie Russell meinte, für jede „Type“ ein eigenes Gesetz des Widerspruches, sondern Eines genügt, da es auf sich selbst nicht angewendet wird.)</div>',2),
(2024,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Anzeichen des logischen Satzes ist <em class=\"germph\">nicht</em> die Allgemeingültigkeit.</div><div class=\"ger\">Allgemein sein heißt ja nur: zufälligerweise für alle Dinge gelten. Ein unverallgemeinerter Satz kann ja ebensowohl tautologisch sein als ein verallgemeinerter.</div>',2),
(2025,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die logische Allgemeingültigkeit könnte man wesentlich nennen, im Gegensatz zu jener zufälligen, etwa des Satzes: „Alle Menschen sind sterblich“. Sätze wie Russells „Axiom of Reducibility“ sind nicht logische Sätze, und dies erklärt unser Gefühl: Dass sie, wenn wahr, so doch nur durch einen günstigen Zufall wahr sein könnten.</div>',2),
(2026,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es lässt sich eine Welt denken, in der das Axiom of Reducibility nicht gilt. Es ist aber klar, dass die Logik nichts mit der Frage zu schaffen hat, ob unsere Welt wirklich so ist oder nicht.</div>',2),
(2027,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die logischen Sätze beschreiben das Gerüst der Welt, oder vielmehr, sie stellen es dar. Sie „handeln“ von nichts. Sie setzen voraus, dass Namen Bedeutung, und Elementarsätze Sinn haben: Und dies ist ihre Verbindung mit der Welt. Es ist klar, dass es etwas über die Welt anzeigen muss, dass gewisse Verbindungen von Symbolen—welche wesentlich einen bestimmten Charakter haben—Tautologien sind. Hierin liegt das Entscheidende. Wir sagten, manches an den Symbolen, die wir gebrauchen, wäre willkürlich, manches nicht. In der Logik drückt nur dieses aus: Das heißt aber, in der Logik drücken nicht <em class=\"germph\">wir</em> mit Hilfe der Zeichen aus, was wir wollen, sondern in der Logik sagt die Natur der naturnotwendigen Zeichen selbst aus: Wenn wir die logische Syntax irgendeiner Zeichensprache kennen, dann sind bereits alle Sätze der Logik gegeben.</div>',2),
(2028,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist möglich, und zwar auch nach der alten Auffassung der Logik, von vornherein eine Beschreibung aller „wahren“ logischen Sätze zu geben.</div>',2),
(2029,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Darum kann es in der Logik auch <em class=\"germph\">nie</em> Überraschungen geben.</div>',2),
(2030,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Ob ein Satz der Logik angehört, kann man berechnen, indem man die logischen Eigenschaften des <em class=\"germph\">Symbols</em> berechnet.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und dies tun wir, wenn wir einen logischen Satz „beweisen“. Denn, ohne uns um einen Sinn und eine Bedeutung zu kümmern, bilden wir den logischen Satz aus anderen nach bloßen <em class=\"germph\">Zeichenregeln</em>.</div><div class=\"ger\">Der Beweis der logischen Sätze besteht darin, dass wir sie aus anderen logischen Sätzen durch successive Anwendung gewisser Operationen entstehen lassen, die aus den ersten immer wieder Tautologien erzeugen. (Und zwar <em class=\"germph\">folgen</em> aus einer Tautologie nur Tautologien.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Natürlich ist diese Art zu zeigen, dass ihre Sätze Tautologien sind, der Logik durchaus unwesentlich. Schon darum, weil die Sätze, von welchen der Beweis ausgeht, ja ohne Beweis zeigen müssen, dass sie Tautologien sind.</div>',2),
(2031,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">In der Logik sind Prozess und Resultat äquivalent. (Darum keine Überraschung.)</div>',2),
(2032,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Beweis in der Logik ist nur ein mechanisches Hilfsmittel zum leichteren Erkennen der Tautologie, wo sie kompliziert ist.</div>',2),
(2033,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es wäre ja auch zu merkwürdig, wenn man einen sinnvollen Satz <em class=\"germph\">logisch</em> aus anderen beweisen könnte, und einen logischen Satz <em class=\"germph\">auch</em>. Es ist von vornherein klar, dass der logische Beweis eines sinnvollen Satzes und der Beweis <em class=\"germph\">in</em> der Logik zwei ganz verschiedene Dinge sein müssen.</div>',2),
(2034,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der sinnvolle Satz sagt etwas aus, und sein Beweis zeigt, dass es so ist; in der Logik ist jeder Satz die Form eines Beweises.</div><div class=\"ger\">Jeder Satz der Logik ist ein in Zeichen dargestellter modus ponens. (Und den modus ponens kann man nicht durch einen Satz ausdrücken.)</div>',2),
(2035,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Immer kann man die Logik so auffassen, dass jeder Satz sein eigener Beweis ist.</div>',2),
(2036,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Alle Sätze der Logik sind gleichberechtigt, es gibt unter ihnen nicht wesentlich Grundgesetze und abgeleitete Sätze.</div><div class=\"ger\">Jede Tautologie zeigt selbst, dass sie eine Tautologie ist.</div>',2),
(2037,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist klar, dass die Anzahl der „logischen Grundgesetze“ willkürlich ist, denn man könnte die Logik ja aus Einem Grundgesetz ableiten, indem man einfach z. B. aus Freges Grundgesetzen das logische Produkt bildet. (Frege würde vielleicht sagen, dass dieses Grundgesetz nun nicht mehr unmittelbar einleuchte. Aber es ist merkwürdig, dass ein so exakter Denker wie Frege sich auf den Grad des Einleuchtens als Kriterium des logischen Satzes berufen hat.)</div>',2),
(2038,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Logik ist keine Lehre, sondern ein Spiegelbild der Welt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Logik ist transzendental.</div>',2),
(2039,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Mathematik ist eine logische Methode.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Sätze der Mathematik sind Gleichungen, also Scheinsätze.</div>',2),
(2040,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Satz der Mathematik drückt keinen Gedanken aus.</div>',2),
(2041,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Im Leben ist es ja nie der mathematische Satz, den wir brauchen, sondern wir benützen den mathematischen Satz <em class=\"germph\">nur</em>, um aus Sätzen, welche nicht der Mathematik angehören, auf andere zu schließen, welche gleichfalls nicht der Mathematik angehören.</div><div class=\"ger\">(In der Philosophie führt die Frage: „Wozu gebrauchen wir eigentlich jenes Wort, jenen Satz“ immer wieder zu wertvollen Einsichten.)</div>',2),
(2042,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Logik der Welt, die die Sätze der Logik in den Tautologien zeigen, zeigt die Mathematik in den Gleichungen.</div>',2),
(2043,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wenn zwei Ausdrücke durch das Gleichheitszeichen verbunden werden, so heißt das, sie sind durch einander ersetzbar. Ob dies aber der Fall ist, muss sich an den beiden Ausdrücken selbst zeigen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es charakterisiert die logische Form zweier Ausdrücke, dass sie durch einander ersetzbar sind.</div>',2),
(2044,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist eine Eigenschaft der Bejahung, dass man sie als doppelte Verneinung auffassen kann.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es ist eine Eigenschaft von „1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1“, dass man es als „(1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1)<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>(1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1)“ auffassen kann.</div>',2),
(2045,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Frege sagt, die beiden Ausdrücke haben dieselbe Bedeutung, aber verschiedenen Sinn.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das Wesentliche an der Gleichung ist aber, dass sie nicht notwendig ist, um zu zeigen, dass die beiden Ausdrücke, die das Gleichheitszeichen verbindet, dieselbe Bedeutung haben, da sich dies aus den beiden Ausdrücken selbst ersehen lässt.</div>',2),
(2046,'2011-10-03 12:17:07','2011-10-03 12:17:07',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Und, dass die Sätze der Mathematik bewiesen werden können, heißt ja nichts anderes, als dass ihre Richtigkeit einzusehen ist, ohne dass das, was sie ausdrücken, selbst mit den Tatsachen auf seine Richtigkeit hin verglichen werden muss.</div>',2),
(2047,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Identität der Bedeutung zweier Ausdrücke lässt sich nicht <em class=\"germph\">behaupten</em>. Denn, um etwas von ihrer Bedeutung behaupten zu können, muss ich ihre Bedeutung kennen: und indem ich ihre Bedeutung kenne, weiß ich, ob sie dasselbe oder verschiedenes bedeuten.</div>',2),
(2048,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Gleichung kennzeichnet nur den Standpunkt, von welchem ich die beiden Ausdrücke betrachte, nämlich vom Standpunkte ihrer Bedeutungsgleichheit.</div>',2),
(2049,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Frage, ob man zur Lösung der mathematischen Probleme die Anschauung brauche, muss dahin beantwortet werden, dass eben die Sprache hier die nötige Anschauung liefert.</div>',2),
(2050,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Vorgang des <em class=\"germph\">Rechnens</em> vermittelt eben diese Anschauung.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Rechnung ist kein Experiment.</div>',2),
(2051,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Mathematik ist eine Methode der Logik.</div>',2),
(2052,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Wesentliche der mathematischen Methode ist es, mit Gleichungen zu arbeiten. Auf dieser Methode beruht es nämlich, dass jeder Satz der Mathematik sich von selbst verstehen muss.</div>',2),
(2053,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Methode der Mathematik, zu ihren Gleichungen zu kommen, ist die Substitutionsmethode.</div><div class=\"ger\">Denn die Gleichungen drücken die Ersetzbarkeit zweier Ausdrücke aus und wir schreiten von einer Anzahl von Gleichungen zu neuen Gleichungen vor, indem wir, den Gleichungen entsprechend, Ausdrücke durch andere ersetzen.</div>',2),
(2054,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">So lautet der Beweis des Satzes 2<span class=\"mathrel\">×</span>2<span class=\"mathrel\">=</span>4:</div><div class=\"ger\"><div class=\"centered\">\n<span class=\"mathop\">(Ω<sup><var>ν</var></sup>)<sup><var>μ</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup><var>ν</var><span class=\"mathrel\">×</span><var>μ</var></sup>’</span><var>x</var> Def.<br />\n<span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>2<span class=\"mathrel\">×</span>2</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω<sup>2</sup>)<sup>2</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω<sup>2</sup>)<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>2</sup>’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>2</sup>’</span><var>x</var><br />\n = <span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω’Ω)’</span><span class=\"mathop\">(Ω’Ω)’</span><var>x</var><br />\n= <span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1<span class=\"mathrel\">+</span>1</sup>’</span><var>x</var><span class=\"mathrel\">=</span><span class=\"mathop\">Ω<sup>4</sup>’</span><var>x</var>.<br />\n</div></div>',2),
(2055,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Erforschung der Logik bedeutet die Erforschung <em class=\"germph\">aller Gesetzmäßigkeit</em>. Und außerhalb der Logik ist alles Zufall.</div>',2),
(2056,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das sogenannte Gesetz der Induktion kann jedenfalls kein logisches Gesetz sein, denn es ist offenbar ein sinnvoller Satz.—Und darum kann es auch kein Gesetz a priori sein.</div>',2),
(2057,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Kausalitätsgesetz ist kein Gesetz, sondern die Form eines Gesetzes.</div>',2),
(2058,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">„Kausalitätsgesetz“, das ist ein Gattungsname. Und wie es in der Mechanik, sagen wir, Minimum-Gesetze gibt—etwa der kleinsten Wirkung—so gibt es in der Physik Kausalitätsgesetze, Gesetze von der Kausalitätsform.</div>',2),
(2059,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Man hat ja auch davon eine Ahnung gehabt, dass es <em class=\"germph\">ein</em> „Gesetz der kleinsten Wirkung“ geben müsse, ehe man genau wusste, wie es lautete. (Hier, wie immer, stellt sich das a priori Gewisse als etwas rein Logisches heraus.)</div>',2),
(2060,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wir <em class=\"germph\">glauben</em> nicht a priori an ein Erhaltungsgesetz, sondern wir <em class=\"germph\">wissen</em> a priori die Möglichkeit einer logischen Form.</div>',2),
(2061,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Alle jene Sätze, wie der Satz vom Grunde, von der Kontinuität in der Natur, vom kleinsten Aufwande in der Natur etc. etc., alle diese sind Einsichten a priori über die mögliche Formgebung der Sätze der Wissenschaft.</div>',2),
(2062,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Newtonsche Mechanik z. B. bringt die Weltbeschreibung auf eine einheitliche Form. Denken wir uns eine weiße Fläche, auf der unregelmäßige schwarze Flecken wären. Wir sagen nun: Was für ein Bild immer hierdurch entsteht, immer kann ich seiner Beschreibung beliebig nahe kommen, indem ich die Fläche mit einem entsprechend feinen quadratischen Netzwerk bedecke und nun von jedem Quadrat sage, dass es weiß oder schwarz ist. Ich werde auf diese Weise die Beschreibung der Fläche auf eine einheitliche Form gebracht haben. Diese Form ist beliebig, denn ich hätte mit dem gleichen Erfolge ein Netz aus dreieckigen oder sechseckigen Maschen verwenden können. Es kann sein, dass die Beschreibung mit Hilfe eines Dreiecks-Netzes einfacher geworden wäre; das heißt, dass wir die Fläche mit einem gröberen Dreiecks-Netz genauer beschreiben könnten als mit einem feineren quadratischen (oder umgekehrt) usw. Den verschiedenen Netzen entsprechen verschiedene Systeme der Weltbeschreibung. Die Mechanik bestimmt eine Form der Weltbeschreibung, indem sie sagt: Alle Sätze der Weltbeschreibung müssen aus einer Anzahl gegebener Sätze—den mechanischen Axiomen—auf eine gegebene Art und Weise erhalten werden. Hierdurch liefert sie die Bausteine zum Bau des wissenschaftlichen Gebäudes und sagt: Welches Gebäude immer du aufführen willst, jedes musst du irgendwie mit diesen und nur diesen Bausteinen zusammenbringen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Wie man mit dem Zahlensystem jede beliebige Anzahl, so muss man mit dem System der Mechanik jeden beliebigen Satz der Physik hinschreiben können.)</div>',2),
(2063,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Und nun sehen wir die gegenseitige Stellung von Logik und Mechanik. (Man könnte das Netz auch aus verschiedenartigen Figuren etwa aus Dreiecken und Sechsecken bestehen lassen.) Dass sich ein Bild, wie das vorhin erwähnte, durch ein Netz von gegebener Form beschreiben lässt, sagt über das Bild <em class=\"germph\">nichts</em> aus. (Denn dies gilt für jedes Bild dieser Art.) Das aber charakterisiert das Bild, dass es sich durch ein bestimmtes Netz von <em class=\"germph\">bestimmter</em> Feinheit <em class=\"germph\">vollständig</em> beschreiben lässt.</div><div class=\"ger\">So auch sagt es nichts über die Welt aus, dass sie sich durch die Newtonsche Mechanik beschreiben lässt; wohl aber, dass sie sich <em class=\"germph\">so</em> durch jene beschreiben lässt, wie dies eben der Fall ist. Auch das sagt etwas über die Welt, dass sie sich durch die eine Mechanik einfacher beschreiben lässt als durch die andere.</div>',2),
(2064,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Mechanik ist ein Versuch, alle <em class=\"germph\">wahren</em> Sätze, die wir zur Weltbeschreibung brauchen, nach Einem Plane zu konstruieren.</div>',2),
(2065,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Durch den ganzen logischen Apparat hindurch sprechen die physikalischen Gesetze doch von den Gegenständen der Welt.</div>',2),
(2066,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wir dürfen nicht vergessen, dass die Weltbeschreibung durch die Mechanik immer die ganz allgemeine ist. Es ist in ihr z. B. nie von <em class=\"germph\">bestimmten</em> materiellen Punkten die Rede, sondern immer nur von <em class=\"germph\">irgend welchen</em>.</div>',2),
(2067,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Obwohl die Flecke in unserem Bild geometrische Figuren sind, so kann doch selbstverständlich die Geometrie gar nichts über ihre tatsächliche Form und Lage sagen. Das Netz aber ist <em class=\"germph\">rein</em> geometrisch, alle seine Eigenschaften können a priori angegeben werden.</div><div class=\"ger\">Gesetze wie der Satz vom Grunde, etc. handeln vom Netz, nicht von dem, was das Netz beschreibt.</div>',2),
(2068,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wenn es ein Kausalitätsgesetz gäbe, so könnte es lauten: „Es gibt Naturgesetze“.</div><div class=\"ger\">Aber freilich kann man das nicht sagen: es zeigt sich.</div>',2),
(2069,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">In der Ausdrucksweise Hertz’s könnte man sagen: Nur <em class=\"germph\">gesetzmäßige</em> Zusammenhänge sind <em class=\"germph\">denkbar</em>.</div>',2),
(2070,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wir können keinen Vorgang mit dem „Ablauf der Zeit“ vergleichen—diesen gibt es nicht—, sondern nur mit einem anderen Vorgang (etwa mit dem Gang des Chronometers).</div><div class=\"ger\">Daher ist die Beschreibung des zeitlichen Verlaufs nur so möglich, dass wir uns auf einen anderen Vorgang stützen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Ganz Analoges gilt für den Raum. Wo man z. B. sagt, es könne keines von zwei Ereignissen (die sich gegenseitig ausschließen) eintreten, weil <em class=\"germph\">keine Ursache</em> vorhanden sei, warum das eine eher als das andere eintreten solle, da handelt es sich in Wirklichkeit darum, dass man gar nicht <em class=\"germph\">eines</em> der beiden Ereignisse beschreiben kann, wenn nicht irgend eine Asymmetrie vorhanden ist. Und <em class=\"germph\">wenn</em> eine solche Asymmetrie vorhanden <em class=\"germph\">ist</em>, so können wir diese als <em class=\"germph\">Ursache</em> des Eintreffens des einen und Nicht- Eintreffens des anderen auffassen.</div>',2),
(2071,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Das Kant’sche Problem von der rechten und linken Hand, die man nicht zur Deckung bringen kann, besteht schon in der Ebene, ja im eindimensionalen Raum, wo die beiden kongruenten Figuren <var>a</var> und <var>b</var> auch nicht zur Deckung gebracht werden können, ohne aus diesem Raum</div>',2),
(2072,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Was sich beschreiben lässt, das kann auch geschehen, und was das Kausalitätsgesetz ausschließen soll, das lässt sich auch nicht beschreiben.</div>',2),
(2073,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Vorgang der Induktion besteht darin, dass wir das <em class=\"germph\">einfachste</em> Gesetz annehmen, das mit unseren Erfahrungen in Einklang zu bringen ist.</div>',2),
(2074,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dieser Vorgang hat aber keine logische, sondern nur eine psychologische Begründung.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es ist klar, dass kein Grund vorhanden ist, zu glauben, es werde nun auch wirklich der einfachste Fall eintreten.</div>',2),
(2075,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass die Sonne morgen aufgehen wird, ist eine Hypothese; und das heißt: wir <em class=\"germph\">wissen</em> nicht, ob sie aufgehen wird.</div>',2),
(2076,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Einen Zwang, nach dem Eines geschehen müsste, weil etwas anderes geschehen ist, gibt es nicht. Es gibt nur eine <em class=\"germph\">logische</em> Notwendigkeit.</div>',2),
(2077,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der ganzen modernen Weltanschauung liegt die Täuschung zugrunde, dass die sogenannten Naturgesetze die Erklärungen der Naturerscheinungen seien.</div>',2),
(2078,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">So bleiben sie bei den Naturgesetzen als bei etwas Unantastbarem stehen, wie die Älteren bei Gott und dem Schicksal.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und sie haben ja beide Recht, und Unrecht. Die Alten sind allerdings insofern klarer, als sie einen klaren Abschluss anerkennen, während es bei dem neuen System scheinen soll, als sei <em class=\"germph\">alles</em> erklärt.</div>',2),
(2079,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Welt ist unabhängig von meinem Willen.</div>',2),
(2080,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Auch wenn alles, was wir wünschen, geschähe, so wäre dies doch nur, sozusagen, eine Gnade des Schicksals, denn es ist kein <em class=\"germph\">logischer</em> Zusammenhang zwischen Willen und Welt, der dies verbürgte, und den angenommenen physikalischen Zusammenhang könnten wir doch nicht selbst wieder wollen.</div>',2),
(2081,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wie es nur eine <em class=\"germph\">logische</em> Notwendigkeit gibt, so gibt es auch nur eine <em class=\"germph\">logische</em> Unmöglichkeit.</div>',2),
(2082,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Dass z. B. zwei Farben zugleich an einem Ort des Gesichtsfeldes sind, ist unmöglich, und zwar logisch unmöglich, denn es ist durch die logische Struktur der Farbe ausgeschlossen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Denken wir daran, wie sich dieser Widerspruch in der Physik darstellt: Ungefähr so, dass ein Teilchen nicht zu gleicher Zeit zwei Geschwindigkeiten haben kann; das heißt, dass es nicht zu gleicher Zeit an zwei Orten sein kann; das heißt, dass Teilchen an verschiedenen Orten zu Einer Zeit nicht identisch sein können.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Es ist klar, dass das logische Produkt zweier Elementarsätze weder eine Tautologie noch eine Kontradiktion sein kann. Die Aussage, dass ein Punkt des Gesichtsfeldes zu gleicher Zeit zwei verschiedene Farben hat, ist eine Kontradiktion.)</div>',2),
(2083,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Alle Sätze sind gleichwertig.</div>',2),
(2084,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Sinn der Welt muss außerhalb ihrer liegen. In der Welt ist alles, wie es ist, und geschieht alles, wie es geschieht; es gibt <em class=\"germph\">in</em> ihr keinen Wert—und wenn es ihn gäbe, so hätte er keinen Wert.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wenn es einen Wert gibt, der Wert hat, so muss er außerhalb alles Geschehens und So-Seins liegen. Denn alles Geschehen und So-Sein ist zufällig.</div><div class=\"ger\">Was es nichtzufällig macht, kann nicht <em class=\"germph\">in</em> der Welt liegen, denn sonst wäre dies wieder zufällig.</div><div class=\"ger\">Es muss außerhalb der Welt liegen.</div>',2),
(2085,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Darum kann es auch keine Sätze der Ethik geben.</div><div class=\"ger\">Sätze können nichts Höheres ausdrücken.</div>',2),
(2086,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es ist klar, dass sich die Ethik nicht aussprechen lässt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Ethik ist transzendental.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Ethik und Ästhetik sind Eins.)</div>',2),
(2087,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der erste Gedanke bei der Aufstellung eines ethischen Gesetzes von der Form „Du sollst …“ ist: Und was dann, wenn ich es nicht tue? Es ist aber klar, dass die Ethik nichts mit Strafe und Lohn im gewöhnlichen Sinne zu tun hat. Also muss diese Frage nach den <em class=\"germph\">Folgen</em> einer Handlung belanglos sein.—Zum Mindesten dürfen diese Folgen nicht Ereignisse sein. Denn etwas muss doch an jener Fragestellung richtig sein. Es muss zwar eine Art von ethischem Lohn und ethischer Strafe geben, aber diese müssen in der Handlung selbst liegen.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Und das ist auch klar, dass der Lohn etwas Angenehmes, die Strafe etwas Unangenehmes sein muss.)</div>',2),
(2088,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Vom Willen als dem Träger des Ethischen kann nicht gesprochen werden.</div><div class=\"ger\">Und der Wille als Phänomen interessiert nur die Psychologie.</div>',2),
(2089,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wenn das gute oder böse Wollen die Welt ändert, so kann es nur die Grenzen der Welt ändern, nicht die Tatsachen; nicht das, was durch die Sprache ausgedrückt werden kann.</div><div class=\"ger\">Kurz, die Welt muss dann dadurch überhaupt eine andere werden. Sie muss sozusagen als Ganzes abnehmen oder zunehmen.</div><div class=\"ger\">Die Welt des Glücklichen ist eine andere als die des Unglücklichen.</div>',2),
(2090,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wie auch beim Tod die Welt sich nicht ändert, sondern aufhört.</div>',2),
(2091,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Der Tod ist kein Ereignis des Lebens. Den Tod erlebt man nicht.</div><div class=\"ger\">Wenn man unter Ewigkeit nicht unendliche Zeitdauer, sondern Unzeitlichkeit versteht, dann lebt der ewig, der in der Gegenwart lebt.</div><div class=\"ger\">Unser Leben ist ebenso endlos, wie unser Gesichtsfeld grenzenlos ist.</div>',2),
(2092,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die zeitliche Unsterblichkeit der Seele des Menschen, das heißt also ihr ewiges Fortleben auch nach dem Tode, ist nicht nur auf keine Weise verbürgt, sondern vor allem leistet diese Annahme gar nicht das, was man immer mit ihr erreichen wollte. Wird denn dadurch ein Rätsel gelöst, dass ich ewig fortlebe? Ist denn dieses ewige Leben dann nicht ebenso rätselhaft wie das gegenwärtige? Die Lösung des Rätsels des Lebens in Raum und Zeit liegt <em class=\"germph\">außerhalb</em> von Raum und Zeit.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Nicht Probleme der Naturwissenschaft sind ja zu lösen.)</div>',2),
(2093,'2011-10-03 12:17:08','2011-10-03 12:17:08',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\"><em class=\"germph\">Wie</em> die Welt ist, ist für das Höhere vollkommen gleichgültig. Gott offenbart sich nicht <em class=\"germph\">in</em> der Welt.</div>',2),
(2094,'2011-10-03 12:17:09','2011-10-03 12:17:09',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Tatsachen gehören alle nur zur Aufgabe, nicht zur Lösung.</div>',2),
(2095,'2011-10-03 12:17:09','2011-10-03 12:17:09',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Nicht <em class=\"germph\">wie</em> die Welt ist, ist das Mystische, sondern <em class=\"germph\">dass</em> sie ist.</div>',2),
(2096,'2011-10-03 12:17:09','2011-10-03 12:17:09',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Anschauung der Welt sub specie aeterni ist ihre Anschauung als—begrenztes—Ganzes.</div><div class=\"ger\">Das Gefühl der Welt als begrenztes Ganzes ist das mystische.</div>',2),
(2097,'2011-10-03 12:17:09','2011-10-03 12:17:09',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Zu einer Antwort, die man nicht aussprechen kann, kann man auch die Frage nicht aussprechen.</div><div class=\"ger\"><em class=\"germph\">Das Rätsel</em> gibt es nicht. </div><div class=\"ger\">Wenn sich eine Frage überhaupt stellen lässt, so <em class=\"germph\">kann</em> sie auch beantwortet werden.</div>',2),
(2098,'2011-10-03 12:17:09','2011-10-03 12:17:09',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Skeptizismus ist <em class=\"germph\">nicht</em> unwiderleglich, sondern offenbar unsinnig, wenn er bezweifeln will, wo nicht gefragt werden kann.</div><div class=\"ger\">Denn Zweifel kann nur bestehen, wo eine Frage besteht; eine Frage nur, wo eine Antwort besteht, und diese nur, wo etwas <em class=\"germph\">gesagt</em> werden <em class=\"germph\">kann</em>.</div>',2),
(2099,'2011-10-03 12:17:09','2011-10-03 12:17:09',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wir fühlen, dass, selbst wenn alle <em class=\"germph\">möglichen</em> wissenschaftlichen Fragen beantwortet sind, unsere Lebensprobleme noch gar nicht berührt sind. Freilich bleibt dann eben keine Frage mehr; und eben dies ist die Antwort.</div>',2),
(2100,'2011-10-03 12:17:09','2011-10-03 12:17:09',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die Lösung des Problems des Lebens merkt man am Verschwinden dieses Problems.</div><div class=\"ger\">(Ist nicht dies der Grund, warum Menschen, denen der Sinn des Lebens nach langen Zweifeln klar wurde, warum diese dann nicht sagen konnten, worin dieser Sinn bestand?)</div>',2),
(2101,'2011-10-03 12:17:09','2011-10-03 12:17:09',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Es gibt allerdings Unaussprechliches. Dies <em class=\"germph\">zeigt</em> sich, es ist das Mystische.</div>',2),
(2102,'2011-10-03 12:17:09','2011-10-03 12:17:09',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Die richtige Methode der Philosophie wäre eigentlich die: Nichts zu sagen, als was sich sagen lässt, also Sätze der Naturwissenschaft—also etwas, was mit Philosophie nichts zu tun hat—, und dann immer, wenn ein anderer etwas Metaphysisches sagen wollte, ihm nachzuweisen, dass er gewissen Zeichen in seinen Sätzen keine Bedeutung gegeben hat. Diese Methode wäre für den anderen unbefriedigend—er hätte nicht das Gefühl, dass wir ihn Philosophie lehrten—aber <em class=\"germph\">sie</em> wäre die einzig streng richtige.</div>',2),
(2103,'2011-10-03 12:17:09','2011-10-03 12:17:09',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Meine Sätze erläutern dadurch, dass sie der, welcher mich versteht, am Ende als unsinnig erkennt, wenn er durch sie—auf ihnen—über sie hinausgestiegen ist. (Er muss sozusagen die Leiter wegwerfen, nachdem er auf ihr hinaufgestiegen ist.)</div><div class=\"ger\">Er muss diese Sätze überwinden, dann sieht er die Welt richtig.</div>',2),
(2104,'2011-10-03 12:17:09','2011-10-03 12:17:09',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'<div class=\"ger\">Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen.</div>',2);
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/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `tractatusapp_textfragment_in_expression` ENABLE KEYS */;
UNLOCK TABLES;
# Dump of table tractatusapp_textunit
# ------------------------------------------------------------
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tractatusapp_textunit`;
CREATE TABLE `tractatusapp_textunit` (
`id` int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`created_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`updated_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`editedrecord` tinyint(1) NOT NULL,
`review` tinyint(1) NOT NULL,
`internal_notes` longtext NOT NULL,
`created_by_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`updated_by_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`name` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`number` int DEFAULT NULL,
`description` longtext NOT NULL,
`hastype_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`parent_id` int DEFAULT NULL,
`lft` int unsigned NOT NULL,
`rght` int unsigned NOT NULL,
`tree_id` int unsigned NOT NULL,
`level` int unsigned NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textunit_4a21cf42` (`created_by_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textunit_6f403c1` (`updated_by_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textunit_3fb4e5d9` (`hastype_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textunit_63f17a16` (`parent_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textunit_42b06ff6` (`lft`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textunit_6eabc1a6` (`rght`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textunit_102f80d8` (`tree_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textunit_2a8f42e8` (`level`),
CONSTRAINT `created_by_id_refs_id_513c81bd` FOREIGN KEY (`created_by_id`) REFERENCES `auth_user` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `hastype_id_refs_id_1bcee5cf` FOREIGN KEY (`hastype_id`) REFERENCES `tractatusapp_textunittype` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `parent_id_refs_id_44c625e5` FOREIGN KEY (`parent_id`) REFERENCES `tractatusapp_textunit` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `updated_by_id_refs_id_513c81bd` FOREIGN KEY (`updated_by_id`) REFERENCES `auth_user` (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3;
LOCK TABLES `tractatusapp_textunit` WRITE;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `tractatusapp_textunit` DISABLE KEYS */;
INSERT INTO `tractatusapp_textunit` (`id`, `created_at`, `updated_at`, `editedrecord`, `review`, `internal_notes`, `created_by_id`, `updated_by_id`, `name`, `number`, `description`, `hastype_id`, `parent_id`, `lft`, `rght`, `tree_id`, `level`)
VALUES
(527,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'1',NULL,'',1,NULL,1,14,1,0),
(528,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'1.1',NULL,'',1,527,6,13,1,1),
(529,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'1.11',NULL,'',1,528,11,12,1,2),
(530,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'1.12',NULL,'',1,528,9,10,1,2),
(531,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'1.13',NULL,'',1,528,7,8,1,2),
(532,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'1.2',NULL,'',1,527,2,5,1,1),
(533,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'1.21',NULL,'',1,532,3,4,1,2),
(534,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2',NULL,'',1,NULL,1,158,8,0),
(535,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 13:55:48',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.01',NULL,'',1,534,134,157,8,1),
(536,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.011',NULL,'',1,535,155,156,8,2),
(537,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.012',NULL,'',1,535,143,154,8,2),
(538,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0121',NULL,'',1,537,152,153,8,3),
(539,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0122',NULL,'',1,537,150,151,8,3),
(540,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0123',NULL,'',1,537,146,149,8,3),
(541,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.01231',NULL,'',1,540,147,148,8,4),
(542,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0124',NULL,'',1,537,144,145,8,3),
(543,'2011-10-03 12:14:54','2011-10-03 12:14:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.013',NULL,'',1,535,139,142,8,2),
(544,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0131',NULL,'',1,543,140,141,8,3),
(545,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.014',NULL,'',1,535,135,138,8,2),
(546,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0141',NULL,'',1,545,136,137,8,3),
(547,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.02',NULL,'',1,534,98,133,8,1),
(548,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0201',NULL,'',1,547,131,132,8,2),
(549,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.021',NULL,'',1,547,125,130,8,2),
(550,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0211',NULL,'',1,549,128,129,8,3),
(551,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0212',NULL,'',1,549,126,127,8,3),
(552,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.022',NULL,'',1,547,123,124,8,2),
(553,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.023',NULL,'',1,547,113,122,8,2),
(554,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0231',NULL,'',1,553,120,121,8,3),
(555,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0232',NULL,'',1,553,118,119,8,3),
(556,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0233',NULL,'',1,553,114,117,8,3),
(557,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.02331',NULL,'',1,556,115,116,8,4),
(558,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.024',NULL,'',1,547,111,112,8,2),
(559,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.025',NULL,'',1,547,107,110,8,2),
(560,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0251',NULL,'',1,559,108,109,8,3),
(561,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.026',NULL,'',1,547,105,106,8,2),
(562,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.027',NULL,'',1,547,99,104,8,2),
(563,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0271',NULL,'',1,562,102,103,8,3),
(564,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.0272',NULL,'',1,562,100,101,8,3),
(565,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.03',NULL,'',1,534,88,97,8,1),
(566,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.031',NULL,'',1,565,95,96,8,2),
(567,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.032',NULL,'',1,565,93,94,8,2),
(568,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.033',NULL,'',1,565,91,92,8,2),
(569,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.034',NULL,'',1,565,89,90,8,2),
(570,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.04',NULL,'',1,534,86,87,8,1),
(571,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.05',NULL,'',1,534,84,85,8,1),
(572,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.06',NULL,'',1,534,76,83,8,1),
(573,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.061',NULL,'',1,572,81,82,8,2),
(574,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.062',NULL,'',1,572,79,80,8,2),
(575,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.063',NULL,'',1,572,77,78,8,2),
(576,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.1',NULL,'',1,534,24,75,8,1),
(577,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.11',NULL,'',1,576,73,74,8,2),
(578,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.12',NULL,'',1,576,71,72,8,2),
(579,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.13',NULL,'',1,576,67,70,8,2),
(580,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.131',NULL,'',1,579,68,69,8,3),
(581,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.14',NULL,'',1,576,63,66,8,2),
(582,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.141',NULL,'',1,581,64,65,8,3),
(583,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.15',NULL,'',1,576,47,62,8,2),
(584,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.151',NULL,'',1,583,48,61,8,3),
(585,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.1511',NULL,'',1,584,59,60,8,4),
(586,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.1512',NULL,'',1,584,55,58,8,4),
(587,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.15121',NULL,'',1,586,56,57,8,5),
(588,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.1513',NULL,'',1,584,53,54,8,4),
(589,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.1514',NULL,'',1,584,51,52,8,4),
(590,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.1515',NULL,'',1,584,49,50,8,4),
(591,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.16',NULL,'',1,576,43,46,8,2),
(592,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.161',NULL,'',1,591,44,45,8,3),
(593,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.17',NULL,'',1,576,33,42,8,2),
(594,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.171',NULL,'',1,593,40,41,8,3),
(595,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.172',NULL,'',1,593,38,39,8,3),
(596,'2011-10-03 12:14:55','2011-10-03 12:14:55',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.173',NULL,'',1,593,36,37,8,3),
(597,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.174',NULL,'',1,593,34,35,8,3),
(598,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.18',NULL,'',1,576,27,32,8,2),
(599,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.181',NULL,'',1,598,30,31,8,3),
(600,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.182',NULL,'',1,598,28,29,8,3),
(601,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.19',NULL,'',1,576,25,26,8,2),
(602,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.2',NULL,'',1,534,2,23,8,1),
(603,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.201',NULL,'',1,602,21,22,8,2),
(604,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.202',NULL,'',1,602,19,20,8,2),
(605,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.203',NULL,'',1,602,17,18,8,2),
(606,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.21',NULL,'',1,602,15,16,8,2),
(607,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.22',NULL,'',1,602,3,14,8,2),
(608,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.221',NULL,'',1,607,12,13,8,3),
(609,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.222',NULL,'',1,607,10,11,8,3),
(610,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.223',NULL,'',1,607,8,9,8,3),
(611,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.224',NULL,'',1,607,6,7,8,3),
(612,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'2.225',NULL,'',1,607,4,5,8,3),
(613,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3',NULL,'',1,NULL,1,148,87,0),
(614,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.001',NULL,'',1,613,146,147,87,1),
(615,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.01',NULL,'',1,613,144,145,87,1),
(616,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.02',NULL,'',1,613,142,143,87,1),
(617,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.03',NULL,'',1,613,134,141,87,1),
(618,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.031',NULL,'',1,617,139,140,87,2),
(619,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.032',NULL,'',1,617,135,138,87,2),
(620,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.0321',NULL,'',1,619,136,137,87,3),
(621,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.04',NULL,'',1,613,132,133,87,1),
(622,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.05',NULL,'',1,613,130,131,87,1),
(623,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.1',NULL,'',1,613,108,129,87,1),
(624,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.11',NULL,'',1,623,127,128,87,2),
(625,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.12',NULL,'',1,623,125,126,87,2),
(626,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.13',NULL,'',1,623,123,124,87,2),
(627,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.14',NULL,'',1,623,109,122,87,2),
(628,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.141',NULL,'',1,627,120,121,87,3),
(629,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.142',NULL,'',1,627,118,119,87,3),
(630,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.143',NULL,'',1,627,112,117,87,3),
(631,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.1431',NULL,'',1,630,115,116,87,4),
(632,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.1432',NULL,'',1,630,113,114,87,4),
(633,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.144',NULL,'',1,627,110,111,87,3),
(634,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.2',NULL,'',1,613,78,107,87,1),
(635,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.201',NULL,'',1,634,105,106,87,2),
(636,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.202',NULL,'',1,634,103,104,87,2),
(637,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 13:55:49',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.203',NULL,'',1,634,101,102,87,2),
(638,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.21',NULL,'',1,634,99,100,87,2),
(639,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.22',NULL,'',1,634,95,98,87,2),
(640,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.221',NULL,'',1,639,96,97,87,3),
(641,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.23',NULL,'',1,634,93,94,87,2),
(642,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.24',NULL,'',1,634,91,92,87,2),
(643,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.25',NULL,'',1,634,87,90,87,2),
(644,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.251',NULL,'',1,643,88,89,87,3),
(645,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.26',NULL,'',1,634,79,86,87,2),
(646,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.261',NULL,'',1,645,84,85,87,3),
(647,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.262',NULL,'',1,645,82,83,87,3),
(648,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.263',NULL,'',1,645,80,81,87,3),
(649,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.3',NULL,'',1,613,12,77,87,1),
(650,'2011-10-03 12:14:56','2011-10-03 12:14:56',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.31',NULL,'',1,649,59,76,87,2),
(651,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.311',NULL,'',1,650,74,75,87,3),
(652,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.312',NULL,'',1,650,72,73,87,3),
(653,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.313',NULL,'',1,650,70,71,87,3),
(654,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.314',NULL,'',1,650,68,69,87,3),
(655,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.315',NULL,'',1,650,66,67,87,3),
(656,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.316',NULL,'',1,650,64,65,87,3),
(657,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.317',NULL,'',1,650,62,63,87,3),
(658,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.318',NULL,'',1,650,60,61,87,3),
(659,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.32',NULL,'',1,649,41,58,87,2),
(660,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.321',NULL,'',1,659,56,57,87,3),
(661,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.322',NULL,'',1,659,54,55,87,3),
(662,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.323',NULL,'',1,659,52,53,87,3),
(663,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.324',NULL,'',1,659,50,51,87,3),
(664,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.325',NULL,'',1,659,48,49,87,3),
(665,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.326',NULL,'',1,659,46,47,87,3),
(666,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.327',NULL,'',1,659,44,45,87,3),
(667,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.328',NULL,'',1,659,42,43,87,3),
(668,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.33',NULL,'',1,649,31,40,87,2),
(669,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.331',NULL,'',1,668,38,39,87,3),
(670,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.332',NULL,'',1,668,36,37,87,3),
(671,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.333',NULL,'',1,668,34,35,87,3),
(672,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.334',NULL,'',1,668,32,33,87,3),
(673,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.34',NULL,'',1,649,13,30,87,2),
(674,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.341',NULL,'',1,673,26,29,87,3),
(675,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.3411',NULL,'',1,674,27,28,87,4),
(676,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.342',NULL,'',1,673,22,25,87,3),
(677,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.3421',NULL,'',1,676,23,24,87,4),
(678,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.343',NULL,'',1,673,20,21,87,3),
(679,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.344',NULL,'',1,673,14,19,87,3),
(680,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.3441',NULL,'',1,679,17,18,87,4),
(681,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.3442',NULL,'',1,679,15,16,87,4),
(682,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.4',NULL,'',1,613,4,11,87,1),
(683,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.41',NULL,'',1,682,7,10,87,2),
(684,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.411',NULL,'',1,683,8,9,87,3),
(685,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.42',NULL,'',1,682,5,6,87,2),
(686,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'3.5',NULL,'',1,613,2,3,87,1),
(687,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4',NULL,'',1,NULL,1,218,161,0),
(688,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 13:55:50',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.001',NULL,'',1,687,216,217,161,1),
(689,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 13:55:50',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.002',NULL,'',1,687,214,215,161,1),
(690,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 13:55:50',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.003',NULL,'',1,687,210,213,161,1),
(691,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.0031',NULL,'',1,690,211,212,161,2),
(692,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 13:55:50',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.01',NULL,'',1,687,194,209,161,1),
(693,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.011',NULL,'',1,692,207,208,161,2),
(694,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.012',NULL,'',1,692,205,206,161,2),
(695,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.013',NULL,'',1,692,203,204,161,2),
(696,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.014',NULL,'',1,692,199,202,161,2),
(697,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.0141',NULL,'',1,696,200,201,161,3),
(698,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.015',NULL,'',1,692,197,198,161,2),
(699,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.016',NULL,'',1,692,195,196,161,2),
(700,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 13:55:50',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.02',NULL,'',1,687,178,193,161,1),
(701,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.021',NULL,'',1,700,191,192,161,2),
(702,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.022',NULL,'',1,700,189,190,161,2),
(703,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.023',NULL,'',1,700,187,188,161,2),
(704,'2011-10-03 12:14:57','2011-10-03 12:14:57',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.024',NULL,'',1,700,185,186,161,2),
(705,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.025',NULL,'',1,700,183,184,161,2),
(706,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.026',NULL,'',1,700,181,182,161,2),
(707,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.027',NULL,'',1,700,179,180,161,2),
(708,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 13:55:50',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.03',NULL,'',1,687,168,177,161,1),
(709,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.031',NULL,'',1,708,171,176,161,2),
(710,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.0311',NULL,'',1,709,174,175,161,3),
(711,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.0312',NULL,'',1,709,172,173,161,3),
(712,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.032',NULL,'',1,708,169,170,161,2),
(713,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 13:55:50',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.04',NULL,'',1,687,160,167,161,1),
(714,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.041',NULL,'',1,713,161,166,161,2),
(715,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.0411',NULL,'',1,714,164,165,161,3),
(716,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.0412',NULL,'',1,714,162,163,161,3),
(717,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 13:55:50',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.05',NULL,'',1,687,158,159,161,1),
(718,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 13:55:50',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.06',NULL,'',1,687,144,157,161,1),
(719,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.061',NULL,'',1,718,155,156,161,2),
(720,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.062',NULL,'',1,718,151,154,161,2),
(721,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.0621',NULL,'',1,720,152,153,161,3),
(722,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.063',NULL,'',1,718,149,150,161,2),
(723,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.064',NULL,'',1,718,145,148,161,2),
(724,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.0641',NULL,'',1,723,146,147,161,3),
(725,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1',NULL,'',1,687,82,143,161,1),
(726,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.11',NULL,'',1,725,125,142,161,2),
(727,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.111',NULL,'',1,726,140,141,161,3),
(728,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.112',NULL,'',1,726,134,139,161,3),
(729,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1121',NULL,'',1,728,137,138,161,4),
(730,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1122',NULL,'',1,728,135,136,161,4),
(731,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.113',NULL,'',1,726,132,133,161,3),
(732,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.114',NULL,'',1,726,130,131,161,3),
(733,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.115',NULL,'',1,726,128,129,161,3),
(734,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.116',NULL,'',1,726,126,127,161,3),
(735,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.12',NULL,'',1,725,83,124,161,2),
(736,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.121',NULL,'',1,735,116,123,161,3),
(737,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1211',NULL,'',1,736,121,122,161,4),
(738,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1212',NULL,'',1,736,119,120,161,4),
(739,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1213',NULL,'',1,736,117,118,161,4),
(740,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.122',NULL,'',1,735,112,115,161,3),
(741,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1221',NULL,'',1,740,113,114,161,4),
(742,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.123',NULL,'',1,735,110,111,161,3),
(743,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.124',NULL,'',1,735,106,109,161,3),
(744,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1241',NULL,'',1,743,107,108,161,4),
(745,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.125',NULL,'',1,735,100,105,161,3),
(746,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1251',NULL,'',1,745,103,104,161,4),
(747,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1252',NULL,'',1,745,101,102,161,4),
(748,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.126',NULL,'',1,735,98,99,161,3),
(749,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.127',NULL,'',1,735,86,97,161,3),
(750,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1271',NULL,'',1,749,95,96,161,4),
(751,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1272',NULL,'',1,749,91,94,161,4),
(752,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.12721',NULL,'',1,751,92,93,161,5),
(753,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1273',NULL,'',1,749,89,90,161,4),
(754,'2011-10-03 12:14:58','2011-10-03 12:14:58',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.1274',NULL,'',1,749,87,88,161,4),
(755,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.128',NULL,'',1,735,84,85,161,3),
(756,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.2',NULL,'',1,687,52,81,161,1),
(757,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.21',NULL,'',1,756,77,80,161,2),
(758,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.211',NULL,'',1,757,78,79,161,3),
(759,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.22',NULL,'',1,756,71,76,161,2),
(760,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.221',NULL,'',1,759,72,75,161,3),
(761,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.2211',NULL,'',1,760,73,74,161,4),
(762,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.23',NULL,'',1,756,69,70,161,2),
(763,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.24',NULL,'',1,756,61,68,161,2),
(764,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.241',NULL,'',1,763,66,67,161,3),
(765,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.242',NULL,'',1,763,64,65,161,3),
(766,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.243',NULL,'',1,763,62,63,161,3),
(767,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.25',NULL,'',1,756,59,60,161,2),
(768,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.26',NULL,'',1,756,57,58,161,2),
(769,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.27',NULL,'',1,756,55,56,161,2),
(770,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.28',NULL,'',1,756,53,54,161,2),
(771,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.3',NULL,'',1,687,48,51,161,1),
(772,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.31',NULL,'',1,771,49,50,161,2),
(773,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.4',NULL,'',1,687,10,47,161,1),
(774,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.41',NULL,'',1,773,43,46,161,2),
(775,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.411',NULL,'',1,774,44,45,161,3),
(776,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.42',NULL,'',1,773,41,42,161,2),
(777,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.43',NULL,'',1,773,37,40,161,2),
(778,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.431',NULL,'',1,777,38,39,161,3),
(779,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.44',NULL,'',1,773,31,36,161,2),
(780,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.441',NULL,'',1,779,34,35,161,3),
(781,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.442',NULL,'',1,779,32,33,161,3),
(782,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.45',NULL,'',1,773,29,30,161,2),
(783,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.46',NULL,'',1,773,11,28,161,2),
(784,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.461',NULL,'',1,783,24,27,161,3),
(785,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.4611',NULL,'',1,784,25,26,161,4),
(786,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.462',NULL,'',1,783,22,23,161,3),
(787,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.463',NULL,'',1,783,20,21,161,3),
(788,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.464',NULL,'',1,783,18,19,161,3),
(789,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.465',NULL,'',1,783,16,17,161,3),
(790,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.466',NULL,'',1,783,12,15,161,3),
(791,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.4661',NULL,'',1,790,13,14,161,4),
(792,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.5',NULL,'',1,687,2,9,161,1),
(793,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.51',NULL,'',1,792,7,8,161,2),
(794,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.52',NULL,'',1,792,5,6,161,2),
(795,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'4.53',NULL,'',1,792,3,4,161,2),
(796,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5',NULL,'',1,NULL,1,302,270,0),
(797,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 13:55:51',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.01',NULL,'',1,796,300,301,270,1),
(798,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 13:55:51',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.02',NULL,'',1,796,298,299,270,1),
(799,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.1',NULL,'',1,796,234,297,270,1),
(800,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 13:55:52',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.101',NULL,'',1,799,295,296,270,2),
(801,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.11',NULL,'',1,799,293,294,270,2),
(802,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.12',NULL,'',1,799,281,292,270,2),
(803,'2011-10-03 12:14:59','2011-10-03 12:14:59',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.121',NULL,'',1,802,290,291,270,3),
(804,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.122',NULL,'',1,802,288,289,270,3),
(805,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.123',NULL,'',1,802,286,287,270,3),
(806,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.124',NULL,'',1,802,282,285,270,3),
(807,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.1241',NULL,'',1,806,283,284,270,4),
(808,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.13',NULL,'',1,799,259,280,270,2),
(809,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.131',NULL,'',1,808,276,279,270,3),
(810,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.1311',NULL,'',1,809,277,278,270,4),
(811,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.132',NULL,'',1,808,274,275,270,3),
(812,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.133',NULL,'',1,808,272,273,270,3),
(813,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.134',NULL,'',1,808,270,271,270,3),
(814,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.135',NULL,'',1,808,268,269,270,3),
(815,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.136',NULL,'',1,808,260,267,270,3),
(816,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.1361',NULL,'',1,815,265,266,270,4),
(817,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.1362',NULL,'',1,815,263,264,270,4),
(818,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.1363',NULL,'',1,815,261,262,270,4),
(819,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.14',NULL,'',1,799,251,258,270,2),
(820,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.141',NULL,'',1,819,256,257,270,3),
(821,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.142',NULL,'',1,819,254,255,270,3),
(822,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.143',NULL,'',1,819,252,253,270,3),
(823,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.15',NULL,'',1,799,235,250,270,2),
(824,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.151',NULL,'',1,823,246,249,270,3),
(825,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.1511',NULL,'',1,824,247,248,270,4),
(826,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.152',NULL,'',1,823,244,245,270,3),
(827,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.153',NULL,'',1,823,242,243,270,3),
(828,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.154',NULL,'',1,823,240,241,270,3),
(829,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.155',NULL,'',1,823,238,239,270,3),
(830,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.156',NULL,'',1,823,236,237,270,3),
(831,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.2',NULL,'',1,796,194,233,270,1),
(832,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.21',NULL,'',1,831,231,232,270,2),
(833,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.22',NULL,'',1,831,229,230,270,2),
(834,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.23',NULL,'',1,831,217,228,270,2),
(835,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.231',NULL,'',1,834,226,227,270,3),
(836,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.232',NULL,'',1,834,224,225,270,3),
(837,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.233',NULL,'',1,834,222,223,270,3),
(838,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.234',NULL,'',1,834,218,221,270,3),
(839,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.2341',NULL,'',1,838,219,220,270,4),
(840,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.24',NULL,'',1,831,211,216,270,2),
(841,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.241',NULL,'',1,840,214,215,270,3),
(842,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.242',NULL,'',1,840,212,213,270,3),
(843,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.25',NULL,'',1,831,195,210,270,2),
(844,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.251',NULL,'',1,843,208,209,270,3),
(845,'2011-10-03 12:15:00','2011-10-03 12:15:00',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.252',NULL,'',1,843,200,207,270,3),
(846,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.2521',NULL,'',1,845,205,206,270,4),
(847,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.2522',NULL,'',1,845,203,204,270,4),
(848,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.2523',NULL,'',1,845,201,202,270,4),
(849,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.253',NULL,'',1,843,198,199,270,3),
(850,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.254',NULL,'',1,843,196,197,270,3),
(851,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.3',NULL,'',1,796,188,193,270,1),
(852,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.31',NULL,'',1,851,191,192,270,2),
(853,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.32',NULL,'',1,851,189,190,270,2),
(854,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.4',NULL,'',1,796,132,187,270,1),
(855,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.41',NULL,'',1,854,185,186,270,2),
(856,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.42',NULL,'',1,854,183,184,270,2),
(857,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.43',NULL,'',1,854,181,182,270,2),
(858,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.44',NULL,'',1,854,175,180,270,2),
(859,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.441',NULL,'',1,858,178,179,270,3),
(860,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.442',NULL,'',1,858,176,177,270,3),
(861,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.45',NULL,'',1,854,163,174,270,2),
(862,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.451',NULL,'',1,861,172,173,270,3),
(863,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.452',NULL,'',1,861,170,171,270,3),
(864,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.453',NULL,'',1,861,168,169,270,3),
(865,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.454',NULL,'',1,861,164,167,270,3),
(866,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.4541',NULL,'',1,865,165,166,270,4),
(867,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.46',NULL,'',1,854,157,162,270,2),
(868,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.461',NULL,'',1,867,158,161,270,3),
(869,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.4611',NULL,'',1,868,159,160,270,4),
(870,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.47',NULL,'',1,854,133,156,270,2),
(871,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.471',NULL,'',1,870,152,155,270,3),
(872,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.4711',NULL,'',1,871,153,154,270,4),
(873,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.472',NULL,'',1,870,150,151,270,3),
(874,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.473',NULL,'',1,870,140,149,270,3),
(875,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.4731',NULL,'',1,874,147,148,270,4),
(876,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.4732',NULL,'',1,874,143,146,270,4),
(877,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.47321',NULL,'',1,876,144,145,270,5),
(878,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.4733',NULL,'',1,874,141,142,270,4),
(879,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.474',NULL,'',1,870,138,139,270,3),
(880,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.475',NULL,'',1,870,136,137,270,3),
(881,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.476',NULL,'',1,870,134,135,270,3),
(882,'2011-10-03 12:15:01','2011-10-03 12:15:01',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5',NULL,'',1,796,26,131,270,1),
(883,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 13:55:52',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.501',NULL,'',1,882,129,130,270,2),
(884,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 13:55:52',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.502',NULL,'',1,882,127,128,270,2),
(885,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 13:55:53',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.503',NULL,'',1,882,125,126,270,2),
(886,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.51',NULL,'',1,882,111,124,270,2),
(887,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.511',NULL,'',1,886,122,123,270,3),
(888,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.512',NULL,'',1,886,120,121,270,3),
(889,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.513',NULL,'',1,886,118,119,270,3),
(890,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.514',NULL,'',1,886,116,117,270,3),
(891,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.515',NULL,'',1,886,112,115,270,3),
(892,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5151',NULL,'',1,891,113,114,270,4),
(893,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.52',NULL,'',1,882,93,110,270,2),
(894,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.521',NULL,'',1,893,108,109,270,3),
(895,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.522',NULL,'',1,893,106,107,270,3),
(896,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.523',NULL,'',1,893,104,105,270,3),
(897,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.524',NULL,'',1,893,102,103,270,3),
(898,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.525',NULL,'',1,893,100,101,270,3),
(899,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.526',NULL,'',1,893,94,99,270,3),
(900,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5261',NULL,'',1,899,97,98,270,4),
(901,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5262',NULL,'',1,899,95,96,270,4),
(902,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.53',NULL,'',1,882,69,92,270,2),
(903,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 13:55:53',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5301',NULL,'',1,902,90,91,270,3),
(904,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 13:55:53',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5302',NULL,'',1,902,88,89,270,3),
(905,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 13:55:53',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5303',NULL,'',1,902,86,87,270,3),
(906,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.531',NULL,'',1,902,84,85,270,3),
(907,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.532',NULL,'',1,902,80,83,270,3),
(908,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5321',NULL,'',1,907,81,82,270,4),
(909,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.533',NULL,'',1,902,78,79,270,3),
(910,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.534',NULL,'',1,902,76,77,270,3),
(911,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.535',NULL,'',1,902,70,75,270,3),
(912,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5351',NULL,'',1,911,73,74,270,4),
(913,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5352',NULL,'',1,911,71,72,270,4),
(914,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.54',NULL,'',1,882,57,68,270,2),
(915,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.541',NULL,'',1,914,66,67,270,3),
(916,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.542',NULL,'',1,914,58,65,270,3),
(917,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5421',NULL,'',1,916,63,64,270,4),
(918,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5422',NULL,'',1,916,61,62,270,4),
(919,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5423',NULL,'',1,916,59,60,270,4),
(920,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.55',NULL,'',1,882,27,56,270,2),
(921,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.551',NULL,'',1,920,54,55,270,3),
(922,'2011-10-03 12:15:02','2011-10-03 12:15:02',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.552',NULL,'',1,920,50,53,270,3),
(923,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5521',NULL,'',1,922,51,52,270,4),
(924,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.553',NULL,'',1,920,48,49,270,3),
(925,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.554',NULL,'',1,920,42,47,270,3),
(926,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5541',NULL,'',1,925,45,46,270,4),
(927,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5542',NULL,'',1,925,43,44,270,4),
(928,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.555',NULL,'',1,920,40,41,270,3),
(929,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.556',NULL,'',1,920,32,39,270,3),
(930,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5561',NULL,'',1,929,37,38,270,4),
(931,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5562',NULL,'',1,929,35,36,270,4),
(932,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5563',NULL,'',1,929,33,34,270,4),
(933,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.557',NULL,'',1,920,28,31,270,3),
(934,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.5571',NULL,'',1,933,29,30,270,4),
(935,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.6',NULL,'',1,796,2,25,270,1),
(936,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.61',NULL,'',1,935,23,24,270,2),
(937,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.62',NULL,'',1,935,19,22,270,2),
(938,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.621',NULL,'',1,937,20,21,270,3),
(939,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.63',NULL,'',1,935,7,18,270,2),
(940,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.631',NULL,'',1,939,16,17,270,3),
(941,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.632',NULL,'',1,939,14,15,270,3),
(942,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.633',NULL,'',1,939,10,13,270,3),
(943,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.6331',NULL,'',1,942,11,12,270,4),
(944,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.634',NULL,'',1,939,8,9,270,3),
(945,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.64',NULL,'',1,935,3,6,270,2),
(946,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'5.641',NULL,'',1,945,4,5,270,3),
(947,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6',NULL,'',1,NULL,1,210,421,0),
(948,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 13:55:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.001',NULL,'',1,947,208,209,421,1),
(949,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 13:55:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.002',NULL,'',1,947,206,207,421,1),
(950,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 13:55:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.01',NULL,'',1,947,204,205,421,1),
(951,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 13:55:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.02',NULL,'',1,947,198,203,421,1),
(952,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.021',NULL,'',1,951,201,202,421,2),
(953,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.022',NULL,'',1,951,199,200,421,2),
(954,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 13:55:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.03',NULL,'',1,947,194,197,421,1),
(955,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.031',NULL,'',1,954,195,196,421,2),
(956,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1',NULL,'',1,947,132,193,421,1),
(957,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.11',NULL,'',1,956,185,192,421,2),
(958,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.111',NULL,'',1,957,190,191,421,3),
(959,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.112',NULL,'',1,957,188,189,421,3),
(960,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.113',NULL,'',1,957,186,187,421,3),
(961,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 12:15:03',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.12',NULL,'',1,956,135,184,421,2),
(962,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 13:55:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1201',NULL,'',1,961,182,183,421,3),
(963,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 13:55:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1202',NULL,'',1,961,180,181,421,3),
(964,'2011-10-03 12:15:03','2011-10-03 13:55:54',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1203',NULL,'',1,961,178,179,421,3),
(965,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.121',NULL,'',1,961,176,177,421,3),
(966,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.122',NULL,'',1,961,166,175,421,3),
(967,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1221',NULL,'',1,966,173,174,421,4),
(968,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1222',NULL,'',1,966,171,172,421,4),
(969,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1223',NULL,'',1,966,169,170,421,4),
(970,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1224',NULL,'',1,966,167,168,421,4),
(971,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.123',NULL,'',1,961,158,165,421,3),
(972,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1231',NULL,'',1,971,163,164,421,4),
(973,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1232',NULL,'',1,971,161,162,421,4),
(974,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1233',NULL,'',1,971,159,160,421,4),
(975,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.124',NULL,'',1,961,156,157,421,3),
(976,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.125',NULL,'',1,961,152,155,421,3),
(977,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1251',NULL,'',1,976,153,154,421,4),
(978,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.126',NULL,'',1,961,140,151,421,3),
(979,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1261',NULL,'',1,978,149,150,421,4),
(980,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1262',NULL,'',1,978,147,148,421,4),
(981,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1263',NULL,'',1,978,145,146,421,4),
(982,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1264',NULL,'',1,978,143,144,421,4),
(983,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1265',NULL,'',1,978,141,142,421,4),
(984,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.127',NULL,'',1,961,136,139,421,3),
(985,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.1271',NULL,'',1,984,137,138,421,4),
(986,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.13',NULL,'',1,956,133,134,421,2),
(987,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.2',NULL,'',1,947,100,131,421,1),
(988,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.21',NULL,'',1,987,127,130,421,2),
(989,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.211',NULL,'',1,988,128,129,421,3),
(990,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.22',NULL,'',1,987,125,126,421,2),
(991,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.23',NULL,'',1,987,105,124,421,2),
(992,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.231',NULL,'',1,991,122,123,421,3),
(993,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.232',NULL,'',1,991,114,121,421,3),
(994,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.2321',NULL,'',1,993,119,120,421,4),
(995,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.2322',NULL,'',1,993,117,118,421,4),
(996,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.2323',NULL,'',1,993,115,116,421,4),
(997,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.233',NULL,'',1,991,110,113,421,3),
(998,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.2331',NULL,'',1,997,111,112,421,4),
(999,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.234',NULL,'',1,991,106,109,421,3),
(1000,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.2341',NULL,'',1,999,107,108,421,4),
(1001,'2011-10-03 12:15:04','2011-10-03 12:15:04',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.24',NULL,'',1,987,101,104,421,2),
(1002,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.241',NULL,'',1,1001,102,103,421,3),
(1003,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.3',NULL,'',1,947,44,99,421,1),
(1004,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.31',NULL,'',1,1003,97,98,421,2),
(1005,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.32',NULL,'',1,1003,91,96,421,2),
(1006,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.321',NULL,'',1,1005,92,95,421,3),
(1007,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.3211',NULL,'',1,1006,93,94,421,4),
(1008,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.33',NULL,'',1,1003,89,90,421,2),
(1009,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.34',NULL,'',1,1003,77,88,421,2),
(1010,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.341',NULL,'',1,1009,86,87,421,3),
(1011,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.342',NULL,'',1,1009,84,85,421,3),
(1012,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.343',NULL,'',1,1009,78,83,421,3),
(1013,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.3431',NULL,'',1,1012,81,82,421,4),
(1014,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.3432',NULL,'',1,1012,79,80,421,4),
(1015,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.35',NULL,'',1,1003,75,76,421,2),
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(1017,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.361',NULL,'',1,1016,68,73,421,3),
(1018,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.3611',NULL,'',1,1017,69,72,421,4),
(1019,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.36111',NULL,'',1,1018,70,71,421,5),
(1020,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.362',NULL,'',1,1016,66,67,421,3),
(1021,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.363',NULL,'',1,1016,60,65,421,3),
(1022,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.3631',NULL,'',1,1021,61,64,421,4),
(1023,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.36311',NULL,'',1,1022,62,63,421,5),
(1024,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.37',NULL,'',1,1003,45,58,421,2),
(1025,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.371',NULL,'',1,1024,56,57,421,3),
(1026,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.372',NULL,'',1,1024,54,55,421,3),
(1027,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.373',NULL,'',1,1024,52,53,421,3),
(1028,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.374',NULL,'',1,1024,50,51,421,3),
(1029,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.375',NULL,'',1,1024,46,49,421,3),
(1030,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.3751',NULL,'',1,1029,47,48,421,4),
(1031,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.4',NULL,'',1,947,16,43,421,1),
(1032,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.41',NULL,'',1,1031,41,42,421,2),
(1033,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.42',NULL,'',1,1031,33,40,421,2),
(1034,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.421',NULL,'',1,1033,38,39,421,3),
(1035,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.422',NULL,'',1,1033,36,37,421,3),
(1036,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.423',NULL,'',1,1033,34,35,421,3),
(1037,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.43',NULL,'',1,1031,21,32,421,2),
(1038,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.431',NULL,'',1,1037,26,31,421,3),
(1039,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.4311',NULL,'',1,1038,29,30,421,4),
(1040,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.4312',NULL,'',1,1038,27,28,421,4),
(1041,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.432',NULL,'',1,1037,22,25,421,3),
(1042,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.4321',NULL,'',1,1041,23,24,421,4),
(1043,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.44',NULL,'',1,1031,19,20,421,2),
(1044,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.45',NULL,'',1,1031,17,18,421,2),
(1045,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.5',NULL,'',1,947,2,15,421,1),
(1046,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.51',NULL,'',1,1045,13,14,421,2),
(1047,'2011-10-03 12:15:05','2011-10-03 12:15:05',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.52',NULL,'',1,1045,7,12,421,2),
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(1049,'2011-10-03 12:15:06','2011-10-03 12:15:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.522',NULL,'',1,1047,8,9,421,3),
(1050,'2011-10-03 12:15:06','2011-10-03 12:15:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.53',NULL,'',1,1045,5,6,421,2),
(1051,'2011-10-03 12:15:06','2011-10-03 12:15:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'6.54',NULL,'',1,1045,3,4,421,2),
(1052,'2011-10-03 12:15:06','2011-10-03 12:15:06',0,0,'',NULL,NULL,'7',NULL,'',1,NULL,1,2,526,0);
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `tractatusapp_textunit` ENABLE KEYS */;
UNLOCK TABLES;
# Dump of table tractatusapp_textunit_hascontents
# ------------------------------------------------------------
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `tractatusapp_textunit_hascontents`;
CREATE TABLE `tractatusapp_textunit_hascontents` (
`id` int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`textunit_id` int NOT NULL,
`textfragment_id` int NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
UNIQUE KEY `textunit_id` (`textunit_id`,`textfragment_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textunit_hascontents_2ba086df` (`textunit_id`),
KEY `tractatusapp_textunit_hascontents_241f4a4b` (`textfragment_id`),
CONSTRAINT `textfragment_id_refs_id_7c7dde0c` FOREIGN KEY (`textfragment_id`) REFERENCES `tractatusapp_textfragment` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `textunit_id_refs_id_5dff672a` FOREIGN KEY (`textunit_id`) REFERENCES `tractatusapp_textunit` (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3;
LOCK TABLES `tractatusapp_textunit_hascontents` WRITE;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `tractatusapp_textunit_hascontents` DISABLE KEYS */;
INSERT INTO `tractatusapp_textunit_hascontents` (`id`, `textunit_id`, `textfragment_id`)
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(359, 'Maria', 'Magallanes', 'W', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Dumaguete', '0000-00-00', '2805552837', '<EMAIL>', 'mariamagallanes', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '498628188', 1, '49457248395', '9v6fmxk3g844', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
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(361, 'Mara', 'Makiling', 'C', 'M', 'Manila', 'Subic', '0000-00-00', '9325554755', '<EMAIL>', 'maramakiling', '', '', 'Filipino', '649826518', 1, '32068162544', 'u5a4l63tnp71', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
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(368, 'Yuuko', 'Aioi', 'A', 'M', 'Tagaytay', 'Tagaytay', '0000-00-00', '9335556740', '<EMAIL>', 'yuukoaioi', 'College', '', 'Japanese', '482225477', 1, '78565241528', 'c0oonkxd34eo', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(369, 'Sid', 'Nicodemus', 'G', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Baler', '0000-00-00', '2835556115', '<EMAIL>', 'sidnicodemus', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '842409116', 1, '47281926012', 'ztndu1afp2ae', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(370, 'George', 'Miler', 'Y', 'M', 'Antipolo', 'Perth', '0000-00-00', '9295553400', '<EMAIL>', 'georgemiler', 'Vocational', '', 'Austrailian', '53027854', 1, '22092841652', 'y1ktmjxhyr0d', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(371, 'Bong', 'Budots', 'R', 'M', '<NAME>', 'Dagupan', '0000-00-00', '9195551998', '<EMAIL>', 'bbudots', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '868199606', 1, '25658671320', 'mcu0i6led3jo', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(372, 'Mark', 'Maquia', 'W', 'M', 'Manila', 'Manila', '0000-00-00', '9215554981', '<EMAIL>', 'mmquia', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '415507697', 1, '72179993686', 'mvd8aax6qlmv', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(373, '<NAME>', 'Bourbon', 'Q', 'M', 'Manila', 'Madrid', '0000-00-00', '9335559032', '<EMAIL>', 'juanbourbon', 'College', '', 'Spanish', '585307701', 1, '44885408702', '4xlczuilywom', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(374, 'May', 'Martinez', 'U', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Quezon City', '0000-00-00', '9285553232', '<EMAIL>', 'kenmartinez', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '866932944', 1, '17541058632', 'pingas123', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(375, 'Juan', 'Rodriguez', 'S', 'M', 'Marikina', 'Marikina', '0000-00-00', '9295558379', '<EMAIL>', 'jrodriguez', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '387868675', 1, '53425006236', 'password12345', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(376, 'Sarah', '<NAME>', 'G', 'M', 'Manila', 'Manila', '0000-00-00', '9285559561', '<EMAIL>', 'sarahdc', '', '', 'Filipino', '75709106', 1, '47928338771', 'dimes4crimes', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(377, 'Martin', 'Jackson', 'W', 'M', 'Taguig', 'New York', '0000-00-00', '2805558385', '<EMAIL>', 'martinjackson', 'College', '', 'American', '692775254', 1, '42963007161', '4twenty69', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(378, 'Max', '<NAME>', 'A', 'M', 'Manila', 'Cebu', '0000-00-00', '2805552245', '<EMAIL>', 'maxdlc', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '665032679', 1, '88507513624', 'boom0606', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(379, 'Yolanda', 'Lobantac', 'P', 'M', 'Pasay', 'Tacloban', '0000-00-00', '9195556506', '<EMAIL>', 'yolobontac', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '239459341', 1, '65498508408', 'q8telmv8xhgp', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(380, 'Nino', 'Santo', 'T', 'M', 'Pasig', 'Dumaguete', '0000-00-00', '9235551325', '<EMAIL>', 'nisanto', '', '', 'Filipino', '70954192', 1, '72444590344', 'khye924cnqbq', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(381, 'Ronald', 'Ongsitco', 'D', 'M', 'Pasay', 'Shenzen', '0000-00-00', '9085559267', '<EMAIL>', 'ronong', 'Vocational', '', 'Chinese', '784203400', 1, '23417589325', 'djf433regwri', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(382, 'Linda', 'Feria', 'R', 'M', 'Muntinlupa', 'Ilo-Ilo', '0000-00-00', '9295552963', '<EMAIL>', 'lindaferia', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '158771229', 1, '91283595099', 'g1gr88g7b9co', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(383, 'May', 'Junjulay', 'Q', 'M', 'Manila', 'Manila', '0000-00-00', '9225552022', '<EMAIL>', 'mayjunjulay', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '678771358', 1, '43743692994', '6mryfegtw3pt', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(384, 'Winber', 'Uy', 'D', 'M', 'Manila', 'Shanghai', '0000-00-00', '2835555044', '<EMAIL>', 'winberuy', 'College', '', 'Chinese', '321679396', 1, '14187524395', 'xur8dx0q854f', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(385, 'Warren', '<NAME>', 'I', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Cebu', '0000-00-00', '2835556700', '<EMAIL>', '<NAME>', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '731438340', 1, '91348434669', 'q31rok38pham', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(386, 'Gah', 'Mytim', 'S', 'M', 'Taguig', '<NAME>', '0000-00-00', '9285550406', '<EMAIL>', 'gahmytim', 'Vocational', '', 'Norwegian', '160344698', 1, '43429643552', 'tj6fip9xlt3k', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(387, 'Karl', 'Martinez', 'U', 'M', 'Manila', 'Vigan', '0000-00-00', '9105551019', '<EMAIL>', 'karlmartinez', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '493805651', 1, '3815725969', '9bilhoohoip6', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(388, 'Felix', 'Gonzalez', 'W', 'M', 'Caloocan', 'Tuguegarao', '0000-00-00', '9335559657', '<EMAIL>', 'felixgonzalez', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '411804775', 1, '88504196920', 'tckmdfdphnnu', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(389, 'Mohammed', 'Abdul', 'Q', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Nubia', '0000-00-00', '9325550466', '<EMAIL>', 'mohammedabdul', 'Vocational', '', 'Egyptian', '965060471', 1, '37548462497', 'lkvznhjflr5e', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(390, 'Clarence', '<NAME>', 'K', 'M', 'Pasig', 'Pasig', '0000-00-00', '9335559369', '<EMAIL>', 'clarence<NAME>ruz', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '661675119', 1, '95833976419', '87kchyio6v7z', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(391, 'Bonifacio', 'Delgado', 'S', 'M', 'Pasay', 'Pasay', '0000-00-00', '9325551901', '<EMAIL>', 'bonifaciodelgado', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '780476625', 1, '92523467245', '7mcxms78ultg', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(392, 'Okbul', 'Ibanez', 'T', 'M', 'Calamba', 'Calamba', '0000-00-00', '9325554138', '<EMAIL>', 'okbulibanez', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '822235480', 1, '53357434464', 'w1re2a11uuf6', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(393, '<NAME>', '<NAME>', 'E', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Ormoc', '0000-00-00', '9195552449', '<EMAIL>', 'jmdelacruz', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '469515749', 1, '77811015462', 'fd17fzhbra81', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(394, 'Docar', 'Lisaydal', 'U', 'M', 'Taguig', 'Buguey', '0000-00-00', '9095557260', '<EMAIL>', 'docarlisaydal', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '773872508', 1, '32671165576', 'zuo3v7q3rrio', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(395, 'John', 'Medina', 'Q', 'M', 'San Juan', 'Baguio', '0000-00-00', '9285558513', '<EMAIL>', 'johnmedina', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '151003210', 1, '60069868364', 'hmare72kcr78', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(396, 'Gus', 'Abergus', 'S', 'M', '<NAME>', 'Dapitan', '0000-00-00', '9215551239', '<EMAIL>', 'gusabergus', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '306607080', 1, '8821979190', '2io69knsojjw', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(397, 'George', 'Carillo', 'U', 'M', 'Caloocan', 'Caloocan', '0000-00-00', '9325556687', '<EMAIL>', 'georgecarillo', '', '', 'Filipino', '715075741', 1, '1539087456', '546qkx6gf0b3', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(398, 'Gopal', 'Kumar', 'R', 'M', 'Manila', 'Mumbai', '0000-00-00', '9325553890', '<EMAIL>', 'gokumar', 'College', '', 'Indian', '687429394', 1, '71250781912', 'f51bmq5id6bp', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(399, 'Maxima', 'Hipolito', 'M', 'M', 'Taguig', 'Digos', '0000-00-00', '9075551275', '<EMAIL>', 'maximahipolito', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '771178127', 1, '43869003505', '5898r22zkat3', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(400, 'Princess', 'Belmonte', 'O', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Zamboanga', '0000-00-00', '9325554003', '<EMAIL>', 'princessbelmonte', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '325727707', 1, '50657067963', 'twssmgw3omvs', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(401, 'Boi', 'Boboi', 'M', 'M', 'San Juan', 'Kuala Lumpur', '0000-00-00', '9285555594', '<EMAIL>', 'boiboboi', 'Vocational', '', 'Malaysian', '210198354', 1, '58661756048', 'vjnz65sqm1jz', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(402, 'Yaya', 'Yaha', 'Y', 'M', 'Valenzuela', 'George Town', '0000-00-00', '9285555185', '<EMAIL>', 'yayayaha', 'College', '', 'Malaysian', '311118647', 1, '49420955738', '8dlbmz7bepl1', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(403, 'Gabi', 'Makahiya', 'G', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Quezon City', '0000-00-00', '9285557434', '<EMAIL>', 'gabimakahiya', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '6105764', 1, '539303920', 'ftcyg31wxtat', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(404, 'Joy ', 'Lobo', 'A', 'M', 'Paranaque', 'Delhi', '0000-00-00', '9335552370', '<EMAIL>', 'joylobo', 'College', '', 'India', '313728307', 1, '79945361438', 'y47fklann11g', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(405, 'Sorwin', 'Chanong', 'Y', 'M', 'Taguig', 'Beijing', '0000-00-00', '9295550690', '<EMAIL>', 'sorwinchanong', 'College', '', 'Chinese', '16811645', 1, '53572395967', 'q1rms7m10pgs', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(406, 'Maria', 'Huse', 'U', 'M', 'Paranaque', 'Puerto Princesa', '0000-00-00', '9295551254', '<EMAIL>', 'mariahuse', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '201412968', 1, '10011351936', '8xzy70bpq71t', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(407, 'Diego', 'Torillo', 'K', 'M', 'Paranaque', 'Cebu', '0000-00-00', '2805553820', '<EMAIL>', 'diegotorillo', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '443413994', 1, '82451936811', 'vjrw9vqqnon4', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(408, 'Cortez', 'Hermano', 'H', 'M', 'Valenzuela', 'Davao', '0000-00-00', '9325550049', '<EMAIL>', 'cortezhermano', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '896196776', 1, '75629034491', 'eup9qobtund4', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(409, 'Maria', 'Magallanes', 'W', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Dumaguete', '0000-00-00', '2805552837', '<EMAIL>', 'mariamagallanes', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '498628188', 1, '49457248395', '9v6fmxk3g844', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(410, 'Dio', 'Diogenes', 'R', 'M', 'Manila', 'Angeles', '0000-00-00', '9335559957', '<EMAIL>', 'diodiogenes', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '229418803', 1, '10612263285', 'vel78k2j17ux', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(411, 'Mara', 'Makiling', 'C', 'M', 'Manila', 'Subic', '0000-00-00', '9325554755', '<EMAIL>', 'maramakiling', '', '', 'Filipino', '649826518', 1, '32068162544', 'u5a4l63tnp71', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(412, 'Rick', 'Astley', 'B', 'M', 'Muntinlupa', 'Chicago', '0000-00-00', '9285550604', '<EMAIL>', 'rickastley', 'College', '', 'American', '591422880', 1, '20812454067', 'vmmy9j20qxab', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(413, 'Rodrigo', 'Gonzalez', 'M', 'M', 'Paranaque', 'Tarlac', '0000-00-00', '9335559242', '<EMAIL>', 'rodrigogonzalez', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '471087144', 1, '28544728858', 'ew6yse8or6nn', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(414, 'Sarah', 'Hermano', 'Z', 'M', 'Meycauayan', 'Meycauayan', '0000-00-00', '9325556569', '<EMAIL>', 'sarahhermano', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '382427475', 1, '70820293145', '37y7inlxd0ls', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(415, 'Bob', 'McBobbison', 'N', 'M', 'Pasay', 'Rejkjavik', '0000-00-00', '2835559124', '<EMAIL>', 'bobmcbobbison', 'College', '', 'Icelandic', '436875318', 1, '33645946354', 'c759olg9kv64', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(416, 'Pia', 'Makasakay', 'D', 'M', 'Manila', 'Mexico', '0000-00-00', '9215557040', '<EMAIL>', 'piamakasakay', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '592085549', 1, '90405451039', '517i0w3qf9l1', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(417, 'Maya', '<NAME>', 'W', 'M', 'Paranaque', 'Bacoor', '0000-00-00', '2835556378', '<EMAIL>', '<NAME>', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '658656911', 1, '10246323669', '5pdm189q6g9a', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(418, 'Yuuko', 'Aioi', 'A', 'M', 'Tagaytay', 'Tagaytay', '0000-00-00', '9335556740', '<EMAIL>', 'yuukoaioi', 'College', '', 'Japanese', '482225477', 1, '78565241528', 'c0oonkxd34eo', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(419, 'Sid', 'Nicodemus', 'G', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Baler', '0000-00-00', '2835556115', '<EMAIL>', 'sidnicodemus', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '842409116', 1, '47281926012', 'ztndu1afp2ae', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(420, 'George', 'Miler', 'Y', 'M', 'Antipolo', 'Perth', '0000-00-00', '9295553400', '<EMAIL>', 'georgemiler', 'Vocational', '', 'Austrailian', '53027854', 1, '22092841652', 'y1ktmjxhyr0d', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(421, 'Bong', 'Budots', 'R', 'M', '<NAME>', 'Dagupan', '0000-00-00', '9195551998', '<EMAIL>', 'bbudots', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '868199606', 1, '25658671320', 'mcu0i6led3jo', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(422, 'Mark', 'Maquia', 'W', 'M', 'Manila', 'Manila', '0000-00-00', '9215554981', '<EMAIL>', 'mmquia', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '415507697', 1, '72179993686', 'mvd8aax6qlmv', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(423, '<NAME>', 'Bourbon', 'Q', 'M', 'Manila', 'Madrid', '0000-00-00', '9335559032', '<EMAIL>', 'juanbourbon', 'College', '', 'Spanish', '585307701', 1, '44885408702', '4xlczuilywom', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(424, 'May', 'Martinez', 'U', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Quezon City', '1975-05-05', '9285553232', '<EMAIL>', 'kenmartinez', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '866932944', 1, '17541058632', 'pingas123', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(425, 'Juan', 'Rodriguez', 'S', 'M', 'Marikina', 'Marikina', '1975-05-05', '9295558379', '<EMAIL>', 'jrodriguez', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '387868675', 1, '53425006236', 'password12345', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(426, 'Sarah', '<NAME>', 'G', 'M', 'Manila', 'Manila', '1975-05-05', '9285559561', '<EMAIL>', 'sarahdc', 'Highschool', '', 'Filipino', '75709106', 1, '47928338771', 'dimes4crimes', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(427, 'Martin', 'Jackson', 'W', 'M', 'Taguig', 'New York', '1976-11-03', '2805558385', '<EMAIL>', 'martinjackson', 'College', '', 'American', '692775254', 1, '42963007161', '4twenty69', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(428, 'Max', '<NAME>', 'A', 'M', 'Manila', 'Cebu', '1976-11-04', '2805552245', '<EMAIL>', 'maxdlc', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '665032679', 1, '88507513624', 'boom0606', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(429, 'Yolanda', 'Lobantac', 'P', 'M', 'Pasay', 'Tacloban', '1976-11-05', '9195556506', '<EMAIL>', 'yolobontac', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '239459341', 1, '65498508408', 'q8telmv8xhgp', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(430, 'Nino', 'Santo', 'T', 'M', 'Pasig', 'Dumaguete', '1977-08-09', '9235551325', '<EMAIL>', 'nisanto', 'Highschool', '', 'Filipino', '70954192', 1, '72444590344', 'khye924cnqbq', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(431, 'Ronald', 'Ongsitco', 'D', 'M', 'Pasay', 'Shenzen', '1977-08-10', '9085559267', '<EMAIL>', 'ronong', 'Vocational', '', 'Chinese', '784203400', 1, '23417589325', 'djf433regwri', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(432, 'Linda', 'Feria', 'R', 'M', 'Muntinlupa', 'Ilo-Ilo', '1977-08-11', '9295552963', '<EMAIL>', 'lindaferia', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '158771229', 1, '91283595099', 'g1gr88g7b9co', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(433, 'May', 'Junjulay', 'Q', 'M', 'Manila', 'Manila', '1977-08-12', '9225552022', '<EMAIL>', 'mayjunjulay', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '678771358', 1, '43743692994', '6mryfegtw3pt', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(434, 'Winber', 'Uy', 'D', 'M', 'Manila', 'Shanghai', '1977-08-13', '2835555044', '<EMAIL>', 'winberuy', 'College', '', 'Chinese', '321679396', 1, '14187524395', 'xur8dx0q854f', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(435, 'Warren', '<NAME>', 'I', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Cebu', '1977-08-14', '2835556700', '<EMAIL>', '<NAME>', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '731438340', 1, '91348434669', 'q31rok38pham', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(436, 'Gah', 'Mytim', 'S', 'M', 'Taguig', '<NAME>', '1977-08-15', '9285550406', '<EMAIL>', 'gahmytim', 'Vocational', '', 'Norwegian', '160344698', 1, '43429643552', 'tj6fip9xlt3k', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(437, 'Karl', 'Martinez', 'U', 'M', 'Manila', 'Vigan', '1977-08-16', '9105551019', '<EMAIL>', 'karlmartinez', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '493805651', 1, '3815725969', '9bilhoohoip6', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(438, 'Felix', 'Gonzalez', 'W', 'M', 'Caloocan', 'Tuguegarao', '1977-08-17', '9335559657', '<EMAIL>', 'felixgonzalez', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '411804775', 1, '88504196920', 'tckmdfdphnnu', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(439, 'Mohammed', 'Abdul', 'Q', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Nubia', '1977-08-18', '9325550466', '<EMAIL>', 'mohammedabdul', 'Vocational', '', 'Egyptian', '965060471', 1, '37548462497', 'lkvznhjflr5e', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(440, 'Clarence', '<NAME>', 'K', 'M', 'Pasig', 'Pasig', '1989-01-04', '9335559369', '<EMAIL>', 'clarencede la cruz', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '661675119', 1, '95833976419', '87kchyio6v7z', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(441, 'Bonifacio', 'Delgado', 'S', 'M', 'Pasay', 'Pasay', '1990-07-10', '9325551901', '<EMAIL>', 'bonifaciodelgado', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '780476625', 1, '92523467245', '7mcxms78ultg', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(442, 'Okbul', 'Ibanez', 'T', 'M', 'Calamba', 'Calamba', '1991-04-01', '9325554138', '<EMAIL>', 'okbulibanez', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '822235480', 1, '53357434464', 'w1re2a11uuf6', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(443, '<NAME>', '<NAME>', 'E', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Ormoc', '1991-12-03', '9195552449', '<EMAIL>', 'jm<EMAIL>', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '469515749', 1, '77811015462', 'fd17fzhbra81', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(444, 'Docar', 'Lisaydal', 'U', 'M', 'Taguig', 'Buguey', '1991-12-04', '9095557260', '<EMAIL>', 'docarlisaydal', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '773872508', 1, '32671165576', 'zuo3v7q3rrio', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(445, 'John', 'Medina', 'Q', 'M', 'San Juan', 'Baguio', '1991-12-05', '9285558513', '<EMAIL>', 'johnmedina', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '151003210', 1, '60069868364', 'hmare72kcr78', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(446, 'Gus', 'Abergus', 'S', 'M', 'San Juan', 'Dapitan', '1994-02-05', '9215551239', '<EMAIL>', 'gusabergus', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '306607080', 1, '8821979190', '2io69knsojjw', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(447, 'George', 'Carillo', 'U', 'M', 'Caloocan', 'Caloocan', '1994-02-06', '9325556687', '<EMAIL>', 'georgecarillo', '', '', 'Filipino', '715075741', 1, '1539087456', '546qkx6gf0b3', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(448, 'Gopal', 'Kumar', 'R', 'M', 'Manila', 'Mumbai', '1994-02-07', '9325553890', '<EMAIL>', 'gokumar', 'College', '', 'Indian', '687429394', 1, '71250781912', 'f51bmq5id6bp', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(449, 'Maxima', 'Hipolito', 'M', 'M', 'Taguig', 'Digos', '1994-02-08', '9075551275', '<EMAIL>', 'maximahipolito', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '771178127', 1, '43869003505', '5898r22zkat3', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(450, 'Princess', 'Belmonte', 'O', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Zamboanga', '1978-05-08', '9325554003', '<EMAIL>', 'princessbelmonte', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '325727707', 1, '50657067963', 'twssmgw3omvs', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(451, 'Boi', 'Boboi', 'M', 'M', '<NAME>', 'Kuala Lumpur', '1978-05-09', '9285555594', '<EMAIL>', 'boiboboi', 'Vocational', '', 'Malaysian', '210198354', 1, '58661756048', 'vjnz65sqm1jz', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(452, 'Yaya', 'Yaha', 'Y', 'M', 'Valenzuela', 'George Town', '1978-05-10', '9285555185', '<EMAIL>', 'yayayaha', 'College', '', 'Malaysian', '311118647', 1, '49420955738', '8dlbmz7bepl1', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(453, 'Gabi', 'Makahiya', 'G', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Quezon City', '1980-09-06', '9285557434', '<EMAIL>', 'gabimakahiya', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '6105764', 1, '539303920', 'ftcyg31wxtat', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(454, 'Joy ', 'Lobo', 'A', 'M', 'Paranaque', 'Delhi', '1980-09-07', '9335552370', '<EMAIL>', 'joylobo', 'College', '', 'India', '313728307', 1, '79945361438', 'y47fklann11g', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(455, 'Sorwin', 'Chanong', 'Y', 'M', 'Taguig', 'Beijing', '1980-09-08', '9295550690', '<EMAIL>', 'sorwinchanong', 'College', '', 'Chinese', '16811645', 1, '53572395967', 'q1rms7m10pgs', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(456, 'Maria', 'Huse', 'U', 'M', 'Paranaque', '<NAME>', '1982-06-02', '9295551254', '<EMAIL>', 'mariahuse', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '201412968', 1, '10011351936', '8xzy70bpq71t', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(457, 'Diego', 'Torillo', 'K', 'M', 'Paranaque', 'Cebu', '1983-08-03', '2805553820', '<EMAIL>', 'diegotorillo', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '443413994', 1, '82451936811', 'vjrw9vqqnon4', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(458, 'Cortez', 'Hermano', 'H', 'M', 'Valenzuela', 'Davao', '1983-08-04', '9325550049', '<EMAIL>', 'cortezhermano', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '896196776', 1, '75629034491', 'eup9qobtund4', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(459, 'Maria', 'Magallanes', 'W', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Dumaguete', '1983-08-05', '2805552837', '<EMAIL>', 'mariamagallanes', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '498628188', 1, '49457248395', '9v6fmxk3g844', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(460, 'Dio', 'Diogenes', 'R', 'M', 'Manila', 'Angeles', '1983-08-06', '9335559957', 'byrtdr<EMAIL>', 'diodiogenes', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '229418803', 1, '10612263285', 'vel78k2j17ux', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(461, 'Mara', 'Makiling', 'C', 'M', 'Manila', 'Subic', '1983-08-07', '9325554755', '<EMAIL>', 'maramakiling', 'Highschool', '', 'Filipino', '649826518', 1, '32068162544', 'u5a4l63tnp71', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(462, 'Rick', 'Astley', 'B', 'M', 'Muntinlupa', 'Chicago', '1986-06-11', '9285550604', '<EMAIL>', 'rickastley', 'College', '', 'American', '591422880', 1, '20812454067', 'vmmy9j20qxab', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(463, 'Rodrigo', 'Gonzalez', 'M', 'M', 'Paranaque', 'Tarlac', '1986-06-12', '9335559242', '<EMAIL>', 'rodrigogonzalez', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '471087144', 1, '28544728858', 'ew6yse8or6nn', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(464, 'Sarah', 'Hermano', 'Z', 'M', 'Meycauayan', 'Meycauayan', '1987-11-06', '9325556569', '<EMAIL>', 'sarahhermano', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '382427475', 1, '70820293145', '37y7inlxd0ls', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(465, 'Bob', 'McBobbison', 'N', 'M', 'Pasay', 'Rejkjavik', '1987-11-07', '2835559124', '<EMAIL>', 'bobmcbobbison', 'College', '', 'Icelandic', '436875318', 1, '33645946354', 'c759olg9kv64', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(466, 'Pia', 'Makasakay', 'D', 'M', 'Manila', 'Mexico', '1987-11-08', '9215557040', '<EMAIL>', 'piamakasakay', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '592085549', 1, '90405451039', '517i0w3qf9l1', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(467, 'Maya', 'De Castro', 'W', 'M', 'Paranaque', 'Bacoor', '1987-11-09', '2835556378', '<EMAIL>', '<NAME>', 'Vocational', '', 'Filipino', '658656911', 1, '10246323669', '5pdm189q6g9a', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(468, 'Yuuko', 'Aioi', 'A', 'M', 'Tagaytay', 'Tagaytay', '1987-11-10', '9335556740', '<EMAIL>', 'yuukoaioi', 'College', '', 'Japanese', '482225477', 1, '78565241528', 'c0oonkxd34eo', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(469, 'Sid', 'Nicodemus', 'G', 'M', 'Quezon City', 'Baler', '1987-11-11', '2835556115', '<EMAIL>', 'sidnicodemus', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '842409116', 1, '47281926012', 'ztndu1afp2ae', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(470, 'George', 'Miler', 'Y', 'M', 'Antipolo', 'Perth', '1987-11-12', '9295553400', '<EMAIL>', 'georgemiler', 'Vocational', '', 'Austrailian', '53027854', 1, '22092841652', 'y1ktmjxhyr0d', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(471, 'Bong', 'Budots', 'R', 'M', '<NAME>', 'Dagupan', '1980-04-03', '9195551998', '<EMAIL>', 'bbudots', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '868199606', 1, '25658671320', 'mcu0i6led3jo', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(472, 'Mark', 'Maquia', 'W', 'M', 'Manila', 'Manila', '1980-04-04', '9215554981', '<EMAIL>', 'mmquia', 'College', '', 'Filipino', '415507697', 1, '72179993686', 'mvd8aax6qlmv', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0),
(473, '<NAME>', 'Bourbon', 'Q', 'M', 'Manila', 'Madrid', '1980-04-05', '9335559032', '<EMAIL>', 'juanbourbon', 'College', '', 'Spanish', '585307701', 1, '44885408702', '4xlczuilywom', 'carpentry;programming;teaching', 'teacher,teacher at a public school;manager,restarurant manager;', 0, 0);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Table structure for table `employee`
--
CREATE TABLE `employee` (
`id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`first_name` varchar(50) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`last_name` varchar(50) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`middle_initial` varchar(2) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`sex` enum('M','F') COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`current_address` varchar(500) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`place_of_birth` varchar(100) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`birthdate` date DEFAULT NULL,
`phone_number` varchar(15) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`email` varchar(50) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`linkedin_profile` varchar(100) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`educational_attainment` enum('College','Vocational','Highschool','Elementary') COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`civil_status` enum('S','M') COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`nationality` varchar(15) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`SSN` varchar(15) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`job_position` varchar(50) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin NOT NULL,
`birth_certificate_id` varchar(100) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`employment_date` datetime DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
`health_package` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_bin;
--
-- Dumping data for table `employee`
--
INSERT INTO `employee` (`id`, `first_name`, `last_name`, `middle_initial`, `sex`, `current_address`, `place_of_birth`, `birthdate`, `phone_number`, `email`, `linkedin_profile`, `educational_attainment`, `civil_status`, `nationality`, `SSN`, `job_position`, `birth_certificate_id`, `employment_date`, `health_package`) VALUES
(1, 'John', 'Solis', 'M', 'M', '16 Mariano street, KL Village, Quezon City, Manila', 'Quezon City', '2000-01-02', '53634454', '<EMAIL>', '', 'Vocational', 'S', 'Filipino', '435354998', 'Janitor 1', '564565645', '2019-05-08 11:05:53', 1),
(2, 'Reno', 'Villar', 'R', 'M', 'B4 L23 AK housing village, Quezon City', 'Manila', '1997-05-01', '43453242', '<EMAIL>', 'linkedin.com/bestjanitor', 'Highschool', 'S', 'Filipino', '43252432', 'Janitor', '5436563', '2019-05-08 11:09:52', 2),
(19, 'Shiro', 'Nai', 'K', 'F', 'Block 5 Lot 11 B.F. Homes, Paranaque City, Metro Manila.', 'Quezon City', '2017-11-22', '090543216969', '<EMAIL>', 'linkedin.com/nainanikusorayo', 'College', 'S', 'Filipino', '7646359856', 'Maid', '83294832474', '2019-05-16 05:29:19', 1);
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Table structure for table `employee_deps`
--
CREATE TABLE `employee_deps` (
`id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`employee_id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`dep_name` varchar(500) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`dep_relation` varchar(50) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_bin;
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Table structure for table `employee_job_history`
--
CREATE TABLE `employee_job_history` (
`id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`employee_id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`job_name` varchar(100) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`job_desc` varchar(300) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`year_started` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`year_ended` int(11) DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_bin;
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Table structure for table `employee_skills`
--
CREATE TABLE `employee_skills` (
`id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`employee_id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`skill` varchar(100) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_bin;
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Table structure for table `health_packages`
--
CREATE TABLE `health_packages` (
`id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`package_name` varchar(50) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin NOT NULL,
`package_desc` varchar(600) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_bin;
--
-- Dumping data for table `health_packages`
--
INSERT INTO `health_packages` (`id`, `package_name`, `package_desc`) VALUES
(1, 'Package A', 'Basic SSS contributions monthly.'),
(2, 'Package B', 'Basic SSS contributions and basic health insurance.'),
(3, 'Package C', 'Basic SSS contributions and premium health insurance.');
-- --------------------------------------------------------
--
-- Table structure for table `job_positions`
--
CREATE TABLE `job_positions` (
`id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
`job_title` varchar(100) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin NOT NULL,
`job_description` varchar(500) COLLATE utf8mb4_bin DEFAULT NULL,
`is_open` tinyint(1) DEFAULT '0'
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_bin;
--
-- Dumping data for table `job_positions`
--
INSERT INTO `job_positions` (`id`, `job_title`, `job_description`, `is_open`) VALUES
(1, 'Janitor 1', 'Basic entry level janitor. Basic salary and starting pay. with health benefits.', 1),
(2, 'Secretary 1', 'Entry level secretary. Basic benefits.', 1),
(3, 'Receptionist 2', 'Receptionist with at least 1 year experience in the bob or any related job. Basic benefits.', 1);
--
-- Indexes for dumped tables
--
--
-- Indexes for table `admin`
--
ALTER TABLE `admin`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indexes for table `applicants`
--
ALTER TABLE `applicants`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
ADD KEY `target_position` (`target_position`);
--
-- Indexes for table `employee`
--
ALTER TABLE `employee`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
ADD KEY `health_package` (`health_package`);
--
-- Indexes for table `employee_deps`
--
ALTER TABLE `employee_deps`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
ADD KEY `employee_id` (`employee_id`);
--
-- Indexes for table `employee_job_history`
--
ALTER TABLE `employee_job_history`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
ADD KEY `employee_id` (`employee_id`);
--
-- Indexes for table `employee_skills`
--
ALTER TABLE `employee_skills`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
ADD KEY `employee_id` (`employee_id`);
--
-- Indexes for table `health_packages`
--
ALTER TABLE `health_packages`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- Indexes for table `job_positions`
--
ALTER TABLE `job_positions`
ADD PRIMARY KEY (`id`);
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT for dumped tables
--
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT for table `admin`
--
ALTER TABLE `admin`
MODIFY `id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=2;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT for table `applicants`
--
ALTER TABLE `applicants`
MODIFY `id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=474;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT for table `employee`
--
ALTER TABLE `employee`
MODIFY `id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=31;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT for table `employee_deps`
--
ALTER TABLE `employee_deps`
MODIFY `id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=7;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT for table `employee_job_history`
--
ALTER TABLE `employee_job_history`
MODIFY `id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=31;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT for table `employee_skills`
--
ALTER TABLE `employee_skills`
MODIFY `id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=46;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT for table `health_packages`
--
ALTER TABLE `health_packages`
MODIFY `id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=4;
--
-- AUTO_INCREMENT for table `job_positions`
--
ALTER TABLE `job_positions`
MODIFY `id` int(10) UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, AUTO_INCREMENT=5;
--
-- Constraints for dumped tables
--
--
-- Constraints for table `applicants`
--
ALTER TABLE `applicants`
ADD CONSTRAINT `applicants_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`target_position`) REFERENCES `job_positions` (`id`);
--
-- Constraints for table `employee`
--
ALTER TABLE `employee`
ADD CONSTRAINT `employee_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`health_package`) REFERENCES `health_packages` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE;
--
-- Constraints for table `employee_deps`
--
ALTER TABLE `employee_deps`
ADD CONSTRAINT `employee_deps_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`employee_id`) REFERENCES `employee` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE;
--
-- Constraints for table `employee_skills`
--
ALTER TABLE `employee_skills`
ADD CONSTRAINT `employee_skills_ibfk_1` FOREIGN KEY (`employee_id`) REFERENCES `employee` (`id`) ON DELETE CASCADE;
COMMIT;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET COLLATION_CONNECTION=@OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
|
select g1.id, g1.textual_id, g1.deleted
from gov_item g1;
|
-- file:regproc.sql ln:14 expect:true
SELECT regprocedure('abs(numeric)')
|
<reponame>flexsocialbox/una<filename>modules/boonex/spaces/updates/12.0.1_12.0.2/install/sql/enable.sql
-- SETTINGS
SET @iCategId = (SELECT `id` FROM `sys_options_categories` WHERE `name`='bx_spaces' LIMIT 1);
DELETE FROM `sys_options` WHERE `name`='bx_spaces_per_page_for_favorites_lists';
INSERT INTO `sys_options` (`name`, `value`, `category_id`, `caption`, `type`, `extra`, `check`, `check_params`, `check_error`, `order`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_per_page_for_favorites_lists', '5', @iCategId, '_bx_spaces_option_per_page_for_favorites_lists', 'digit', '', '', '', '', 17);
-- PAGES
DELETE FROM `sys_objects_page` WHERE `object`='bx_spaces_join_profile';
INSERT INTO `sys_objects_page`(`object`, `uri`, `title_system`, `title`, `module`, `layout_id`, `visible_for_levels`, `visible_for_levels_editable`, `url`, `meta_description`, `meta_keywords`, `meta_robots`, `cache_lifetime`, `cache_editable`, `deletable`, `override_class_name`, `override_class_file`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_join_profile', 'join-space-profile', '_bx_spaces_page_title_sys_join_profile', '_bx_spaces_page_title_join_profile', 'bx_spaces', 5, 2147483647, 1, 'page.php?i=join-space-profile', '', '', '', 0, 1, 0, 'BxSpacesPageEntry', 'modules/boonex/spaces/classes/BxSpacesPageEntry.php');
DELETE FROM `sys_pages_blocks` WHERE `object`='bx_spaces_join_profile';
INSERT INTO `sys_pages_blocks`(`object`, `cell_id`, `module`, `title_system`, `title`, `designbox_id`, `visible_for_levels`, `type`, `content`, `text`, `text_updated`, `deletable`, `copyable`, `order`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_join_profile', 1, 'bx_spaces', '', '_bx_spaces_page_block_title_join_profile', 11, 2147483647, 'service', 'a:3:{s:6:"module";s:9:"bx_spaces";s:6:"method";s:11:"entity_join";s:6:"params";a:1:{i:0;s:12:"{profile_id}";}}', '', 0, 0, 0, 0);
DELETE FROM `sys_objects_page` WHERE `object`='bx_spaces_profile_pricing';
INSERT INTO `sys_objects_page`(`object`, `uri`, `title_system`, `title`, `module`, `layout_id`, `visible_for_levels`, `visible_for_levels_editable`, `url`, `meta_description`, `meta_keywords`, `meta_robots`, `cache_lifetime`, `cache_editable`, `deletable`, `override_class_name`, `override_class_file`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_profile_pricing', 'edit-space-pricing', '_bx_spaces_page_title_sys_profile_pricing', '_bx_spaces_page_title_profile_pricing', 'bx_spaces', 5, 2147483647, 1, 'page.php?i=edit-space-pricing', '', '', '', 0, 1, 0, 'BxSpacesPageEntry', 'modules/boonex/spaces/classes/BxSpacesPageEntry.php');
DELETE FROM `sys_pages_blocks` WHERE `object`='bx_spaces_profile_pricing';
INSERT INTO `sys_pages_blocks`(`object`, `cell_id`, `module`, `title_system`, `title`, `designbox_id`, `visible_for_levels`, `type`, `content`, `text`, `text_updated`, `deletable`, `copyable`, `active`, `order`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_profile_pricing', 1, 'bx_spaces', '_bx_spaces_page_block_title_system_profile_pricing', '_bx_spaces_page_block_title_profile_pricing_link', 11, 2147483647, 'service', 'a:3:{s:6:"module";s:9:"bx_spaces";s:6:"method";s:14:"entity_pricing";s:6:"params";a:1:{i:0;s:12:"{profile_id}";}}', '', 0, 0, 0, 1, 1);
DELETE FROM `sys_objects_page` WHERE `object`='bx_spaces_favorites';
INSERT INTO `sys_objects_page`(`object`, `title_system`, `title`, `module`, `layout_id`, `visible_for_levels`, `visible_for_levels_editable`, `uri`, `url`, `meta_description`, `meta_keywords`, `meta_robots`, `cache_lifetime`, `cache_editable`, `deletable`, `override_class_name`, `override_class_file`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_favorites', '_bx_spaces_page_title_sys_entries_favorites', '_bx_spaces_page_title_entries_favorites', 'bx_spaces', 12, 2147483647, 1, 'spaces-favorites', 'page.php?i=spaces-favorites', '', '', '', 0, 1, 0, 'BxSpacesPageListEntry', 'modules/boonex/spaces/classes/BxSpacesPageListEntry.php');
DELETE FROM `sys_pages_blocks` WHERE `object`='bx_spaces_favorites';
INSERT INTO `sys_pages_blocks`(`object`, `cell_id`, `module`, `title_system`, `title`, `designbox_id`, `visible_for_levels`, `type`, `content`, `text`, `text_updated`, `deletable`, `copyable`, `order`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_favorites', 2, 'bx_spaces', '', '_bx_spaces_page_block_title_favorites_entries', 11, 2147483647, 'service', 'a:3:{s:6:"module";s:9:"bx_spaces";s:6:"method";s:15:"browse_favorite";s:6:"params";a:2:{s:10:"profile_id";s:12:"{profile_id}";s:6:"params";a:3:{s:9:"unit_view";s:7:"gallery";s:13:"empty_message";b:0;s:13:"ajax_paginate";b:0;}}}', '', 0, 0, 1, 1),
('bx_spaces_favorites', 3, 'bx_spaces', '', '_bx_spaces_page_block_title_favorites_entries_info', 11, 2147483647, 'service', 'a:2:{s:6:"module";s:9:"bx_spaces";s:6:"method";s:19:"favorites_list_info";}', '', 0, 0, 0, 0),
('bx_spaces_favorites', 3, 'bx_spaces', '', '_bx_spaces_page_block_title_favorites_entries_actions', 13, 2147483647, 'service', 'a:2:{s:6:"module";s:9:"bx_spaces";s:6:"method";s:22:"favorites_list_actions";}', '', 0, 0, 0, 1);
-- MENUS
DELETE FROM `sys_menu_items` WHERE `set_name`='bx_spaces_view_actions' AND `name`='join-space-profile';
INSERT INTO `sys_menu_items`(`set_name`, `module`, `name`, `title_system`, `title`, `link`, `onclick`, `target`, `icon`, `addon`, `markers`, `submenu_object`, `submenu_popup`, `visible_for_levels`, `visibility_custom`, `active`, `copyable`, `editable`, `order`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_view_actions', 'bx_spaces', 'join-space-profile', '_bx_spaces_menu_item_title_system_pay_and_join', '_bx_spaces_menu_item_title_pay_and_join', 'page.php?i=join-space-profile&profile_id={profile_id}', '', '', 'sign-in-alt', '', '', '', 0, 2147483647, 'a:3:{s:6:"module";s:9:"bx_spaces";s:6:"method";s:22:"is_paid_join_avaliable";s:6:"params";a:1:{i:0;s:12:"{profile_id}";}}', 1, 0, 0, 5);
DELETE FROM `sys_menu_items` WHERE `set_name`='bx_spaces_view_actions_more' AND `name`='edit-space-pricing';
INSERT INTO `sys_menu_items`(`set_name`, `module`, `name`, `title_system`, `title`, `link`, `onclick`, `target`, `icon`, `addon`, `markers`, `submenu_object`, `visible_for_levels`, `visibility_custom`, `active`, `copyable`, `order`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_view_actions_more', 'bx_spaces', 'edit-space-pricing', '_bx_spaces_menu_item_title_system_edit_pricing', '_bx_spaces_menu_item_title_edit_pricing', 'page.php?i=edit-space-pricing&profile_id={profile_id}', '', '', 'money-check-alt', '', '', '', 2147483647, 'a:3:{s:6:"module";s:9:"bx_spaces";s:6:"method";s:20:"is_pricing_avaliable";s:6:"params";a:1:{i:0;s:12:"{profile_id}";}}', 1, 0, 41);
DELETE FROM `sys_menu_items` WHERE `set_name`='bx_spaces_view_actions_all' AND `name` IN ('join-space-profile', 'edit-space-pricing');
INSERT INTO `sys_menu_items`(`set_name`, `module`, `name`, `title_system`, `title`, `link`, `onclick`, `target`, `icon`, `addon`, `markers`, `submenu_object`, `submenu_popup`, `visible_for_levels`, `visibility_custom`, `active`, `copyable`, `order`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_view_actions_all', 'bx_spaces', 'join-space-profile', '_bx_spaces_menu_item_title_system_pay_and_join', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', 0, 2147483647, '', 1, 0, 5),
('bx_spaces_view_actions_all', 'bx_spaces', 'edit-space-pricing', '_bx_spaces_menu_item_title_system_edit_pricing', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', 0, 2147483647, '', 1, 0, 415);
UPDATE `sys_menu_items` SET `visibility_custom`='a:2:{s:6:"module";s:9:"bx_spaces";s:6:"method";s:19:"is_badges_avaliable";}' WHERE `set_name`='bx_spaces_view_actions_all' AND `name`='profile-set-badges';
DELETE FROM `sys_menu_items` WHERE `set_name`='bx_spaces_snippet_meta' AND `name`='join-paid';
INSERT INTO `sys_menu_items`(`set_name`, `module`, `name`, `title_system`, `title`, `link`, `onclick`, `target`, `icon`, `addon`, `markers`, `submenu_object`, `visible_for_levels`, `visibility_custom`, `active`, `copyable`, `editable`, `order`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_snippet_meta', 'bx_spaces', 'join-paid', '_sys_menu_item_title_system_sm_join_paid', '_sys_menu_item_title_sm_join_paid', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', 2147483647, 'a:3:{s:6:"module";s:9:"bx_spaces";s:6:"method";s:33:"is_paid_join_avaliable_by_content";s:6:"params";a:1:{i:0;s:12:"{content_id}";}}', 1, 0, 1, 8);
UPDATE `sys_menu_items` SET `visibility_custom`='a:3:{s:6:"module";s:9:"bx_spaces";s:6:"method";s:33:"is_free_join_avaliable_by_content";s:6:"params";a:1:{i:0;s:12:"{content_id}";}}' WHERE `set_name`='bx_spaces_snippet_meta' AND `name`='join';
-- ACL
SET @iIdActionUsePaidJoin = (SELECT `ID` FROM `sys_acl_actions` WHERE `Module`='bx_spaces' AND `Name`='use paid join' LIMIT 1);
DELETE FROM `sys_acl_actions` WHERE `ID`=@iIdActionUsePaidJoin;
DELETE FROM `sys_acl_matrix` WHERE `IDAction`=@iIdActionUsePaidJoin;
INSERT INTO `sys_acl_actions` (`Module`, `Name`, `AdditionalParamName`, `Title`, `Desc`, `Countable`, `DisabledForLevels`) VALUES
('bx_spaces', 'use paid join', NULL, '_bx_spaces_acl_action_use_paid_join', '', 1, 1);
SET @iIdActionUsePaidJoin = LAST_INSERT_ID();
SET @iUnauthenticated = 1;
SET @iAccount = 2;
SET @iStandard = 3;
SET @iUnconfirmed = 4;
SET @iPending = 5;
SET @iSuspended = 6;
SET @iModerator = 7;
SET @iAdministrator = 8;
SET @iPremium = 9;
INSERT INTO `sys_acl_matrix` (`IDLevel`, `IDAction`) VALUES
(@iStandard, @iIdActionUsePaidJoin),
(@iModerator, @iIdActionUsePaidJoin),
(@iAdministrator, @iIdActionUsePaidJoin),
(@iPremium, @iIdActionUsePaidJoin);
-- GRIDS
DELETE FROM `sys_grid_fields` WHERE `object`='bx_spaces_fans' AND `name` IN ('role_added', 'role_expired');
INSERT INTO `sys_grid_fields` (`object`, `name`, `title`, `width`, `params`, `order`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_fans', 'role_added', '_bx_spaces_txt_role_added', '10%', '', 16),
('bx_spaces_fans', 'role_expired', '_bx_spaces_txt_role_expired', '10%', '', 17);
UPDATE `sys_grid_fields` SET `width`='20%' WHERE `object`='bx_spaces_fans' AND `name`='actions';
DELETE FROM `sys_objects_grid` WHERE `object` IN ('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'bx_spaces_prices_view');
INSERT INTO `sys_objects_grid` (`object`, `source_type`, `source`, `table`, `field_id`, `field_order`, `field_active`, `paginate_url`, `paginate_per_page`, `paginate_simple`, `paginate_get_start`, `paginate_get_per_page`, `filter_fields`, `filter_fields_translatable`, `filter_mode`, `sorting_fields`, `sorting_fields_translatable`, `visible_for_levels`, `override_class_name`, `override_class_file`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'Sql', 'SELECT * FROM `bx_spaces_prices` WHERE 1 ', 'bx_spaces_prices', 'id', 'order', '', '', 100, NULL, 'start', '', 'period,period_unit,price', '', 'like', '', '', 2147483647, 'BxSpacesGridPricesManage', 'modules/boonex/spaces/classes/BxSpacesGridPricesManage.php'),
('bx_spaces_prices_view', 'Sql', 'SELECT * FROM `bx_spaces_prices` WHERE 1 ', 'bx_spaces_prices', 'id', 'order', '', '', 100, NULL, 'start', '', 'period,period_unit,price', '', 'like', '', '', 2147483647, 'BxSpacesGridPricesView', 'modules/boonex/spaces/classes/BxSpacesGridPricesView.php');
DELETE FROM `sys_grid_fields` WHERE `object` IN ('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'bx_spaces_prices_view');
INSERT INTO `sys_grid_fields` (`object`, `name`, `title`, `width`, `translatable`, `chars_limit`, `params`, `order`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'checkbox', '_sys_select', '1%', 0, 0, '', 1),
('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'order', '', '1%', 0, 0, '', 2),
('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'name', '_bx_spaces_grid_column_title_name', '38%', 0, 32, '', 3),
('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'price', '_bx_spaces_grid_column_title_price', '20%', 0, 16, '', 4),
('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'period', '_bx_spaces_grid_column_title_period', '20%', 0, 16, '', 5),
('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'actions', '', '20%', 0, 0, '', 6),
('bx_spaces_prices_view', 'role_id', '_bx_spaces_grid_column_title_role_id', '40%', 0, 32, '', 1),
('bx_spaces_prices_view', 'price', '_bx_spaces_grid_column_title_price', '20%', 0, 16, '', 2),
('bx_spaces_prices_view', 'period', '_bx_spaces_grid_column_title_period', '20%', 0, 16, '', 3),
('bx_spaces_prices_view', 'actions', '', '20%', 0, 0, '', 4);
DELETE FROM `sys_grid_actions` WHERE `object` IN ('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'bx_spaces_prices_view');
INSERT INTO `sys_grid_actions` (`object`, `type`, `name`, `title`, `icon`, `icon_only`, `confirm`, `order`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'independent', 'add', '_bx_spaces_grid_action_title_add', '', 0, 0, 1),
('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'single', 'edit', '_bx_spaces_grid_action_title_edit', 'pencil-alt', 1, 0, 1),
('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'single', 'delete', '_bx_spaces_grid_action_title_delete', 'remove', 1, 1, 2),
('bx_spaces_prices_manage', 'bulk', 'delete', '_bx_spaces_grid_action_title_delete', '', 0, 1, 1),
('bx_spaces_prices_view', 'single', 'buy', '_bx_spaces_grid_action_title_buy', 'cart-plus', 0, 0, 1),
('bx_spaces_prices_view', 'single', 'subscribe', '_bx_spaces_grid_action_title_subscribe', 'credit-card', 0, 0, 2),
('bx_spaces_prices_view', 'single', 'choose', '_bx_spaces_grid_action_title_choose', 'far check-square', 0, 0, 3);
-- PRIVACY
DELETE FROM `sys_objects_privacy` WHERE `object`='bx_spaces_allow_view_favorite_list';
INSERT INTO `sys_objects_privacy` (`object`, `module`, `action`, `title`, `default_group`, `spaces`, `table`, `table_field_id`, `table_field_author`, `override_class_name`, `override_class_file`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_allow_view_favorite_list', 'bx_spaces', 'view_favorite_list', '_bx_spaces_form_profile_input_allow_view_favorite_list', '3', '', 'bx_spaces_favorites_lists', 'id', 'author_id', 'BxSpacesPrivacy', 'modules/boonex/spaces/classes/BxSpacesPrivacy.php');
-- CRON
DELETE FROM `sys_cron_jobs` WHERE `name`='bx_spaces_pruning';
INSERT INTO `sys_cron_jobs` (`name`, `time`, `class`, `file`, `service_call`) VALUES
('bx_spaces_pruning', '0 0 * * *', 'BxSpacesCronPruning', 'modules/boonex/spaces/classes/BxSpacesCronPruning.php', '');
|
DROP TABLE movies;
|
<gh_stars>0
drop table palabras;
drop table user_permissions;
drop table users;
drop table Country ;
drop table DbTypes;
drop table UserTypes;
|
<filename>src/main/resources/database.sql
CREATE TABLE patient(
id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
имя VARCHAR(15) NOT NULL,
фамилия VARCHAR(15) NOT NULL,
отчество VARCHAR(15) NOT NULL,
телефон INT NOT NULL
)
ENGINE = InnoDB;
CREATE TABLE doctor(
id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
имя VARCHAR(15) NOT NULL,
фамилия VARCHAR(15) NOT NULL,
отчество VARCHAR(15) NOT NULL,
специализация VARCHAR(15) NOT NULL
)
ENGINE = InnoDB;
CREATE TABLE recipe(
id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
описание VARCHAR(500) NOT NULL,
дата_создания INT NOT NULL,
срок_действия INT NOT NULL,
приоритет VARCHAR(15) NOT NULL,
doctorid INT, FOREIGN KEY(doctorid) REFERENCES doctor(id),
patientid INT, FOREIGN KEY(patientid) REFERENCES patient(id)
)
ENGINE = InnoDB;
|
<filename>persistent/schema.sql
drop table danan.Address cascade constraints;
drop table danan.auditLogDetail cascade constraints;
drop table danan.User_Address cascade constraints;
drop table danan.UserAuditLog cascade constraints;
drop table danan.Users cascade constraints;
drop sequence danan.hibernate_sequence;
create sequence danan.hibernate_sequence start with 1 increment by 1;
create table danan.Address (id number(19,0) not null, address varchar2(255 char), primary key (id));
create table danan.auditLogDetail (id number(19,0) not null, action varchar2(80 char), description varchar2(300 char), auditLogId number(19,0) not null, primary key (id));
create table danan.User_Address (users_id number(19,0) not null, address_id number(19,0) not null);
create table danan.UserAuditLog (id number(19,0) not null, code number(5,0), endtimestamp timestamp, message varchar2(255 char), starttimestamp timestamp, userId number(19,0) not null, primary key (id));
create table danan.Users (id number(19,0) not null, name varchar2(255 char), primary key (id));
alter table danan.auditLogDetail add constraint FK1nvhoc0ij5m82at9uxtr5jnyo foreign key (auditLogId) references danan.UserAuditLog;
alter table danan.User_Address add constraint FKd574ky3oktgq00y548drejxh8 foreign key (address_id) references danan.Address;
alter table danan.User_Address add constraint FK396n6eyombb4sb0yrgusq5aqg foreign key (users_id) references danan.Users;
alter table danan.UserAuditLog add constraint FKtdevyicwx98g69dt49rvp4s3e foreign key (userId) references danan.Users;
drop table danan.Address cascade constraints;
drop table danan.auditLogDetail cascade constraints;
drop table danan.User_Address cascade constraints;
drop table danan.UserAuditLog cascade constraints;
drop table danan.Users cascade constraints;
drop sequence danan.hibernate_sequence;
create sequence danan.hibernate_sequence start with 1 increment by 1;
create table danan.Address (id number(19,0) not null, address varchar2(255 char), primary key (id));
create table danan.auditLogDetail (id number(19,0) not null, action varchar2(80 char), description varchar2(300 char), auditLogId number(19,0) not null, primary key (id));
create table danan.User_Address (users_id number(19,0) not null, address_id number(19,0) not null);
create table danan.UserAuditLog (id number(19,0) not null, code number(5,0), endtimestamp timestamp, message varchar2(255 char), starttimestamp timestamp, userId number(19,0) not null, primary key (id));
create table danan.Users (id number(19,0) not null, name varchar2(255 char), primary key (id));
alter table danan.auditLogDetail add constraint FK1nvhoc0ij5m82at9uxtr5jnyo foreign key (auditLogId) references danan.UserAuditLog;
alter table danan.User_Address add constraint FKd574ky3oktgq00y548drejxh8 foreign key (address_id) references danan.Address;
alter table danan.User_Address add constraint FK396n6eyombb4sb0yrgusq5aqg foreign key (users_id) references danan.Users;
alter table danan.UserAuditLog add constraint FKtdevyicwx98g69dt49rvp4s3e foreign key (userId) references danan.Users;
drop table danan.Address cascade constraints;
drop table danan.auditLogDetail cascade constraints;
drop table danan.User_Address cascade constraints;
drop table danan.UserAuditLog cascade constraints;
drop table danan.Users cascade constraints;
drop sequence danan.hibernate_sequence;
create sequence danan.hibernate_sequence start with 1 increment by 1;
create table danan.Address (id number(19,0) not null, address varchar2(255 char), primary key (id));
create table danan.auditLogDetail (id number(19,0) not null, action varchar2(80 char), description varchar2(300 char), auditLogId number(19,0) not null, primary key (id));
create table danan.User_Address (users_id number(19,0) not null, address_id number(19,0) not null);
create table danan.UserAuditLog (id number(19,0) not null, code number(5,0), endtimestamp timestamp, message varchar2(255 char), starttimestamp timestamp, userId number(19,0) not null, primary key (id));
create table danan.Users (id number(19,0) not null, name varchar2(255 char), primary key (id));
alter table danan.auditLogDetail add constraint FK1nvhoc0ij5m82at9uxtr5jnyo foreign key (auditLogId) references danan.UserAuditLog;
alter table danan.User_Address add constraint FKd574ky3oktgq00y548drejxh8 foreign key (address_id) references danan.Address;
alter table danan.User_Address add constraint FK396n6eyombb4sb0yrgusq5aqg foreign key (users_id) references danan.Users;
alter table danan.UserAuditLog add constraint FKtdevyicwx98g69dt49rvp4s3e foreign key (userId) references danan.Users;
|
# i3albo database creation script.
# Author: giuliobosco
# Version: 1.0.1
CREATE DATABASE i3albo;
CREATE TABLE i3albo.group (
id INT PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT,
group_name VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
admin_id VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
description VARCHAR(200) NOT NULL,
img_path VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL,
FOREIGN KEY (admin_id) REFERENCES i3albo.user (username)
);
CREATE TABLE i3albo.user (
username VARCHAR(50) PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT,
group_id INT NOT NULL,
email VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL,
password CHAR(64) NOT NULL,
img_path VARCHAR(50),
firstname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
lastname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
born_date DATE NOT NULL,
licenses INT(1),
receive_email TINYINT,
show_birthdays TINYINT,
phone_number VARCHAR(20),
FOREIGN KEY (group_id) REFERENCES i3albo.group (id)
);
CREATE TABLE i3albo.event (
id INT PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT,
author_id VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
group_id INT NOT NULL,
title VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
content VARCHAR(255),
date DATETIME NOT NULL,
FOREIGN KEY (author_id) REFERENCES i3albo.user (username),
FOREIGN KEY (group_id) REFERENCES i3albo.group (id)
);
CREATE TABLE i3albo.task_type (
id INT PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT,
name VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
description VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL,
group_id INT NOT NULL,
FOREIGN KEY (group_id) REFERENCES i3albo.group (id)
);
CREATE TABLE i3albo.task (
id INT PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT,
task_type_id INT NOT NULL,
author_username VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
group_id INT NOT NULL,
date DATETIME NOT NULL,
title VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL,
description TEXT,
FOREIGN KEY (task_type_id) REFERENCES i3albo.task_type (id),
FOREIGN KEY (author_username) REFERENCES i3albo.user (username),
FOREIGN KEY (group_id) REFERENCES i3albo.group (id)
);
CREATE TABLE i3albo.test (
id INT PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT,
task_type_id INT NOT NULL,
author_username VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
group_id INT NOT NULL,
date DATETIME NOT NULL,
args TEXT NOT NULL,
FOREIGN KEY (task_type_id) REFERENCES i3albo.task_type (id),
FOREIGN KEY (author_username) REFERENCES i3albo.user (username),
FOREIGN KEY (group_id) REFERENCES i3albo.group (id)
);
|
/*
*
* GO 20091112: indexes added
*
* PhG 20010-01-06:
* LMF_LASER_COLORS_DEF -> LMF_LASER_COLOR_DEF + column changes.
* Err. on norm. factor
*
* GO 20010109: new indexes added - removed SEQ_ID from
* LMF_PRIM_DATASET_DAT - partitioned tables
*
* GO 20100323: sequences redefined with NOCACHE
*
* GO 20100910: removed contraints against RUN_IOV (cannot constraint on a
* different account): substituted by triggers
*
* GO 20100927: SYNONYMs created (may need grant on CMS_ECAL_COND)
* GO 20101011: modified table structure for XXX_CLS_XXX tables
* GO 20101020: LMF_CLS_XXX tables modified to move the REF field after
* LOGIC_ID (needed to use only one class in C++)
* GO 20101124: modified Corr coeff table
* GO 20110301: final (hopefully) version with pre-partitioned
* tables and local indices, as well as with
* splitted DB sequences.
* GO 20110531: added support for CLS classes. Added partitions %_11b.
* GO 20110907: updated the script to reflect the current table layout
* (PN_PRIM_DAT tables columns swapped w.r.t. the real ones)
* GO 20110907: added USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE clause to the creation of
* LMF_LED_XX_PN_PRIM_DAT table as a test (see e-mail from
* Skorupinski)
*/
PROMPT "Starting creating laser tables: "
PROMPT " please GRANT SELECT ON RUN_IOV from CMS_ECAL_COND account"
/* create sequences. Create different sequences for different years */
CREATE SEQUENCE LMF_RUN_TAG_SQ INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1 NOCACHE;
CREATE SEQUENCE LMF_RUN_IOV_10_SQ INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1 NOCACHE;
CREATE SEQUENCE LMF_RUN_IOV_11_SQ INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1158001 NOCACHE;
CREATE SEQUENCE LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_ID_10_SQ INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1 NOCACHE;
CREATE SEQUENCE LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_ID_11_SQ INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 2401 NOCACHE;
CREATE SEQUENCE LMF_IOV_10_SQ INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1 NOCACHE;
CREATE SEQUENCE LMF_IOV_11_SQ INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 2401 NOCACHE;
CREATE SEQUENCE SEQ_ID_10_SQ INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 1 NOCACHE;
CREATE SEQUENCE SEQ_ID_11_SQ INCREMENT BY 1 START WITH 18001 NOCACHE;
/* LMF_RUN_TAG: done */
CREATE TABLE LMF_RUN_TAG
(
GEN_TAG VARCHAR2(100),
VERSION NUMBER,
TAG_ID NUMBER NOT NULL
)
/
INSERT INTO LMF_RUN_TAG VALUES ('gen', 1, lmf_run_tag_sq.nextVal);
ALTER TABLE LMF_RUN_TAG
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_RUN_TAG_PK PRIMARY KEY (TAG_ID) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
/* LMF_COLOR_DEF: done */
CREATE TABLE LMF_COLOR_DEF
(
COLOR_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
COLOR_INDEX NUMBER NOT NULL,
SNAME VARCHAR2(10) NOT NULL,
LNAME VARCHAR2(100) NOT NULL
)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_COLOR_DEF
ADD CONSTRAINT LM_COLOR_DEF_PK PRIMARY KEY (COLOR_ID) USING INDEX LOCAL
ENABLE
/
INSERT INTO LMF_COLOR_DEF VALUES (1, 0, 'blue',
'blue laser (440 nm) or blue led');
INSERT INTO LMF_COLOR_DEF VALUES (2, 1, 'green', 'green (495 nm)');
INSERT INTO LMF_COLOR_DEF VALUES (3, 2,
'red/orange', 'red laser (706 nm) or orange led');
INSERT INTO LMF_COLOR_DEF VALUES (4, 3, 'IR', 'infrared (796 nm)');
/* LMF_TRIG_TYPE_DEF */
CREATE TABLE LMF_TRIG_TYPE_DEF
(
TRIG_TYPE NUMBER,
SNAME VARCHAR2(5),
LNAME VARCHAR2(50),
CONSTRAINT LMF_TRIG_TYPE_DEF PRIMARY KEY(TRIG_TYPE) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
)
/
INSERT INTO LMF_TRIG_TYPE_DEF VALUES (1, 'las', 'laser');
INSERT INTO LMF_TRIG_TYPE_DEF VALUES (2, 'led', 'led');
INSERT INTO LMF_TRIG_TYPE_DEF VALUES (3, 'tp', 'test pulse');
INSERT INTO LMF_TRIG_TYPE_DEF VALUES (4, 'ped', 'pedestal');
/* LMF_SEQ_VERS */
CREATE TABLE LMF_SEQ_VERS
(
VERS NUMBER(3),
DB_TIMESTAMP TIMESTAMP DEFAULT sys_extract_utc(SYSTIMESTAMP) NOT NULL,
DESCR VARCHAR2(100),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_SEQ_VERS_PK PRIMARY KEY(VERS) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
)
/
INSERT INTO LMF_SEQ_VERS VALUES (0, DEFAULT, 'none');
INSERT INTO LMF_SEQ_VERS VALUES (1, DEFAULT, 'default');
/* LMF_SEQ_DAT
-- In the table the list of calibration sequences, that is a scan
-- of the whole ECAL with the different event type. 1 row = 1 sequence.
*/
CREATE TABLE LMF_SEQ_DAT
(
SEQ_ID NUMBER,
RUN_IOV_ID NUMBER,
SEQ_NUM NUMBER,
SEQ_START DATE NOT NULL,
SEQ_STOP DATE NOT NULL,
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_SEQ_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY(SEQ_ID) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_SEQ_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN) REFERENCES LMF_SEQ_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_SEQ_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX) REFERENCES LMF_SEQ_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("SEQ_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_SEQ_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (18000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_SEQ_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (36000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
/* LMF_RUN_IOV */
-- This table holds the list of monitoring subruns, that a batch
-- of consecutive events on the same region and of the same type.
CREATE TABLE LMF_RUN_IOV
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
TAG_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
SEQ_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LMR NUMBER NOT NULL,
COLOR_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
TRIG_TYPE NUMBER NOT NULL,
SUBRUN_START DATE NOT NULL,
SUBRUN_END DATE NOT NULL,
SUBRUN_TYPE VARCHAR2(20) NOT NULL,
DB_TIMESTAMP TIMESTAMP DEFAULT SYS_EXTRACT_UTC(SYSTIMESTAMP) NOT NULL
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_RUN_IOV_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_RUN_IOV_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_RUN_IOV
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_RUN_IOV_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID) USING INDEX LOCAL
ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_RUN_IOV
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_RUN_IOV_UK UNIQUE (SEQ_ID, LMR, COLOR_ID, TRIG_TYPE)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_RUN_IOV
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_RUN_IOV_FK1 FOREIGN KEY (TAG_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_TAG(TAG_ID)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_RUN_IOV
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_RUN_IOV_FK2 FOREIGN KEY (SEQ_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_SEQ_DAT(SEQ_ID)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_RUN_IOV
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_RUN_IOV_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (COLOR_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_COLOR_DEF(COLOR_ID)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_RUN_IOV
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_RUN_IOV_FK4 FOREIGN KEY (TRIG_TYPE)
REFERENCES LMF_TRIG_TYPE_DEF
/
/* LMF_LASER_CONFIG_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LASER_CONFIG_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
WAVELENGTH NUMBER,
VFE_GAIN NUMBER,
PN_GAIN NUMBER,
LSR_POWER NUMBER,
LSR_ATTENUATOR NUMBER,
LSR_CURRENT NUMBER,
LSR_DELAY_1 NUMBER,
LSR_DELAY_2 NUMBER
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LASER_CONFIG_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LASER_CONFIG_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_CONFIG_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_CONFIG_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID)
USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_CONFIG_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_CONFIG_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV(LMF_IOV_ID)
/
/* LMF_RUN_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_RUN_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
NEVENTS NUMBER,
QUALITY_FLAG NUMBER
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_RUN_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_RUN_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_RUN_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_RUN_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID)
USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_RUN_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_RUN_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV(LMF_IOV_ID)
/
/* LMF_TEST_PULSE_CONFIG_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_TEST_PULSE_CONFIG_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
VFE_GAIN NUMBER,
DAC_MGPA NUMBER,
PN_GAIN NUMBER,
PN_VINJ NUMBER
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_TEST_PULSE_CONFIG_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_TEST_PULSE_CONFIG_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_TEST_PULSE_CONFIG_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_TEST_PULSE_CONFIG_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_TEST_PULSE_CONFIG_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_TEST_PULSE_CONFIG_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV(LMF_IOV_ID)
/
/* LMF_PRIM_VERS */
CREATE TABLE LMF_PRIM_VERS
(
VERS NUMBER,
DB_TIMESTAMP TIMESTAMP DEFAULT SYS_EXTRACT_UTC(SYSTIMESTAMP) NOT NULL,
DESCR VARCHAR2(100),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_PRIM_VERS_PK PRIMARY KEY(VERS) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
)
/
INSERT INTO LMF_PRIM_VERS VALUES (0, DEFAULT, 'none');
INSERT INTO LMF_PRIM_VERS VALUES (1, DEFAULT, 'default');
INSERT INTO LMF_PRIM_VERS VALUES (2, DEFAULT, 'vers. 2');
INSERT INTO LMF_PRIM_VERS VALUES (3, DEFAULT, 'vers. 3');
INSERT INTO LMF_PRIM_VERS VALUES (4, DEFAULT, 'vers. 4');
/* LMF_CLS_XXX_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LMF_IOV_ID_REF NUMBER,
MEAN NUMBER,
NORM NUMBER,
RMS NUMBER,
NEVT NUMBER,
ENORM NUMBER,
FLAG NUMBER,
FLAGNORM NUMBER,
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY(LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV(LMF_IOV_ID)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE TABLE LMF_CLS_IR_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LMF_IOV_ID_REF NUMBER,
MEAN NUMBER,
NORM NUMBER,
RMS NUMBER,
NEVT NUMBER,
ENORM NUMBER,
FLAG NUMBER,
FLAGNORM NUMBER,
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY(LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV(LMF_IOV_ID)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_CLS_IR_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
/* LMF_CORR_VERS */
CREATE TABLE LMF_CORR_VERS
(
VERS NUMBER,
DB_TIMESTAMP TIMESTAMP DEFAULT SYS_EXTRACT_UTC(SYSTIMESTAMP) NOT NULL,
DESCR VARCHAR2(100),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_CORR_VERS_PK PRIMARY KEY(VERS) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
)
/
INSERT INTO LMF_CORR_VERS VALUES (0, DEFAULT, 'none');
INSERT INTO LMF_CORR_VERS VALUES (1, DEFAULT, 'default');
/* LMF_IOV */
CREATE TABLE LMF_IOV
(
IOV_ID NUMBER,
IOV_START DATE,
IOV_STOP DATE,
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_IOV_PK PRIMARY KEY(IOV_ID) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_IOV_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN) REFERENCES LMF_CORR_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_IOV_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX) REFERENCES LMF_CORR_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_IOV_10" VALUES LESS THAN (2400)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_IOV_11" VALUES LESS THAN (4800)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
/* LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV
(
LMR_SUB_IOV_ID NUMBER,
IOV_ID NUMBER,
T1 DATE,
T2 DATE,
T3 DATE,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_PK PRIMARY KEY(LMR_SUB_IOV_ID)
USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_FK FOREIGN KEY(IOV_ID) REFERENCES LMF_IOV
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMR_SUB_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_10" VALUES LESS THAN (2400)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_11" VALUES LESS THAN (4800)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
/* LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT
(
LMR_SUB_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
P1 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
P2 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
P3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
P1_ERR NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
P2_ERR NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
P3_ERR NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
FLAG NUMBER,
SEQ_ID NUMBER
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMR_SUB_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (2400)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (4800)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_11b" VALUES LESS THAN (10000) /* added 30-05-2011 */
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LOGIC_ID, LMR_SUB_IOV_ID)
USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY (LMR_SUB_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY (SEQ_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_SEQ_DAT
/
/* RUN_LASERRUN_CONFIG_DAT */
CREATE TABLE RUN_LASERRUN_CONFIG_DAT
(
IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LASER_SEQUENCE_TYPE VARCHAR2(20),
LASER_SEQUENCE_COND VARCHAR2(20)
)
/
ALTER TABLE RUN_LASERRUN_CONFIG_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT RUN_LASERRUN_CONFIG_DAT_PK UNIQUE (IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID)
/
-- BLUE LASER PRIMITIVE TABLES
/* LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
SHAPE_COR_PN NUMBER,
MEAN NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
RMS NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
M3 NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_MEAN NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_RMS NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_M3 NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
FLAG NUMBER,
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV
/
/* LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
FIT_METHOD NUMBER,
MTQ_AMPL NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_TIME NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_RISE NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_FWHM NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_FW20 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_FW80 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_SLIDING NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV(LMF_IOV_ID)
/
/* LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
MEAN NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
RMS NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
M3 NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
FLAG NUMBER,
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV
/
/* LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
MEAN NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
RMS NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
M3 NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
FLAG NUMBER,
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV
/
/* LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT: done */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
FLAG NUMBER,
MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
ALPHA NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
BETA NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
SHAPE_COR NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV(LMF_IOV_ID)
/
-- IR LASER PRIMITIVE TABLES
/* LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
SHAPE_COR_PN NUMBER,
MEAN NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
RMS NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
M3 NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_MEAN NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_RMS NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_M3 NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
FLAG NUMBER,
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV
/
/* LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
FIT_METHOD NUMBER,
MTQ_AMPL NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_TIME NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_RISE NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_FWHM NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_FW20 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_FW80 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
MTQ_SLIDING NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV(LMF_IOV_ID)
/
/* LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
FLAG NUMBER,
MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
ALPHA NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
BETA NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
SHAPE_COR NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV(LMF_IOV_ID)
/
-- BLUE LED PRIMITIVE TABLES
/* LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
MEAN NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
RMS NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
M3 NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_MEAN NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_RMS NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_M3 NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
FLAG NUMBER,
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV
/
/* LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
FLAG NUMBER,
MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
ALPHA NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
BETA NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
SHAPE_COR NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV(LMF_IOV_ID)
/
-- ORANGE LED PRIMITIVE TABLES
/* LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
MEAN NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
RMS NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
M3 NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_MEAN NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_RMS NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
PNA_OVER_PNB_M3 NUMBER, -- or BINARY_FLOAT
FLAG NUMBER,
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV
/
/* LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT */
CREATE TABLE LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT
(
LMF_IOV_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
LOGIC_ID NUMBER NOT NULL,
FLAG NUMBER,
MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNA_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PNB_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_MEAN NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_RMS NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
APD_OVER_PN_M3 NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
ALPHA NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
BETA NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
SHAPE_COR NUMBER, -- OR BINARY_FLOAT
VMIN NUMBER,
VMAX NUMBER,
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT_FK1 FOREIGN KEY(VMIN)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS),
CONSTRAINTS LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT_FK2 FOREIGN KEY(VMAX)
REFERENCES LMF_PRIM_VERS(VERS)
)
PARTITION BY RANGE ("LMF_IOV_ID")
(PARTITION "LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT_10" VALUES LESS THAN (1158000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION "LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT_11" VALUES LESS THAN (2316000)
TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT_PK PRIMARY KEY (LMF_IOV_ID,LOGIC_ID,
VMIN) USING INDEX LOCAL ENABLE
/
ALTER TABLE LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT
ADD CONSTRAINT LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT_FK3 FOREIGN KEY (LMF_IOV_ID)
REFERENCES LMF_RUN_IOV(LMF_IOV_ID)
/
PROMPT "Creating indices";
CREATE INDEX LMF_RUN_STRT_IX ON LMF_RUN_IOV(SUBRUN_START) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_RUN_END_IX ON LMF_RUN_IOV(SUBRUN_END) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_SEQ_DAT_IX ON LMF_SEQ_DAT(RUN_IOV_ID) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_SEQ_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_SEQ_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_IOV_START_IX ON LMF_IOV(IOV_START) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_IOV_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_IOV_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_IOV_STOP_IX ON LMF_IOV(IOV_STOP) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_IOV_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_IOV_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX RUN_LASRRUN_CONFIG_DAT_IX ON RUN_LASERRUN_CONFIG_DAT(IOV_ID)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_IX ON LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV(T1) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
/* FOREIGN KEYS INDEXES */
CREATE INDEX LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_FIX1 ON LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_FIX2 ON LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID_REF) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_FIX1 ON LMF_CLS_IR_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_FIX2 ON LMF_CLS_IR_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID_REF) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_RUN_IOV_FIX1 ON LMF_RUN_IOV(SEQ_ID) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_RUN_IOV_FIX2 ON LMF_RUN_IOV(TAG_ID) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_RUN_IOV_FIX3 ON LMF_RUN_IOV(COLOR_ID) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_RUN_IOV_FIX4 ON LMF_RUN_IOV(TRIG_TYPE) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_RUN_IOV_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT_FIX ON LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_CONFIG_DAT_FIX ON LMF_LASER_CONFIG_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_RUN_DAT_FIX ON LMF_RUN_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_TEST_PULSE_CONFIG_DAT_FIX ON LMF_TEST_PULSE_CONFIG_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_FIX ON LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV(IOV_ID) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_FIX1 ON LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT(LMR_SUB_IOV_ID) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_FIX2 ON LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT(SEQ_ID) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_CORR_COEF_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FIX ON LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FIX ON LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT_FIX ON LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_FIX ON LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT_FIX ON LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT_FIX ON LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT_FIX ON LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_FIX ON LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_FIX ON LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT(LMF_IOV_ID) LOCAL
/
/* VMIN, VMAX indices */
CREATE INDEX LMF_SEQ_FKIX ON LMF_SEQ_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_SEQ_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_SEQ_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_CLS_BLUE_FKIX ON LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_CLS_IR_FKIX ON LMF_CLS_IR_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_IOVFKIX ON LMF_IOV(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_IOV10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_IOV11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_FKIX ON LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LASER_BLUE_PULSE_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_FKIX ON LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LASER_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_FKIX ON LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LASER_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_FKIX ON LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LED_BLUE_PN_PRIM_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_FKIX ON LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LED_BLUE_PRIM_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_FKIX ON LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LED_ORANGE_PN_PRIM_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_FKIX ON LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LED_ORANGE_PRIM_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_FKIX ON LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LASER_IR_PULSE_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_FKIX ON LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LASER_IR_PN_PRIM_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_FKIX ON LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_LASER_IR_PRIM_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_FKIX ON LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_TESTPULSE_PN_PRIM_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE INDEX LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_FKIX ON LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT(VMIN) LOCAL
(PARTITION LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT_10 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2010_DATA,
PARTITION LMF_TESTPULSE_PRIM_DAT_11 TABLESPACE CMS_ECAL_LASER_COND_2011_DATA)
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER LMF_CHECK_SEQ_DAT_TG
BEFORE INSERT ON LMF_SEQ_DAT
REFERENCING NEW AS new_seq_dat
FOR EACH ROW
DECLARE
result NUMBER;
BEGIN
SELECT COUNT(IOV_ID) INTO result FROM CMS_ECAL_COND.RUN_IOV
WHERE IOV_ID = :new_seq_dat.RUN_IOV_ID;
IF result = 0 THEN
RAISE_APPLICATION_ERROR(-20000, 'RUN.IOV_ID = ' ||
:new_seq_dat.RUN_IOV_ID || ' does not exists!');
END IF;
END;
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER LMF_CHECK_LASERCONF_TG
BEFORE INSERT ON RUN_LASERRUN_CONFIG_DAT
REFERENCING NEW AS new_config_dat
FOR EACH ROW
DECLARE
result NUMBER;
BEGIN
SELECT COUNT(IOV_ID) INTO result FROM CMS_ECAL_COND.RUN_IOV
WHERE IOV_ID = :new_config_dat.IOV_ID;
IF result = 0 THEN
RAISE_APPLICATION_ERROR(-20000, 'RUN.IOV_ID = ' ||
:new_config_dat.IOV_ID || ' does not exists!');
END IF;
END;
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER LMF_CHECK_TRIPLETS_TG
BEFORE INSERT ON LMF_LMR_SUB_IOV
REFERENCING NEW AS new_sub_iov
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
IF ((:new_sub_iov.t2 < :new_sub_iov.t1) OR
(:new_sub_iov.t3 < :new_sub_iov.t2) OR
(:new_sub_iov.t3 < :new_sub_iov.t1))
THEN
RAISE_APPLICATION_ERROR (
num => -20000,
msg => 'Wrong triplets detected: T2 < T1 or T3 < T2');
END IF;
END;
/
/* create triggers to support 0 values in LMF_IOV_ID_REF and ensure referential
integrity */
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT_TG
BEFORE INSERT ON LMF_CLS_BLUE_DAT
REFERENCING NEW AS new
FOR EACH ROW
DECLARE
rowcount NUMBER;
BEGIN
IF (:new.LMF_IOV_ID_REF != 0) THEN
SELECT COUNT(LMF_IOV_ID) INTO rowcount FROM LMF_RUN_IOV WHERE LMF_IOV_ID = :n\
ew.LMF_IOV_ID_REF;
IF (rowcount = 0) THEN
RAISE_APPLICATION_ERROR(-20001, 'LMF_IOV_ID_REF = ' || :new.LMF_IOV_ID_REF \
|| ' not found');
END IF;
END IF;
END;
/
CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER LMF_CLS_IR_DAT_TG
BEFORE INSERT ON LMF_CLS_IR_DAT
REFERENCING NEW AS new
FOR EACH ROW
DECLARE
rowcount NUMBER;
BEGIN
IF (:new.LMF_IOV_ID_REF != 0) THEN
SELECT COUNT(LMF_IOV_ID) INTO rowcount FROM LMF_RUN_IOV WHERE LMF_IOV_ID = :n\
ew.LMF_IOV_ID_REF;
IF (rowcount = 0) THEN
RAISE_APPLICATION_ERROR(-20001, 'LMF_IOV_ID_REF = ' || :new.LMF_IOV_ID_REF \
|| ' not found');
END IF;
END IF;
END;
/
/*
CREATE SYNONYM RUN_TYPE_DEF FOR CMS_ECAL_COND.RUN_TYPE_DEF;
CREATE SYNONYM RUN_IOV FOR CMS_ECAL_COND.RUN_IOV;
CREATE SYNONYM VIEWDESCRIPTION FOR CMS_ECAL_COND.VIEWDESCRIPTION;
CREATE SYNONYM CHANNELVIEW FOR CMS_ECAL_COND.CHANNELVIEW;
CREATE SYNONYM LOCATION_DEF FOR CMS_ECAL_COND.LOCATION_DEF;
*/
|
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--
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-- Tiempo de generación: 28-04-2018 a las 06:14:34
-- Versión del servidor: 10.1.21-MariaDB
-- Versión de PHP: 5.6.30
SET SQL_MODE = "NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO";
SET time_zone = "+00:00";
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@@CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@@CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
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/*!40101 SET NAMES utf8mb4 */;
--
-- Base de datos: `recuperalo`
--
--
-- Volcado de datos para la tabla `status`
--
INSERT INTO `status` (`id`, `name`, `description`) VALUES
(1, 'Sin asignar', 'aún no cuenta con un artículo registrado'),
(2, 'Registrado', 'el código esta asociado con un artículo'),
(3, 'Prestado', 'el articulo es prestado a otra persona'),
(4, 'Extraviado', 'articulo perdido'),
(5, 'Baja', 'articulo eliminado'),
(6, 'devuelto', 'articulo regresado a su dueño'),
(7, 'encontrado', 'articulo encontrado');
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
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|
<gh_stars>0
insert into lokacija (id, ime, vodja) values (1, 'Ullrich Inc', 202);
insert into lokacija (id, ime, vodja) values (2, 'Harber-Marvin', 12);
insert into lokacija (id, ime, vodja) values (3, 'Brown-Strosin', 245);
insert into lokacija (id, ime, vodja) values (4, 'Lehner-Feeney', 115);
insert into lokacija (id, ime, vodja) values (5, 'Zieme Inc', 6);
insert into lokacija (id, ime, vodja) values (6, 'Predovic-Stanton', 20);
insert into lokacija (id, ime, vodja) values (7, 'Walker Inc', 101);
insert into lokacija (id, ime, vodja) values (8, 'Buckridge-Gutkowski', 20);
insert into lokacija (id, ime, vodja) values (9, 'Ullrich-Boyle', 220);
insert into lokacija (id, ime, vodja) values (10, 'Lesch, <NAME>', 213);
|
<reponame>anbya/contohUploadKeGit
INSERT INTO pos_itemtemp VALUES("IATT190004602","193077","191001","192001","30000","1","30000","0","30000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193077"),
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("IATT190004625","193055","191002","192010","17000","1","17000","0","17000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193055"),
("IATT190004626","193023","191001","192003","30000","1","30000","0","30000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193023"),
("IATT190004626","193040","191001","192008","20000","1","20000","0","20000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193040"),
("IATT190004626","193033","191001","192005","42000","1","42000","0","42000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193033"),
("IATT190004626","193052","191002","192010","20000","1","20000","0","20000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193052"),
("IATT190004626","193050","191002","192010","20000","1","20000","0","20000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193050"),
("IATT190004627","193112","191001","192003","50000","1","50000","0","50000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193112"),
("IATT190004628","193011","191001","192001","40000","1","40000","0","40000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","PEDAS"),
("IATT190004628","193022","191001","192003","30000","1","30000","0","30000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193022"),
("IATT190004628","193067","191001","192003","7000","1","7000","0","7000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193067"),
("IATT190004628","193052","191002","192010","20000","1","20000","0","20000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193052"),
("IATT190004628","193052","191002","192010","20000","1","20000","0","20000","2","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193052"),
("IATT190004628","193052","191002","192010","20000","1","20000","0","20000","3","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193052"),
("IATT190004628","193054","191002","192010","20000","1","20000","0","20000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193054"),
("IATT190004628","193046","191002","192010","10000","1","10000","0","10000","1","1","1","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193046"),
("IATT190004628","193048","191002","192010","8000","1","8000","0","8000","1","1","2","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","PAID","","193048");
INSERT INTO pos_salestemp VALUES("IATT190004602","","1","50000","0","5000","0","55000","100000","31/12/2019","12:35","2019-12-31","13:53:15","ISU000015","tbl0023","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004478","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004603","","3","160000","0","16000","0","176000","200000","31/12/2019","12:44","2019-12-31","14:00:45","ISU000015","tbl0010","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004481","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004604","","4","212000","52000","16000","0","176000","200000","31/12/2019","12:47","2019-12-31","13:26:55","ISU000015","tbl0012","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004475","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004605","","1","99000","0","9900","0","108900","110000","31/12/2019","12:57","2019-12-31","13:03:43","ISU000015","tbl0011","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004474","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004606","","2","118000","0","11800","0","129800","130000","31/12/2019","13:12","2019-12-31","13:57:11","ISU000015","tbl0019","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004479","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004607","","2","98000","0","9800","0","107800","110000","31/12/2019","13:15","2019-12-31","13:43:39","ISU000015","tbl0014","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004476","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004608","","2","91000","0","9100","0","100100","100100","31/12/2019","13:17","2019-12-31","13:45:36","ISU000015","tbl0012","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004477","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004609","","2","92000","16400","7560","0","83160","83160","31/12/2019","13:21","2019-12-31","14:00:06","ISU000015","tbl0021","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004480","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004610","","2","111000","0","11100","0","122100","122100","31/12/2019","13:27","2019-12-31","14:08:16","ISU000015","tbl0018","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004482","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004611","","2","74000","0","7400","0","81400","100400","31/12/2019","13:30","2019-12-31","14:12:13","ISU000015","tbl0016","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004483","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004612","","1","40000","0","4000","0","44000","44000","31/12/2019","13:42","2019-12-31","14:15:24","ISU000015","tbl0004","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004484","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004613","","4","173000","0","17300","0","190300","200000","31/12/2019","13:52","2019-12-31","14:47:42","ISU000015","tbl0011","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004487","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004614","","2","114000","0","11400","0","125400","150400","31/12/2019","14:04","2019-12-31","14:40:28","ISU000015","tbl0012","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004485","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004615","","2","91000","0","9100","0","100100","100100","31/12/2019","14:21","2019-12-31","14:46:16","ISU000015","tbl0022","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004486","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004616","","2","152000","0","15200","0","167200","167200","31/12/2019","14:25","2019-12-31","14:59:54","ISU000004","tbl0010","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004489","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004617","","1","38000","0","3800","0","41800","50000","31/12/2019","14:35","2019-12-31","14:56:48","ISU000004","tbl0004","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004488","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004618","","2","170000","0","17000","0","187000","200000","31/12/2019","15:04","2019-12-31","15:36:25","ISU000004","tbl0012","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004490","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004619","","1","46000","0","4600","0","50600","50600","31/12/2019","15:44","2019-12-31","16:24:39","ISU000004","tbl0011","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004491","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004620","","1","50000","0","5000","0","55000","55000","31/12/2019","18:31","2019-12-31","19:19:22","ISU000004","tbl0012","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004492","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004621","","2","77000","0","7700","0","84700","100000","31/12/2019","19:03","2019-12-31","19:35:20","ISU000004","tbl0011","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004493","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004622","","2","110000","0","11000","0","121000","121000","31/12/2019","19:06","2019-12-31","19:47:15","ISU000004","tbl0010","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004494","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004623","","2","97000","15400","8160","0","89760","100000","31/12/2019","19:29","2019-12-31","20:28:12","ISU000004","tbl0012","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004498","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004624","","1","0","0","0","0","0","0","31/12/2019","19:44","31/12/2019","22:05:42","ISU000004","takeaway","CANCELED","1","PERMINTAAN CUSTOMER","","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004625","","1","47000","0","4700","0","51700","100000","31/12/2019","19:44","2019-12-31","20:00:49","ISU000004","tbl0006","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004495","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004626","","2","132000","0","13200","0","145200","150000","31/12/2019","19:48","2019-12-31","20:24:11","ISU000004","tbl0001","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004497","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004627","","1","50000","0","5000","0","55000","55000","31/12/2019","19:50","2019-12-31","20:24:02","ISU000004","tbl0002","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004496","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004628","","3","175000","0","17500","0","192500","200000","31/12/2019","20:41","2019-12-31","21:26:09","ISU000004","tbl0003","CLOSED","1","","IATR190004499","","","","","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007");
INSERT INTO item_void VALUES("IATT190004613","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","193040","193040","1","20000","Before Send","Komplen Customer"),
("IATT190004613","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007","193041","193041","1","20000","Before Send","Komplen Customer");
INSERT INTO pos_promotion_h VALUES("IATT190004609","NPRM18000024","DISC ITEM","1","16400","KANAN KIRI DISKON 20%","IAT3112190954","PAID","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004604","NPRM18000026","DISC ITEM","1","52000","KANAN KIRI DISKON 40%","IAT3112190954","PAID","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004623","NPRM18000024","DISC ITEM","1","15400","KANAN KIRI DISKON 20%","IAT3112190954","PAID","NHO2018000007");
INSERT INTO pos_promotion_d VALUES("IATT190004609","NPRM18000024","DISC ITEM","1","1","193021","1","8000","IAT3112190954","PAID","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004609","NPRM18000024","DISC ITEM","1","1","193033","1","8400","IAT3112190954","PAID","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004604","NPRM18000026","DISC ITEM","1","1","193083","1","12000","IAT3112190954","PAID","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004604","NPRM18000026","DISC ITEM","1","1","193084","1","12000","IAT3112190954","PAID","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004604","NPRM18000026","DISC ITEM","1","1","193020","1","16000","IAT3112190954","PAID","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004604","NPRM18000026","DISC ITEM","1","1","193085","1","12000","IAT3112190954","PAID","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004623","NPRM18000024","DISC ITEM","1","1","193011","1","8000","IAT3112190954","PAID","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004623","NPRM18000024","DISC ITEM","1","1","193008","1","7400","IAT3112190954","PAID","NHO2018000007");
INSERT INTO pos_paymenttemp VALUES("IATT190004605","VOUCHER","E-Voucher 50K Bloggers X ","50000","50000","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","NHV20191220000065","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004605","VOUCHER","E-Voucher 50K Bloggers X ","50000","50000","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","NHV20191220000072","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004605","CASH","CASH","8900","10000","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004604","CASH","CASH","176000","200000","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004607","CASH","CASH","107800","110000","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004608","CARD","DEBIT BCA","100100","100100","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004602","CASH","CASH","55000","100000","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004606","CASH","CASH","129800","130000","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004609","CARD","DEBIT BCA","83160","83160","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004603","CASH","CASH","176000","200000","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004610","CARD","DEBIT BCA","122100","122100","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004611","CASH","CASH","81400","100400","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004612","CASH","OVO","44000","44000","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004614","VOUCHER","TRAVELOKA EATS 100K","100000","100000","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004614","CASH","CASH","25400","50400","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004615","CASH","CASH","100100","100100","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004613","CASH","CASH","190300","200000","ISU000015","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004617","CASH","CASH","41800","50000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004616","CARD","DEBIT BCA","167200","167200","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004618","CASH","CASH","187000","200000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004619","CARD","DEBIT BCA","50600","50600","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004620","CASH","CASH","55000","55000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004621","CASH","CASH","84700","100000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004622","CASH","OVO","121000","121000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004625","CASH","CASH","51700","100000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004626","VOUCHER","E-Voucher 50K Bloggers X ","50000","50000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","NHV20191220000004","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004626","VOUCHER","E-Voucher 50K Bloggers X ","50000","50000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","NHV20191220000011","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004626","VOUCHER","E-Voucher 50K Bloggers X ","50000","50000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","NHV20191220000018","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004627","VOUCHER","E-Voucher 50K Bloggers X ","50000","50000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","NHV20191220000025","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004627","CASH","CASH","5000","5000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004623","CASH","CASH","89760","100000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007"),
("IATT190004628","CASH","CASH","192500","200000","ISU000004","2019-12-31","","1","","CLOSED","IAT3112190954","NHO2018000007");
|
<reponame>Honderdors/Analysis-Services-Load-Balancing
CREATE PROCEDURE [app].[performancecounters_pivot]
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE @cols AS NVARCHAR(MAX),
@colssum NVARCHAR(MAX),
@query AS NVARCHAR(MAX);
SELECT [p].[performancecounters_id],
[p].[collection_id],
[p].[collection_time],
[p].[categoryname],
[p].[countername],
[p].[instancename],
[p].[categoryname] + [p].[countername] + [p].[instancename] AS [pivcol],
[p].[machinename],
[p].[countervalue]
INTO [#data]
FROM [log].[performancecounters] AS [p] WITH (NOLOCK)
INNER JOIN
(
SELECT [p].[machinename],
MAX([p].[collection_time]) AS [collection_time]
FROM [log].[performancecounters] AS [p] WITH (NOLOCK)
GROUP BY [p].[machinename]
) AS [lastlog]
ON [lastlog].[machinename] = [p].[machinename]
AND [lastlog].[collection_time] = [p].[collection_time];
SELECT @cols = STUFF(
(
SELECT ',' + QUOTENAME([d].[pivcol])
FROM [#data] AS [d]
GROUP BY [d].[pivcol]
ORDER BY [d].[pivcol]
FOR XML PATH(''), TYPE
).[value]('.', 'NVARCHAR(MAX)'),
1,
1,
''
);
SELECT @colssum = STUFF(
(
SELECT ', SUM(' + QUOTENAME([d].[pivcol]) + ') AS ' + QUOTENAME([d].[pivcol])
FROM [#data] AS [d]
GROUP BY [d].[pivcol]
ORDER BY [d].[pivcol]
FOR XML PATH(''), TYPE
).[value]('.', 'NVARCHAR(MAX)'),
1,
1,
''
);
SET @query
= 'SELECT machinename,[collection_time],' + @colssum
+ ' from
(
SELECT [p].[performancecounters_id],
[p].[collection_id],
[p].[collection_time],
[p].[categoryname],
[p].[countername],
[p].[instancename],
[p].[categoryname] + [p].[countername]+ [p].[instancename] AS pivcol,
[p].[machinename],
[p].[countervalue]
FROM [log].[performancecounters] AS [p] WITH (NOLOCK)
/*INNER JOIN
(
SELECT [p].[machinename],
MAX([p].[collection_time]) AS [collection_time]
FROM [log].[performancecounters] AS [p] WITH (NOLOCK)
GROUP BY [p].[machinename]
) AS [lastlog]
ON [lastlog].[machinename] = [p].[machinename]
AND [lastlog].[collection_time] = [p].[collection_time]*/
) x
pivot
(
sum(countervalue)
for [pivcol] in (' + @cols + ')
) p group by machinename,[collection_time] order by [collection_time],machinename';
--PRINT @query;
EXECUTE (@query);
DROP TABLE [#data];
END
|
/*
Query the two cities in STATION with the shortest and longest CITY names, as well as their respective lengths (i.e.: number of characters in the name).
If there is more than one smallest or largest city, choose the one that comes first when ordered alphabetically.
Input Format
The STATION table is described as follows:
STATION
Field Type
ID NUMBER
CITY VARCHAR2(21)
STATE VARCHAR2(2)
LAT_N NUMBER
LONG_W NUMBER
where LAT_N is the northern latitude and LONG_W is the western longitude.
Sample Input
Let’s say that CITY only has four entries: DEF, ABC, PQRS and WXY
Sample Ouput
ABC 3
PQRS 4
Explanation
When ordered alphabetically, the CITY names are listed as ABC, DEF, PQRS, and WXY, with the respective lengths 3, 3, 4 and 3.
The longest-named city is obviously PQRS, but there are 3 options for shortest-named city; we choose ABC, because it comes first alphabetically.
*/
/*
Analysis
For the shortest city name, we can sort city names according to their length in ascending order,
and for cities having the same length, sort with their names in alphabetical order. Then we output city name and its length of the first entry. So,
output city name and its length ==> SELECT CITY, LENGTH(CITY)
from STATION table ==> FROM STATION
sort with length in ascending order, name in alphabetical order ==>
ORDER BY LENGTH(CITY), CITY
output result of first entry ==> LIMIT 1
For the longest city name, we can sort city names with length in descending order.
Then sort cities’ names in alphabetical order for those having the same length. Finally output city name and length of first entry. So,
output city name and length ==> SELECT CITY, LENGTH(CITY)
from STATION table ==> FROM STATION
sort with length in descending order, name in alphabetical order ==>
ORDER BY LENGTH(CITY) DESC, CITY
output result of first entry ==> LIMIT 1
*/
SELECT CITY, LENGTH(CITY) FROM STATION
ORDER BY LENGTH(CITY), CITY
LIMIT 1;
SELECT CITY, LENGTH(CITY) FROM STATION
ORDER BY LENGTH(CITY) DESC, CITY
LIMIT 1;
|
-- MySQL dump 10.13 Distrib 8.0.26, for Win64 (x86_64)
--
-- Host: localhost Database: actasunicordoba
-- ------------------------------------------------------
-- Server version 8.0.26
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@@CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@@CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION=@@COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
/*!50503 SET NAMES utf8 */;
/*!40103 SET @OLD_TIME_ZONE=@@TIME_ZONE */;
/*!40103 SET TIME_ZONE='+00:00' */;
/*!40014 SET @OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS=@@UNIQUE_CHECKS, UNIQUE_CHECKS=0 */;
/*!40014 SET @OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=@@FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS, FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=0 */;
/*!40101 SET @OLD_SQL_MODE=@@SQL_MODE, SQL_MODE='NO_AUTO_VALUE_ON_ZERO' */;
/*!40111 SET @OLD_SQL_NOTES=@@SQL_NOTES, SQL_NOTES=0 */;
--
-- Table structure for table `actionspoints`
--
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `actionspoints`;
/*!40101 SET @saved_cs_client = @@character_set_client */;
/*!50503 SET character_set_client = utf8mb4 */;
CREATE TABLE `actionspoints` (
`idActionPoint` int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`task` text NOT NULL,
`datetime` datetime NOT NULL,
`progress` text NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`idActionPoint`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=33 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3;
/*!40101 SET character_set_client = @saved_cs_client */;
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LOCK TABLES `actionspoints` WRITE;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `actionspoints` DISABLE KEYS */;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `actionspoints` ENABLE KEYS */;
UNLOCK TABLES;
--
-- Table structure for table `meetings`
--
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `meetings`;
/*!40101 SET @saved_cs_client = @@character_set_client */;
/*!50503 SET character_set_client = utf8mb4 */;
CREATE TABLE `meetings` (
`idmeeting` int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`organizer` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
`datatime` datetime NOT NULL,
`assistants` text NOT NULL,
`notes` text,
PRIMARY KEY (`idmeeting`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=15 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3;
/*!40101 SET character_set_client = @saved_cs_client */;
--
-- Dumping data for table `meetings`
--
LOCK TABLES `meetings` WRITE;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `meetings` DISABLE KEYS */;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `meetings` ENABLE KEYS */;
UNLOCK TABLES;
--
-- Table structure for table `meetings-actionspoints`
--
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `meetings-actionspoints`;
/*!40101 SET @saved_cs_client = @@character_set_client */;
/*!50503 SET character_set_client = utf8mb4 */;
CREATE TABLE `meetings-actionspoints` (
`idmeetingsactions` int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`idmeetings` int NOT NULL,
`idactionspoints` int NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`idmeetingsactions`),
KEY `fk_meeting_idx` (`idmeetings`),
KEY `fk_actionspoints_idx` (`idactionspoints`),
CONSTRAINT `fk_actionspoints` FOREIGN KEY (`idactionspoints`) REFERENCES `actionspoints` (`idActionPoint`) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE,
CONSTRAINT `fk_meeting` FOREIGN KEY (`idmeetings`) REFERENCES `meetings` (`idmeeting`) ON DELETE CASCADE ON UPDATE CASCADE
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=10 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3;
/*!40101 SET character_set_client = @saved_cs_client */;
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-- Dumping data for table `meetings-actionspoints`
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/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `meetings-actionspoints` DISABLE KEYS */;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `meetings-actionspoints` ENABLE KEYS */;
UNLOCK TABLES;
--
-- Table structure for table `users`
--
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `users`;
/*!40101 SET @saved_cs_client = @@character_set_client */;
/*!50503 SET character_set_client = utf8mb4 */;
CREATE TABLE `users` (
`iduser` int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`firstname` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
`lastname` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
`username` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
`password` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
`isFunctionary` tinyint DEFAULT '0',
`isTeacher` tinyint DEFAULT '0',
PRIMARY KEY (`iduser`),
UNIQUE KEY `username_UNIQUE` (`username`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=2 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb3;
/*!40101 SET character_set_client = @saved_cs_client */;
--
-- Dumping data for table `users`
--
LOCK TABLES `users` WRITE;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `users` DISABLE KEYS */;
/*!40000 ALTER TABLE `users` ENABLE KEYS */;
UNLOCK TABLES;
/*!40103 SET TIME_ZONE=@OLD_TIME_ZONE */;
/*!40101 SET SQL_MODE=@OLD_SQL_MODE */;
/*!40014 SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS=@OLD_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS */;
/*!40014 SET UNIQUE_CHECKS=@OLD_UNIQUE_CHECKS */;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT */;
/*!40101 SET CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS=@OLD_CHARACTER_SET_RESULTS */;
/*!40101 SET COLLATION_CONNECTION=@OLD_COLLATION_CONNECTION */;
/*!40111 SET SQL_NOTES=@OLD_SQL_NOTES */;
-- Dump completed on 2022-02-15 9:33:43
|
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