text
stringlengths 1
22.8M
|
|---|
Phyllopezus diamantino is a species of gecko, a lizard in the family Phyllodactylidae. The species is endemic to Brazil.
References
Phyllopezus
Reptiles of Brazil
Reptiles described in 2022
|
Seyed Shamseddin Seyed-Abbasi (, February 5, 1943, Tehran – March 16, 2004, Tehran) was an Iranian wrestler who won a bronze medal in freestyle at the 1968 Summer Olympics.
Seyed-Abbasi died at 3 o'clock on the afternoon of 16 March 2004 (26 Esfand 1382 AH) in Iranmehr Hospital in Gholhak, Tehran from cancer.
References
Biography
www.sports-reference.com
1943 births
2004 deaths
Wrestlers at the 1968 Summer Olympics
Wrestlers at the 1972 Summer Olympics
Iranian male sport wrestlers
Olympic wrestlers for Iran
Olympic bronze medalists for Iran
Asian Games gold medalists for Iran
Olympic medalists in wrestling
Asian Games medalists in wrestling
Wrestlers at the 1970 Asian Games
World Wrestling Championships medalists
Medalists at the 1968 Summer Olympics
Medalists at the 1970 Asian Games
20th-century Iranian people
21st-century Iranian people
World Wrestling Champions
Sport wrestlers from Tehran
|
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<resources>
<string-array name="city_array">
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
<item></item>
</string-array>
</resources>
```
|
```xml
import { ImmutablePayloadCollection } from '../Collection/Payload/ImmutablePayloadCollection'
import {
EncryptedPayloadInterface,
FullyFormedPayloadInterface,
isDecryptedPayload,
isEncryptedPayload,
} from '../../Abstract/Payload'
import { SourcelessSyncDeltaEmit } from './Abstract/DeltaEmit'
import { SyncResolvedPayload } from './Utilities/SyncResolvedPayload'
import { payloadByFinalizingSyncState } from './Utilities/ApplyDirtyState'
export class ItemsKeyDelta {
constructor(
private baseCollection: ImmutablePayloadCollection,
private readonly applyPayloads: FullyFormedPayloadInterface[],
) {}
public result(): SourcelessSyncDeltaEmit {
const emits: SyncResolvedPayload[] = []
const ignored: EncryptedPayloadInterface[] = []
for (const apply of this.applyPayloads) {
const base = this.baseCollection.find(apply.uuid)
if (!base) {
emits.push(payloadByFinalizingSyncState(apply, this.baseCollection))
continue
}
if (isEncryptedPayload(apply) && isDecryptedPayload(base)) {
const keepBaseWithApplyTimestamps = base.copyAsSyncResolved({
updated_at_timestamp: apply.updated_at_timestamp,
updated_at: apply.updated_at,
dirty: false,
lastSyncEnd: new Date(),
})
emits.push(keepBaseWithApplyTimestamps)
ignored.push(apply)
} else {
emits.push(payloadByFinalizingSyncState(apply, this.baseCollection))
}
}
return {
emits: emits,
ignored,
}
}
}
```
|
```c++
// henry UNDERSCORE christophe AT hotmail DOT com
// This is an extended version of the state machine available in the boost::mpl library
// Distributed under the same license as the original.
// file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// path_to_url
#ifndef BOOST_MSM_FRONT_STATEMACHINE_DEF_H
#define BOOST_MSM_FRONT_STATEMACHINE_DEF_H
#include <exception>
#include <boost/assert.hpp>
#include <boost/mpl/vector.hpp>
#include <boost/msm/row_tags.hpp>
#include <boost/msm/back/common_types.hpp>
#include <boost/msm/front/states.hpp>
#include <boost/msm/front/completion_event.hpp>
#include <boost/msm/front/common_states.hpp>
namespace boost { namespace msm { namespace front
{
template<class Derived,class BaseState = default_base_state>
struct state_machine_def : public boost::msm::front::detail::state_base<BaseState>
{
// tags
// default: no flag
typedef ::boost::mpl::vector0<> flag_list;
typedef ::boost::mpl::vector0<> internal_flag_list;
//default: no deferred events
typedef ::boost::mpl::vector0<> deferred_events;
// customization (message queue, exceptions)
typedef ::boost::mpl::vector0<> configuration;
typedef BaseState BaseAllStates;
template<
typename T1
, class Event
, typename T2
, void (Derived::*action)(Event const&)
>
struct a_row
{
typedef a_row_tag row_type_tag;
typedef T1 Source;
typedef T2 Target;
typedef Event Evt;
template <class FSM,class SourceState,class TargetState,class AllStates>
static ::boost::msm::back::HandledEnum action_call(FSM& fsm,Event const& evt,SourceState&,TargetState&, AllStates&)
{
// in this front-end, we don't need to know source and target states
(fsm.*action)(evt);
return ::boost::msm::back::HANDLED_TRUE;
}
};
template<
typename T1
, class Event
, typename T2
>
struct _row
{
typedef _row_tag row_type_tag;
typedef T1 Source;
typedef T2 Target;
typedef Event Evt;
};
template<
typename T1
, class Event
, typename T2
, void (Derived::*action)(Event const&)
, bool (Derived::*guard)(Event const&)
>
struct row
{
typedef row_tag row_type_tag;
typedef T1 Source;
typedef T2 Target;
typedef Event Evt;
template <class FSM,class SourceState,class TargetState, class AllStates>
static ::boost::msm::back::HandledEnum action_call(FSM& fsm,Event const& evt,SourceState&,TargetState&,AllStates&)
{
// in this front-end, we don't need to know source and target states
(fsm.*action)(evt);
return ::boost::msm::back::HANDLED_TRUE;
}
template <class FSM,class SourceState,class TargetState,class AllStates>
static bool guard_call(FSM& fsm,Event const& evt,SourceState&,TargetState&,AllStates&)
{
// in this front-end, we don't need to know source and target states
return (fsm.*guard)(evt);
}
};
template<
typename T1
, class Event
, typename T2
, bool (Derived::*guard)(Event const&)
>
struct g_row
{
typedef g_row_tag row_type_tag;
typedef T1 Source;
typedef T2 Target;
typedef Event Evt;
template <class FSM,class SourceState,class TargetState,class AllStates>
static bool guard_call(FSM& fsm,Event const& evt,SourceState&,TargetState&,AllStates&)
{
// in this front-end, we don't need to know source and target states
return (fsm.*guard)(evt);
}
};
// internal transitions
template<
typename T1
, class Event
, void (Derived::*action)(Event const&)
>
struct a_irow
{
typedef a_irow_tag row_type_tag;
typedef T1 Source;
typedef T1 Target;
typedef Event Evt;
template <class FSM,class SourceState,class TargetState,class AllStates>
static ::boost::msm::back::HandledEnum action_call(FSM& fsm,Event const& evt,SourceState&,TargetState&,AllStates&)
{
// in this front-end, we don't need to know source and target states
(fsm.*action)(evt);
return ::boost::msm::back::HANDLED_TRUE;
}
};
template<
typename T1
, class Event
, void (Derived::*action)(Event const&)
, bool (Derived::*guard)(Event const&)
>
struct irow
{
typedef irow_tag row_type_tag;
typedef T1 Source;
typedef T1 Target;
typedef Event Evt;
template <class FSM,class SourceState,class TargetState,class AllStates>
static ::boost::msm::back::HandledEnum action_call(FSM& fsm,Event const& evt,SourceState&,TargetState&,AllStates&)
{
// in this front-end, we don't need to know source and target states
(fsm.*action)(evt);
return ::boost::msm::back::HANDLED_TRUE;
}
template <class FSM,class SourceState,class TargetState,class AllStates>
static bool guard_call(FSM& fsm,Event const& evt,SourceState&,TargetState&,AllStates&)
{
// in this front-end, we don't need to know source and target states
return (fsm.*guard)(evt);
}
};
template<
typename T1
, class Event
, bool (Derived::*guard)(Event const&)
>
struct g_irow
{
typedef g_irow_tag row_type_tag;
typedef T1 Source;
typedef T1 Target;
typedef Event Evt;
template <class FSM,class SourceState,class TargetState,class AllStates>
static bool guard_call(FSM& fsm,Event const& evt,SourceState&,TargetState&,AllStates&)
{
// in this front-end, we don't need to know source and target states
return (fsm.*guard)(evt);
}
};
// internal row withou action or guard. Does nothing except forcing the event to be ignored.
template<
typename T1
, class Event
>
struct _irow
{
typedef _irow_tag row_type_tag;
typedef T1 Source;
typedef T1 Target;
typedef Event Evt;
};
protected:
// Default no-transition handler. Can be replaced in the Derived SM class.
template <class FSM,class Event>
void no_transition(Event const& ,FSM&, int )
{
BOOST_ASSERT(false);
}
// default exception handler. Can be replaced in the Derived SM class.
template <class FSM,class Event>
void exception_caught (Event const&,FSM&,std::exception& )
{
BOOST_ASSERT(false);
}
};
} } }// boost::msm::front
#endif //BOOST_MSM_FRONT_STATEMACHINE_DEF_H
```
|
```go
package scanner
import (
"fmt"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"strconv"
"strings"
"time"
"golang.org/x/xerrors"
"github.com/future-architect/vuls/constant"
"github.com/future-architect/vuls/logging"
"github.com/future-architect/vuls/models"
"github.com/future-architect/vuls/reporter"
"github.com/future-architect/vuls/util"
)
func isRunningKernel(pack models.Package, family, release string, kernel models.Kernel) (isKernel, running bool) {
switch family {
case constant.RedHat, constant.CentOS, constant.Alma, constant.Rocky, constant.Fedora, constant.Oracle, constant.Amazon:
isKernel, kernelReleaseSuffix := func() (bool, string) {
switch pack.Name {
case "kernel", "kernel-core", "kernel-modules", "kernel-modules-core", "kernel-modules-extra", "kernel-modules-extra-common", "kernel-modules-internal", "kernel-modules-partner", "kernel-devel", "kernel-doc", "kernel-firmware", "kernel-headers",
"kernel-aarch64",
"kernel-kdump", "kernel-kdump-devel",
"kernel-lpae", "kernel-lpae-core", "kernel-lpae-devel", "kernel-lpae-modules", "kernel-lpae-modules-core", "kernel-lpae-modules-extra", "kernel-lpae-modules-internal",
"kernel-uek", "kernel-uek-core", "kernel-uek-devel", "kernel-uek-firmware", "kernel-uek-headers", "kernel-uek-modules", "kernel-uek-modules-extra", "kernel-uki-virt":
return true, ""
case "kernel-debug", "kernel-debug-core", "kernel-debug-devel", "kernel-debug-modules", "kernel-debug-modules-core", "kernel-debug-modules-extra", "kernel-debug-modules-internal", "kernel-debug-modules-partner", "kernel-debug-uki-virt",
"kernel-uek-debug", "kernel-uek-debug-core", "kernel-uek-debug-devel", "kernel-uek-debug-modules", "kernel-uek-debug-modules-extra":
return true, "debug"
case "kernel-64k", "kernel-64k-core", "kernel-64k-devel", "kernel-64k-modules", "kernel-64k-modules-core", "kernel-64k-modules-extra", "kernel-64k-modules-internal", "kernel-64k-modules-partner":
return true, "64k"
case "kernel-64k-debug", "kernel-64k-debug-core", "kernel-64k-debug-devel", "kernel-64k-debug-modules", "kernel-64k-debug-modules-core", "kernel-64k-debug-modules-extra", "kernel-64k-debug-modules-internal", "kernel-64k-debug-modules-partner":
return true, "64k-debug"
case "kernel-PAE", "kernel-PAE-devel":
return true, "PAE"
case "kernel-rt", "kernel-rt-core", "kernel-rt-devel", "kernel-rt-kvm", "kernel-rt-modules", "kernel-rt-modules-core", "kernel-rt-modules-extra", "kernel-rt-modules-internal", "kernel-rt-modules-partner", "kernel-rt-trace", "kernel-rt-trace-devel", "kernel-rt-trace-kvm", "kernel-rt-virt", "kernel-rt-virt-devel":
return true, "rt"
case "kernel-rt-debug", "kernel-rt-debug-core", "kernel-rt-debug-devel", "kernel-rt-debug-kvm", "kernel-rt-debug-modules", "kernel-rt-debug-modules-core", "kernel-rt-debug-modules-extra", "kernel-rt-debug-modules-internal", "kernel-rt-debug-modules-partner":
return true, "rt-debug"
case "kernel-zfcpdump", "kernel-zfcpdump-core", "kernel-zfcpdump-devel", "kernel-zfcpdump-modules", "kernel-zfcpdump-modules-core", "kernel-zfcpdump-modules-extra", "kernel-zfcpdump-modules-internal", "kernel-zfcpdump-modules-partner":
return true, "zfcpdump"
case "kernel-xen", "kernel-xen-devel":
return true, "xen"
default:
return false, ""
}
}()
if !isKernel {
return false, false
}
switch family {
case constant.RedHat, constant.CentOS, constant.Oracle:
if v, _ := strconv.Atoi(util.Major(release)); v < 6 {
return true, kernel.Release == fmt.Sprintf("%s-%s%s", pack.Version, pack.Release, kernelReleaseSuffix)
}
if kernelReleaseSuffix != "" {
return true, kernel.Release == fmt.Sprintf("%s-%s.%s+%s", pack.Version, pack.Release, pack.Arch, kernelReleaseSuffix)
}
return true, kernel.Release == fmt.Sprintf("%s-%s.%s", pack.Version, pack.Release, pack.Arch)
case constant.Fedora:
if v, _ := strconv.Atoi(util.Major(release)); v < 9 {
return true, kernel.Release == fmt.Sprintf("%s-%s%s", pack.Version, pack.Release, kernelReleaseSuffix)
}
if kernelReleaseSuffix != "" {
return true, kernel.Release == fmt.Sprintf("%s-%s.%s+%s", pack.Version, pack.Release, pack.Arch, kernelReleaseSuffix)
}
return true, kernel.Release == fmt.Sprintf("%s-%s.%s", pack.Version, pack.Release, pack.Arch)
default:
if kernelReleaseSuffix != "" {
return true, kernel.Release == fmt.Sprintf("%s-%s.%s+%s", pack.Version, pack.Release, pack.Arch, kernelReleaseSuffix)
}
return true, kernel.Release == fmt.Sprintf("%s-%s.%s", pack.Version, pack.Release, pack.Arch)
}
case constant.OpenSUSE, constant.OpenSUSELeap, constant.SUSEEnterpriseServer, constant.SUSEEnterpriseDesktop:
switch pack.Name {
case "kernel-default":
// Remove the last period and later because uname don't show that.
ss := strings.Split(pack.Release, ".")
return true, kernel.Release == fmt.Sprintf("%s-%s-default", pack.Version, strings.Join(ss[0:len(ss)-1], "."))
default:
return false, false
}
default:
logging.Log.Warnf("Reboot required is not implemented yet: %s, %v", family, kernel)
return false, false
}
}
// EnsureResultDir ensures the directory for scan results
func EnsureResultDir(resultsDir string, scannedAt time.Time) (currentDir string, err error) {
jsonDirName := scannedAt.Format("2006-01-02T15-04-05-0700")
if resultsDir == "" {
wd, _ := os.Getwd()
resultsDir = filepath.Join(wd, "results")
}
jsonDir := filepath.Join(resultsDir, jsonDirName)
if err := os.MkdirAll(jsonDir, 0700); err != nil {
return "", xerrors.Errorf("Failed to create dir: %w", err)
}
return jsonDir, nil
}
func writeScanResults(jsonDir string, results models.ScanResults) error {
ws := []reporter.ResultWriter{reporter.LocalFileWriter{
CurrentDir: jsonDir,
FormatJSON: true,
}}
for _, w := range ws {
if err := w.Write(results...); err != nil {
return xerrors.Errorf("Failed to write summary: %s", err)
}
}
reporter.StdoutWriter{}.WriteScanSummary(results...)
errServerNames := []string{}
for _, r := range results {
if 0 < len(r.Errors) {
errServerNames = append(errServerNames, r.ServerName)
}
}
if 0 < len(errServerNames) {
return fmt.Errorf("An error occurred on %s", errServerNames)
}
return nil
}
```
|
Abdur Rahman Peshawari (; ; 1886–1925), also known as Abdurrahman Bey (), was a Turkish soldier, journalist and diplomat who was born in Peshawar in British India (now Pakistan).
Born into a wealthy family of Kashmiri–Pashtun heritage, he completed his schooling in Peshawar and attended the prestigious Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College in Aligarh. A Muslim nationalist, Peshawari left his education and journeyed to Ottoman Turkey in 1912 among a group of volunteer medics from British India to aid Ottoman forces in the Balkan War. At the end of the war, he chose to stay behind in Turkey and joined the Ottoman Army, earning a distinguished military career participating in the First World War. He also briefly worked as a journalist for Anadolu Agency. In 1920, he was appointed by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk as Turkey's first envoy to Afghanistan.
In 1925, he was the target of an assassination attempt in Istanbul in what is believed to be a case of mistaken identity, and died of gunshot wounds a month later in a hospital.
Early life
Family background
Abdur Rahman Peshawari was born in 1886 in Peshawar, in what was then the Punjab Province – but in 1901 became part of the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) – of British India (now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan) to the city's prominent Samdani family. Paternally, his family was of Kashmiri Muslim origin; his great-great-grandfather, of Mughal ancestry, had settled in Baramulla in the Kashmir region (later part of the state of Jammu and Kashmir) during the late 18th century. Peshawari's father, Haji Ghulam Samdani (–1926), moved to Peshawar in the late 19th century where he became a prosperous businessman and philanthropist. The family were noted to be speakers of Peshawar's Hindko dialect. According to Faiz Ahmed, Peshawari also had Waziri origins and was an ethnic Pashtun. He is described by sources as a "Kashmiri-origin Pashtun."
Peshawari's father worked as a contractor for the government and military of British India, and was one of Peshawar's wealthiest individuals. He reportedly owned large tracts of forest and agricultural land in the NWFP, Punjab and Kashmir, as well as much of the Qissa Khwani Bazaar in Peshawar. The Qasim Ali Khan Mosque located within this bazaar was renovated and expanded by his father in the 1920s. According to one source, Samdani donated several neighbouring shops and a house in the area for the mosque's extension, and these renovations took place in 1884 as per a Persian inscription inside the mosque. The graves of his father and three of Peshawari's brothers are interred in the precincts of the mosque. The family's haveli was located in the Kohati Gate area of Peshawar's old city.
Peshawari had many siblings and half-siblings paternally; prominent amongst them was Mian Abdul Aziz (d. 1946), who was the first Muslim from the NWFP to complete a bar-at-law from England. Aziz was also one of the confidantes of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, and a key member of the All-India Muslim League (AIML) which campaigned for an independent Pakistan during British rule. He first joined the London Muslim League during his student days, and then led the Frontier Muslim League as its first president until it was dissolved. In 1917, he went to Delhi, and would eventually become the president of the AIML itself in 1933. In 1934, he abdicated his position in deference to Jinnah, ultimately unifying the various AIML factions under the latter's leadership. Aziz spent the later part of his life preaching Islam, including spending a year in Japan in 1935 where he delivered a series of lectures and inaugurated Japan's first mosque at Kobe.
Peshawari's other siblings included Mohammed Yahya (1901–1990), a Pakistani politician who was elected to the NWFP Legislative Assembly in 1946, and served as the provincial minister for education under Khan Abdul Jabbar Khan's cabinet; and Mohammad Yunus (1916–2001), an Indian independence movement activist who remained in India after the partition of British India, and served as the country's ambassador to Indonesia, Iraq, Turkey and Algeria – as well as becoming a nominated member of the Rajya Sabha in 1989. Peshawari was also closely related to the family of Abdul Ghaffar Khan. Due to his association with Turkey in later life, he became known amongst his family members as Chacha Turkey ("Uncle Turkey") or Lala Turkey ("Brother Turkey").
Education
Peshawari studied at the Edwards High School in Peshawar, and excelled at sports. He then proceeded to Aligarh to pursue his higher education at the Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College (MAO College), which would later become the famed Aligarh Muslim University. During its initial years when it was facing financial difficulties, his father funded the institution on the request of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan.
Medical mission
While Peshawari was studying at Aligarh, the Balkan Wars broke out in Europe in 1912, in which the Turkish Ottoman Empire faced a revolt from a group of allied Balkan states. In the Indian subcontinent, which at that time was under British rule, there had been an ongoing resurgence of pan-Islamic nationalism, as also evidenced many years later through the pro-Ottoman Khilafat Movement. As expressed by viceroy Lord Hardinge in a communiqué sent to Lord Crewe, the Secretary for India, he did not think the "Foreign Office in London sufficiently appreciated the difficulties" which the government in British India was facing with its Muslim subjects over Turkey. The news of the European aggression against the Turks was met with strong public support for the Ottoman Empire; in the North-West Frontier Province, a relief fund was established to which ordinary civilians contributed generously, providing financial assistance to the ailing Turks. At MAO College, an educational institution whose roots lay in the Islamic renaissance-inspired Aligarh Movement, there was great sympathy for the Turkish cause. A meeting was held at the college during which it was decided that a team of medics from Aligarh would be assembled and dispatched to Turkey to provide medical aid, as well as assist wounded Turkish soldiers on the war front.
The delegation, known as the "People's Mission to the Ottoman Empire," was put together by Dr. Mukhtar Ahmed Ansari and consisted of 24 members, comprising five doctors and 19 supporting medics. Abdur Rahman Siddiqui and Chaudhry Khaliquzzaman were amongst the members. One of the original objectives of the mission was also to provide medical attention to the ailing Ottoman Sultan. Peshawari, who himself was a passionate Muslim nationalist, immediately volunteered for the cause as a paramedic and decided to quit his studies. Aged around 26 at the time, he sold off his personal belongings in order to raise funds for the traveling and did not initially contact his family – visiting them only before he was to depart, as he was certain that his father, who wanted him to strictly pursue his education, would not have approved his decision. Since he did not have experience as a medic, he completed a training course in paramedicine and first aid to qualify for the mission. In 1912, he and his team sailed aboard an Italian ship Sardegna from Bombay on 15 December 1912 for the Ottoman capital Istanbul, amidst a mammoth public sendoff arranged earlier at Delhi's Jama Masjid, where the atmosphere was charged with the speech of Hakim Ajmal Khan. This trend continued across stations in India wherever the team stopped and traveled throughout the first two weeks of December. The mission was hailed by notable Muslim figures like Shibli Nomani, Mohammad Ali Jauhar and Abul Kalam Azad. The sentiments of the people were appropriately encapsulated by Ansari thus: "It was the first time that the Muslims of India had collectively sent a mission for helping Muslims abroad during the British rule." It docked at Aden and Suez, where the team were greeted with cheering crowds, before changing ships at Alexandria, and arriving at Istanbul two weeks later.
During the course of their assignment in Turkey which lasted six months, the activities of the medical mission received press coverage and the Ottoman Sultan reportedly invited the team to his palace to thank them for their contributions. Peshawari also joined the Ottoman Red Crescent Society, which brought financial aid from Muslims in British India and provided medical equipment and relief to Ottoman soldiers engaged in the Balkans. The mission was covered positively back home by Indian newspapers, especially Al-Hilal. When the delegation returned to British India, a meeting was held in Bombay to welcome its members. It was attended by eminent Muslim leaders, including Altaf Hussain Hali.
Military career
Following the end of the Balkans conflict, the members of the medical delegation had returned to the subcontinent by 4 July 1913. Peshawari, however, decided to stay back in Turkey, becoming a naturalised citizen and serving the country for his remaining lifetime. He joined the Ottoman Army as a lieutenant. Another colleague of Peshawari's from the medical mission, Mirza Abdul Qayyum, also joined the Turkish forces; Abdul Qayyum would later be killed during World War I.
Peshawari was trained closely by Rauf Orbay, whom he is said to have regarded as a "younger brother". He received military training first in Istanbul and then in Beirut, until World War I started.
World War I
At the start of World War I, Peshawari was deployed to the Dardanelles as part of the Ottoman Army's Gallipoli campaign in the Middle Eastern theatre, and commanded a military contingent. He proved his gallantry, partaking in several battles against the Allied Powers. He was wounded thrice during the war while fighting against the Royal British Navy. Eventually, the Ottomans won the Gallipoli campaign and repelled the invading forces.
Turkish War of Independence
When the Ottoman Empire suffered losses in World War I and Istanbul came under the occupation of the Allies, Peshawari became part of the Turkish War of Independence led by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk who, as head of the Turkish National Movement, established a provisional government in Ankara aiming for the restoration of Turkish sovereignty. These events accompanied the gradual dissolution of the Ottoman Empire. Peshawari was one of many Pashtun and British Indian Muslims who served in the Turkish Army during that war. Eventually, he witnessed the establishment of an independent Turkish Republic.
Journalism
Peshawari had a brief career in journalism. He became one of the earliest reporters of Turkey's Anadolu Agency, shortly after it was founded in 1920 during the war of independence. He was the news agency's first foreign affairs officer. Working alongside its renowned founders Halide Edib Adıvar and Yunus Nadi Abalıoğlu, Peshawari was based in a small office where he covered news stories on wartime events in Anatolia as a correspondent. As described impressionably in Abalıoğlu's memoirs, he would work with only one finger "flying" over a typewriter.
Diplomatic career
In 1920, Peshawari was appointed by the Turkish government as its first ever envoy to Afghanistan. The reason for the appointment was twofold: to strengthen Turkey's ties with Afghanistan, as both countries were fighting for independence from European imperialism, and for Turkey to receive information about conditions in Afghanistan. Peshawari was personally chosen by Kemal Atatürk due to his knowledge of the region (especially the Indo-Afghan frontier) and because he was well known in the Turkish Army. Additionally, due to his heritage in Peshawar, he was fluent in both Pashto and Persian, the two national languages of Afghanistan; he was also fluent in English.
Peshawari arrived in Kabul in 1921, passing via Erzerum and Moscow, and delivered a letter from Atatürk to the monarch Amanullah Khan. His post was titled as a "special envoy". He served in the position until June 1922, following which the post was converted into a full-fledged ambassadorial role due to the Turkish Republic's independence. During his tenure in Kabul, he promoted bilateral relations by financing various development projects, particularly in the field of education. He was succeeded by Fakhri Pasha.
Political views
Described as a "revolutionary" in early Turkish sources, Peshawari neither married nor ever returned home to Peshawar, refusing to abandon Turkey until the time that it was fully liberated from foreign occupation. Later when he became the Turkish envoy in Afghanistan, he maintained close contacts with members of the Provisional Government of India based in exile in Kabul, who sought to achieve the Indian subcontinent's independence from the British Empire, a cause that he fully supported. He was such a staunch supporter of the independence movement that he reportedly declined an offer from the British authorities to visit his hometown of Peshawar, vowing not to set foot on the subcontinent so long as it remained part of the British Raj – despite the fact that Peshawar, located just across the border, was the closest city of British India to Kabul. He extended his support to independence activists like Ubaidullah Sindhi.
Assassination
In 1925, Peshawari was shot in the back during an assassination attempt in Istanbul. He remained hospitalised for a month but died from his injuries. His death was mourned in Turkey, British India and Afghanistan. Peshawari's assassination is supposed to have been a case of mistaken identity; Rauf Orbay, the politician and naval commander who served as Turkey's first prime minister after the independence war, had been the intended target of the Armenian shooter. Peshawari reportedly bore a close physical resemblance to Orbay, whom he was also acquainted with personally, and was mistaken for him by the killer. He is buried in Istanbul. His material possessions, which included his medals, uniform, and personal diary were handed over to his brother Abdul Aziz, but were confiscated by the British authorities in India.
Legacy
In 1979, Peshawari's younger brother, Muhammad Yusuf, published a book called Ghazi Abdur Rehman Peshawari Shaheed, chronicling the elder brother's life. The younger brother had collected materials documenting the elder brother's life over a number of years. He had originally requested Sir Abdul Qadir to author the book, who gave the project to his student Hafeez Hoshiarpuri. Hoshiarpuri completed a partial manuscript, before passing the task to Abu Salman Shahjahanpuri who finally completed the book.
During a state visit to Pakistan in 2016, Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan publicly acknowledged Peshawari's legacy and services to his adopted nation during a speech to a joint session of the Pakistani parliament. He highlighted him as one of many notable figures featuring in the historically close relationship between modern Pakistan and Turkey.
In January 2021, it was reported that Pakistan and Turkey would jointly produce a historical television series titled Lala Turki based on Peshawari's life. The series would also depict the contribution that Muslims from the subcontinent had in Turkey's independence struggles. Pakistan's prime minister Imran Khan discussed the project with leading Turkish director Kemal Tekden. The series will be a joint venture between Tekden Films and Pakistan's Ansari Films.
See also
Foreign relations of the Ottoman Empire
History of Peshawar
Khilafat Movement
Muslim nationalism in South Asia
Notes
References
External links
Ghazi Abdur Rahman Shaheed Peshawari, by Abu Salman Shahjahanpuri (Urdu)
1886 births
1925 deaths
Ambassadors of Turkey to Afghanistan
Assassinated Turkish diplomats
Emigrants from British India
Immigrants to the Ottoman Empire
Deaths by firearm in Turkey
Indian military personnel of World War I
Indian revolutionaries
Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College alumni
Ottoman Army personnel
Ottoman military personnel of World War I
Paramedics
Military personnel from Istanbul
People from Peshawar
People murdered in Turkey
People of the Balkan Wars
Turkish military personnel of the Turkish War of Independence
Turkish Muslims
Turkish nationalists
Turkish nurses
Turkish people of Hindkowan descent
Turkish people of Kashmiri descent
Turkish people of Pashtun descent
Turkish revolutionaries
Turkish war correspondents
Diplomats from Istanbul
|
```java
/*
* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
*
* This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this
* particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided
* by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code.
*
* This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
* accompanied this code).
*
* 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
* Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
*
* Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA
* or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any
* questions.
*/
package jdk.graal.compiler.core.test;
import jdk.graal.compiler.debug.GraalError;
import jdk.graal.compiler.test.GraalTest;
import org.objectweb.asm.Label;
import org.objectweb.asm.MethodVisitor;
import org.objectweb.asm.Opcodes;
import jdk.vm.ci.meta.JavaKind;
public final class SubWordTestUtil implements Opcodes {
private SubWordTestUtil() {
}
static void convertToKind(MethodVisitor snippet, JavaKind kind) {
switch (kind) {
case Boolean:
snippet.visitInsn(ICONST_1);
snippet.visitInsn(IAND);
break;
case Byte:
snippet.visitInsn(I2B);
break;
case Short:
snippet.visitInsn(I2S);
break;
case Char:
snippet.visitInsn(I2C);
break;
default:
throw GraalError.shouldNotReachHereUnexpectedValue(kind); // ExcludeFromJacocoGeneratedReport
}
}
static void testEqual(MethodVisitor snippet) {
Label label = new Label();
snippet.visitJumpInsn(IF_ICMPNE, label);
snippet.visitInsn(ICONST_1);
snippet.visitInsn(IRETURN);
snippet.visitLabel(label);
snippet.visitInsn(ICONST_0);
snippet.visitInsn(IRETURN);
}
static void getUnsafe(MethodVisitor snippet) {
snippet.visitFieldInsn(GETSTATIC, GraalTest.class.getName().replace('.', '/'), "UNSAFE", "Ljdk/internal/misc/Unsafe;");
}
static String getUnsafePutMethodName(JavaKind kind) {
String name = kind.getJavaName();
return name.substring(0, 1).toUpperCase() + name.substring(1);
}
}
```
|
Tumenko () is a gender-neutral Slavic surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Aleksandr Tumenko (born 1983), Russian football player
Dmitri Tumenko (born 1989), Russian football player
Russian-language surnames
|
Vladislav Igorevich Dubovoy (; born 5 January 1989) is a Russian former professional footballer.
Club career
He made his professional debut in the Russian Second Division in 2008 for FC Nika Krasny Sulin.
He made his Russian Football National League debut for FC Chayka Peschanokopskoye on 7 July 2019 in a game against FC Chertanovo Moscow.
References
External links
1989 births
People from Tsimlyansky District
Living people
Russian men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
FC Nika Krasny Sulin players
FC Chernomorets Novorossiysk players
FC Rostov players
FC Chayka Peschanokopskoye players
Footballers from Rostov Oblast
|
Leoš Škoda (born 1 May 1953) is a Czech ski jumper. He competed at the 1972 Winter Olympics and the 1980 Winter Olympics.
References
1953 births
Living people
Czech male ski jumpers
Olympic ski jumpers for Czechoslovakia
Ski jumpers at the 1972 Winter Olympics
Ski jumpers at the 1980 Winter Olympics
Sportspeople from Liberec
|
```c++
/*
*
* This source code is licensed under the MIT license found in the
* LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree.
*/
#include "GraphVisualizer.h"
#include <fstream>
#include <iostream>
#include <boost/algorithm/string.hpp>
#include <boost/range/adaptors.hpp>
#include "ControlFlow.h"
#include "Debug.h"
#include "DexPosition.h"
#include "IRCode.h"
#include "Show.h"
// The "Hotspot Client Compiler Visualizer" (c1visualizer) is a tool consuming
// Hotspot C1 compiler debug info to display control flow graphs of compilation
// passes. The format is not well-specified, the best definition is the parser
// itself, which can be found here:
//
// path_to_url
//
// as well as accompanying code on how to parse some textual data.
//
// A cfg file contains a set of compilations which are denoted by a compilation
// header ("begin_compilation" to "end_compilation") and associated CFGs
// ("begin_cfg" to "end_cfg"). CFGs are made up of connected blocks that contain
// different forms of supported representation (HIR, LR, IR, bytecode; we only
// use HIR at this point).
//
// A (shortened) sample file may look like this:
//
// begin_compilation
// name "static void foo.bar()"
// method "static void foo.bar()"
// date 1576632329
// end_compilation
// begin_cfg
// name "Initial"
// begin_block
// name "B18446744073709551615"
// from_bci -1
// to_bci -1
// predecessors
// successors "B0"
// xhandlers
// flags
// begin_states
// begin_locals
// size 0
// method "none"
// end_locals
// end_states
// begin_HIR
// 0 0 info0 INFO data:static void foo.bar() <|@
// end_HIR
// end_block
// begin_block
// name "B0"
// from_bci -1
// to_bci -1
// predecessors
// successors
// xhandlers
// flags
// begin_states
// [...]
// end_states
// begin_HIR
// 0 0 i0 CONST [v0] literal:0 <|@
// [...]
// 0 0 i9 RETURN_VOID <|@
// end_HIR
// end_block
// end_cfg
// begin_cfg
// name "First pass"
// [...]
namespace visualizer {
using namespace cfg;
namespace {
// A "container" that helps with formatting list. Use as a helper instance, add
// elements to the stream given by next(), and create the final format with the
// supplied operator<<.
class List {
public:
explicit List() : m_empty(true) {}
std::ostream& next() {
if (m_empty) {
m_empty = false;
} else {
m_stream << ",";
}
return m_stream;
}
private:
bool m_empty;
std::ostringstream m_stream;
friend std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& os, const List& list);
};
std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& os, const List& list) {
os << '[' << list.m_stream.str() << ']';
return os;
}
// Base class for "tagged" element formatting. Knows how to format blocks (and
// provides an RAII wrapper) as well as some of the textual format (plain
// values that may be quoted, attributes that are key-value pairs).
class TaggedBase {
public:
explicit TaggedBase(std::ostream& o) : m_output(o), m_indent(0) {}
void start_tag(const char* name) {
indent();
m_output << "begin_" << name << std::endl;
m_indent++;
}
void end_tag(const char* name) {
m_indent--;
indent();
m_output << "end_" << name << std::endl;
}
struct TagRAII {
explicit TagRAII(TaggedBase* p, const char* tag) : p(p), tag(tag) {
p->start_tag(tag);
}
~TagRAII() { p->end_tag(tag); }
TaggedBase* p;
const char* tag;
};
void indent() {
for (size_t i = 0; i < m_indent; ++i) {
m_output << " ";
}
}
// QuotedEnum and ValueStream are helpers for printing (complex) values.
// ValueStream will take care of quotation, printing the right string on
// _destruction, so ensure that a ValueStream does not exist longer than
// necessary, i.e., best-practice is to never keep one explicitly.
enum QuotedEnum {
QUOTED,
NOT_QUOTED,
};
template <QuotedEnum quoted>
struct ValueStream final {
std::ostringstream oss;
std::ostream* trg = nullptr;
bool disposed = false;
explicit ValueStream(std::ostream* trg) : trg(trg) {}
// Only exists for resolution. Will fail when used.
ValueStream(const ValueStream&) : disposed(true) { not_reached(); }
ValueStream(ValueStream&& rhs) noexcept
: oss(std::move(rhs.oss)), trg(rhs.trg) {
rhs.disposed = true;
}
~ValueStream() {
if (disposed) {
return;
}
auto tmp = oss.str();
if (!tmp.empty()) {
bool is_quoted = quoted == QUOTED;
*trg << (is_quoted ? "\"" : "") << tmp << (is_quoted ? "\"" : "");
}
*trg << std::endl;
}
// See copy constructor. Assignment operators for lint.
ValueStream& operator=(const ValueStream&) { not_reached(); }
ValueStream& operator=(ValueStream&& rhs) noexcept {
oss = std::move(rhs.oss);
trg = rhs.trg;
rhs.disposed = true;
return *this;
}
template <typename T>
ValueStream& operator<<(const T& val) {
oss << val;
return *this;
}
};
template <QuotedEnum quoted = NOT_QUOTED>
ValueStream<quoted> value(const std::string& name) {
indent();
m_output << name << ' ';
return ValueStream<quoted>(&m_output);
}
std::ostream& attribute() {
m_output << " ";
return m_output;
}
std::ostream& attribute(const std::string& attr) {
m_output << " ";
always_assert_log(!attr.empty(), "Attribute must be non-empty");
always_assert_log(attr.find(' ') == std::string::npos,
"Attribute must not have spaces");
return m_output << attr << ":";
}
protected:
std::ostream& m_output;
size_t m_indent;
};
// Base printer that can format c1visualizer blocks filled with Redex elements
// as HIR. Generic to allow both ControlFlowGraph as well as IRList input in
// specialized implementations.
template <typename T>
class CodeVisualizer : public TaggedBase {
public:
explicit CodeVisualizer(std::ostream& output) : TaggedBase(output) {}
virtual ~CodeVisualizer() {}
static void dex_string(std::ostream& os, const DexString* s) {
os << (s ? s->str() : "<null>");
}
void instruction(IRInstruction* insn) {
m_output << SHOW(insn->opcode());
if (insn->srcs_size() || insn->has_dest()) {
List input_list;
if (insn->has_dest()) {
input_list.next() << "v" << insn->dest();
}
for (reg_t src : insn->srcs()) {
input_list.next() << "v" << src;
}
attribute() << input_list;
}
if (insn->has_method()) {
attribute("method_name") << show(insn->get_method());
}
if (insn->has_field()) {
attribute("field_name") << show(insn->get_field());
}
if (insn->has_type()) {
attribute("type") << show(insn->get_type());
}
if (insn->has_literal()) {
attribute("literal") << insn->get_literal();
}
if (insn->has_string()) {
dex_string(attribute("string"), insn->get_string());
}
}
void mie_position(const MethodItemEntry& mie) {
m_output << mie.type;
if (mie.pos) {
m_output << " \"";
DexPosition& pos = *mie.pos;
if (pos.method != nullptr) {
m_output << pos.method->str();
} else {
m_output << "<unnamed-method>";
}
m_output << "(";
if (pos.file != nullptr) {
m_output << pos.file->str() << ":" << pos.line;
} else {
m_output << "<no-file>";
}
m_output << ")\"";
}
}
void source_block(const SourceBlock& sb) {
m_output << MFLOW_SOURCE_BLOCK << " " << sb.show(/*quoted_src=*/true);
}
template <typename... Args>
void mie(const MethodItemEntry& mie, Args... args) {
switch (mie.type) {
case MFLOW_TRY:
case MFLOW_CATCH:
case MFLOW_DEX_OPCODE:
case MFLOW_TARGET:
case MFLOW_DEBUG:
case MFLOW_FALLTHROUGH:
m_output << mie.type;
return;
case MFLOW_POSITION:
static_cast<T*>(this)->mie_position(mie);
return;
case MFLOW_OPCODE:
static_cast<T*>(this)->instruction(mie.insn, args...);
return;
case MFLOW_SOURCE_BLOCK:
static_cast<T*>(this)->source_block(*mie.src_block);
return;
}
}
// bci (bytecode index) & num_uses are required by the format.
void mie_prefix(size_t bci, size_t num_uses) {
indent();
m_output << bci << " " << num_uses;
}
void mie_prefix(size_t bci, size_t num_uses, size_t insn_id) {
mie_prefix(bci, num_uses);
m_output << " i" << insn_id << " ";
}
void mie_suffix() { m_output << " <|@" << std::endl; }
template <typename C, typename... Other>
void mie_list(C* b, Other... other) {
for (auto& m : *b) {
// Using 0 for bci and num_uses as we don't have/need this.
mie_prefix(0, 0, static_cast<T*>(this)->mie_id(m));
mie(m, b, other...);
mie_suffix();
}
}
template <typename C, typename IdT, typename HIRFn>
void block(C* block, IdT id, bool exc, HIRFn hir) {
TagRAII block_tag(this, "block");
value<QUOTED>("name") << "B" << id;
value("from_bci") << -1;
value("to_bci") << -1;
static_cast<T*>(this)->predecessors(block);
static_cast<T*>(this)->successors(block);
static_cast<T*>(this)->exception_handlers(block);
value<QUOTED>("flags") << (exc ? "catch_block" : "");
{
// TODO: Is this really necessary? If so, fill in correctly.
TagRAII states_tag(this, "states");
TagRAII locals_tag(this, "locals");
value("size") << 0;
value<QUOTED>("method") << "none";
}
{
TagRAII hir_tag(this, "HIR");
hir(block);
}
}
};
using namespace boost::adaptors;
class CFGVisualizer : public CodeVisualizer<CFGVisualizer> {
public:
CFGVisualizer(ControlFlowGraph* cfg, std::ostream& output)
: CodeVisualizer(output), m_cfg(cfg) {
if (m_cfg) {
prepare();
}
}
virtual ~CFGVisualizer() {}
template <typename T>
void blocklist(const std::string& name, const T& blocks) {
indent();
m_output << name;
for (auto b : blocks) {
m_output << " \"B" << b->id() << "\" ";
}
m_output << std::endl;
}
void predecessors(Block* block) {
blocklist("predecessors",
transform(block->preds(), [](Edge* e) { return e->src(); }));
}
static bool is_throw_edge(const Edge* e) { return e->type() == EDGE_THROW; }
static bool is_not_throw_edge(const Edge* e) { return !is_throw_edge(e); }
template <typename T>
std::vector<Edge*> get_succ_edges(Block* block, T& fn) {
return m_cfg ? m_cfg->get_succ_edges_if(block, fn) : std::vector<Edge*>{};
}
void successors(Block* block) {
blocklist("successors",
transform(get_succ_edges(block, is_not_throw_edge),
[](Edge* e) { return e->target(); }));
}
void exception_handlers(Block* block) {
blocklist("xhandlers",
transform(get_succ_edges(block, is_throw_edge),
[](Edge* e) { return e->target(); }));
}
void instruction(IRInstruction* insn, Block* from) {
CodeVisualizer::instruction(insn);
if (opcode::is_a_conditional_branch(insn->opcode())) {
auto edge = m_cfg->get_succ_edge_if(
from, [](Edge* e) { return e->type() == EDGE_BRANCH; });
redex_assert(edge);
attribute("target") << "B" << edge->target()->id();
}
}
size_t mie_id(const MethodItemEntry& mie) const {
return m_mie_id_map.at(&mie);
}
void prefix_block(Block* b, const std::string& prefix) {
auto fake_insn = [&](Block*) {
mie_prefix(0, 0);
m_output << " info0 INFO";
attribute("data") << prefix;
mie_suffix();
};
CodeVisualizer::block(b, b->id(), false, fake_insn);
}
void prepare() {
size_t index = 0;
for (auto block : m_cfg->blocks()) {
for (auto& mie : *block) {
m_mie_id_map[&mie] = index;
if (mie.type == MFLOW_OPCODE) {
m_insn_id_map[mie.insn] = index;
}
++index;
}
for (auto edge : m_cfg->get_succ_edges_if(block, is_throw_edge)) {
m_exc_blocks.insert(edge->target());
}
if (m_cfg->get_pred_edge_if(block, is_throw_edge)) {
m_exc_blocks.insert(block);
}
}
}
void cfg(const std::string& name, const optional<std::string>& prefix) {
{
TagRAII cfg_tag(this, "cfg");
value<QUOTED>("name") << name;
if (prefix) {
Block fake_block(m_cfg, std::numeric_limits<BlockId>::max());
auto first_real = (!m_cfg || m_cfg->blocks().empty())
? nullptr
: *m_cfg->blocks().begin();
Edge fake_edge(&fake_block, first_real ? first_real : &fake_block,
EDGE_GOTO);
const_cast<std::vector<Edge*>&>(fake_block.succs())
.push_back(&fake_edge);
prefix_block(&fake_block, *prefix);
}
if (m_cfg) {
for (auto b : m_cfg->blocks()) {
CodeVisualizer::block(b, b->id(), m_exc_blocks.count(b),
[&](Block*) { mie_list(b); });
}
}
}
}
private:
ControlFlowGraph* m_cfg;
std::unordered_map<const MethodItemEntry*, size_t> m_mie_id_map;
std::unordered_map<const IRInstruction*, size_t> m_insn_id_map;
std::unordered_set<Block*> m_exc_blocks;
};
class IRCodeVisualizer : public CodeVisualizer<IRCodeVisualizer> {
public:
IRCodeVisualizer(IRCode* code, std::ostream& output)
: CodeVisualizer(output), m_code(code) {
if (m_code) {
prepare();
}
}
virtual ~IRCodeVisualizer() {}
void empty_blocklist(const std::string& name) {
indent();
m_output << name;
m_output << std::endl;
}
void blocklist(const std::string& name, size_t succ_id) {
indent();
m_output << name;
m_output << " \"B" << succ_id << "\" ";
m_output << std::endl;
}
void predecessors(IRCode*) { empty_blocklist("predecessors"); }
void successors(IRCode*) { empty_blocklist("successors"); }
void exception_handlers(IRCode*) { empty_blocklist("xhandlers"); }
void predecessors(const std::string*) { empty_blocklist("predecessors"); }
void successors(const std::string*) { blocklist("successors", 0); }
void exception_handlers(const std::string*) { empty_blocklist("xhandlers"); }
void instruction(IRInstruction* insn, IRCode*) {
CodeVisualizer::instruction(insn);
}
size_t mie_id(const MethodItemEntry& mie) const {
return m_mie_id_map.at(&mie);
}
void prefix_block(const std::string& prefix) {
auto fake_insn = [&](const std::string*) {
mie_prefix(0, 0);
m_output << " info0 INFO";
attribute("data") << prefix;
mie_suffix();
};
CodeVisualizer::block(&prefix, (size_t)(-1), false, fake_insn);
}
void prepare() {
size_t index = 0;
for (auto& mie : *m_code) {
m_mie_id_map[&mie] = index++;
}
}
void code(const std::string& name, const optional<std::string>& prefix) {
{
TagRAII cfg_tag(this, "cfg");
value<QUOTED>("name") << name;
if (prefix) {
prefix_block(*prefix);
}
if (m_code) {
CodeVisualizer::block(m_code, 0, false,
[&](IRCode*) { mie_list(m_code); });
}
}
}
private:
IRCode* m_code;
std::unordered_map<const MethodItemEntry*, size_t> m_mie_id_map;
};
} // namespace
void print_compilation_header(std::ostream& os,
const std::string& name,
const std::string& method) {
TaggedBase printer(os);
TaggedBase::TagRAII compilation_tag(&printer, "compilation");
printer.value<TaggedBase::QUOTED>("name") << name;
printer.value<TaggedBase::QUOTED>("method") << method;
printer.value("date") << time(nullptr);
}
void print_cfg(std::ostream& os,
ControlFlowGraph* cfg,
const std::string& name,
const optional<std::string>& prefix_block) {
CFGVisualizer visualizer(cfg, os);
visualizer.cfg(name, prefix_block);
}
void print_ircode(std::ostream& os,
IRCode* code,
const std::string& name,
const optional<std::string>& prefix_block) {
if (code && code->cfg_built()) {
print_cfg(os, &code->cfg(), name, prefix_block);
return;
}
IRCodeVisualizer visualizer(code, os);
visualizer.code(name, prefix_block);
}
namespace {
// A fake name to allow dedupe.
static constexpr const char* FAKE_PASS_NAME = "FAKE_PASS_NAME_FOR_DEDUPE";
std::vector<DexMethod*> get_all_methods(DexClass* klass) {
std::vector<DexMethod*> all_methods;
all_methods.insert(all_methods.end(), klass->get_dmethods().begin(),
klass->get_dmethods().end());
all_methods.insert(all_methods.end(), klass->get_vmethods().begin(),
klass->get_vmethods().end());
return all_methods;
}
} // namespace
// A stream storage for CFG visualization. On request, will not emit a pass if
// the CFG did not change.
MethodCFGStream::MethodCFGStream(DexMethod* m) : m_method(m) {
m_orig_name = vshow(m, false);
print_compilation_header(m_ss, m_orig_name, m_orig_name);
}
void MethodCFGStream::add_pass(const std::string& pass_name,
Options o,
const optional<std::string>& extra_prefix) {
auto cur_name = vshow(m_method, false);
auto code = m_method->get_code();
if (!code) {
cur_name += " (NO CODE)";
} else if (!(o & PRINT_CODE)) {
code = nullptr;
}
if (extra_prefix) {
cur_name = *extra_prefix + cur_name;
}
std::stringstream tmp;
if ((o & FORCE_CFG) && code) {
bool built_cfg = false;
if (code && !code->cfg_built()) {
built_cfg = true;
code->build_cfg();
}
print_cfg(tmp, &code->cfg(), FAKE_PASS_NAME, cur_name);
if (built_cfg) {
code->clear_cfg();
}
} else {
print_ircode(tmp, code, FAKE_PASS_NAME, cur_name);
}
std::string new_pass = tmp.str();
if (new_pass != m_last || !(o & SKIP_NO_CHANGE)) {
m_last = new_pass;
// Replace pass name.
auto pos = new_pass.find(FAKE_PASS_NAME);
redex_assert(pos != std::string::npos);
new_pass.replace(pos, strlen(FAKE_PASS_NAME), pass_name);
m_ss << new_pass;
}
}
ClassCFGStream::ClassCFGStream(DexClass* klass) : m_class(klass) {
for (auto* method : get_all_methods(klass)) {
m_methods.push_back(MethodState{method, MethodCFGStream(method), false});
}
}
void ClassCFGStream::add_pass(const std::string& pass_name, Options o) {
auto all_methods = get_all_methods(m_class);
for (auto& m : m_methods) {
auto it = std::find(all_methods.begin(), all_methods.end(), m.method);
if (it == all_methods.end()) {
m.removed = true;
} else {
all_methods.erase(it);
}
}
for (auto* method : all_methods) {
m_methods.push_back(MethodState{method, MethodCFGStream(method), false});
}
for (auto& m : m_methods) {
m.stream.add_pass(pass_name,
(Options)(o | (!m.removed ? Options::PRINT_CODE : 0)),
m.removed ? optional<std::string>("REMOVED ")
: boost::none);
}
}
void ClassCFGStream::write(std::ostream& os) const {
for (auto& m : m_methods) {
os << m.stream.get_output();
}
}
void Classes::add_all(const std::string& class_names) {
if (class_names.empty()) {
return;
}
std::vector<std::string> classes;
boost::algorithm::split(classes, class_names,
[](char c) { return c == ';'; });
for (const auto& c : classes) {
if (c.empty()) {
continue;
}
auto complete = c + ';';
if (!add(complete)) {
std::cerr << "Did not find class " << complete;
m_not_found.push_back(complete);
}
}
}
bool Classes::add(const std::string& class_name, bool add_initial_pass) {
auto type = DexType::make_type(class_name);
auto klass = type_class(type);
if (!klass) {
return false;
}
add(klass, add_initial_pass);
return true;
}
void Classes::add(DexClass* klass, bool add_initial_pass) {
m_class_cfgs.emplace_back(klass);
if (add_initial_pass) {
m_class_cfgs.back().add_pass("Initial");
}
}
void Classes::add_pass(const std::string& pass_name, Options o) {
add_pass([&pass_name]() { return pass_name; }, o);
}
void Classes::add_pass(const std::function<std::string()>& pass_name_lazy,
Options o) {
auto end =
std::remove_if(m_not_found.begin(), m_not_found.end(),
[&](const std::string& class_name) {
return add(class_name, /*add_initial_pass=*/false);
});
if (end != m_not_found.end()) {
m_not_found.erase(end, m_not_found.end());
}
if (m_class_cfgs.empty()) {
return;
}
std::string pass_name = pass_name_lazy();
for (auto& class_cfg : m_class_cfgs) {
class_cfg.add_pass(pass_name, o);
}
if (m_write_after_each_pass) {
write();
}
}
void Classes::write() const {
if (m_class_cfgs.empty()) {
return;
}
std::ofstream os(m_file_name);
for (const auto& c : m_class_cfgs) {
c.write(os);
}
}
} // namespace visualizer
```
|
```xml
import { CLIENTPORTALUSER_BASIC_INFO } from "./constants";
import { generateFields } from "./utils";
export default {
types: [
{
description: "Business Portal User",
type: "user"
}
],
fields: generateFields,
defaultColumnsConfig: {
user: [
{ name: "email", label: "Email", order: 1 },
{ name: "phone", label: "Phone", order: 2 },
{ name: "username", label: "User name", order: 3 },
{ name: "firstName", label: "First name", order: 4 },
{ name: "lastName", label: "Last name", order: 5 },
{ name: "companyName", label: "Company name", order: 6 },
{
name: "companyRegistrationNumber",
label: "Company registration number",
order: 7
},
{
name: "avatar",
label: "Avatar",
order: 8
}
]
},
systemFields: ({ data: { groupId } }) =>
CLIENTPORTALUSER_BASIC_INFO.ALL.map(e => ({
text: e.label,
type: e.field,
groupId,
contentType: `clientportal:user`,
isDefinedByErxes: true
})),
systemFieldsAvailable: true
};
```
|
Omar Mario Pérez Aguado (born September 20, 1976) is a former Uruguayan professional footballer, who last played for Central Español Fútbol Club as a midfielder.
Personal life
He is the oldest brother of Diego Pérez, nicknamed Ruso who last team was Bologna and the Uruguay national football team.
External links
1976 births
Living people
Footballers from Montevideo
Uruguayan men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Central Español players
Club Nacional de Football players
Defensor Sporting players
Centro Atlético Fénix players
Rampla Juniors players
Peñarol players
C.A. Cerro players
Russian Premier League players
FC Rostov players
CD Castellón footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Argentina
Expatriate men's footballers in Ecuador
Expatriate men's footballers in Russia
Expatriate men's footballers in Spain
Uruguayan expatriate men's footballers
|
```kotlin
package de.westnordost.streetcomplete.data.user.statistics
import de.westnordost.streetcomplete.data.ConnectionException
import de.westnordost.streetcomplete.data.wrapApiClientExceptions
import io.ktor.client.HttpClient
import io.ktor.client.call.body
import io.ktor.client.plugins.expectSuccess
import io.ktor.client.request.get
/** Client for the statistics service
* path_to_url */
class StatisticsApiClient(
private val httpClient: HttpClient,
private val baseUrl: String,
private val statisticsParser: StatisticsParser
) {
/** Get the statistics for the given user id
*
* @throws ConnectionException on connection or server error */
suspend fun get(osmUserId: Long): Statistics = wrapApiClientExceptions {
val response = httpClient.get("$baseUrl?user_id=$osmUserId") { expectSuccess = true }
return statisticsParser.parse(response.body())
}
}
```
|
```c++
/**your_sha256_hash___________
*
* Pyomo: Python Optimization Modeling Objects
* National Technology and Engineering Solutions of Sandia, LLC
* Under the terms of Contract DE-NA0003525 with National Technology and
* Engineering Solutions of Sandia, LLC, the U.S. Government retains certain
* rights in this software.
* your_sha256_hash___________
**/
#ifndef MODEL_HEADER
#define MODEL_HEADER
#include "expression.hpp"
class Constraint;
class Objective;
class Model;
extern double inf;
class Objective {
public:
Objective() = default;
virtual ~Objective() = default;
int sense = 0; // 0 means min; 1 means max
std::string name;
};
class Constraint {
public:
Constraint() = default;
virtual ~Constraint() = default;
std::shared_ptr<ExpressionBase> lb = std::make_shared<Constant>(-inf);
std::shared_ptr<ExpressionBase> ub = std::make_shared<Constant>(inf);
bool active = true;
int index = -1;
std::string name;
};
bool constraint_sorter(std::shared_ptr<Constraint> c1,
std::shared_ptr<Constraint> c2);
class Model {
public:
Model();
virtual ~Model() = default;
std::set<std::shared_ptr<Constraint>, decltype(constraint_sorter) *>
constraints;
std::shared_ptr<Objective> objective;
void add_constraint(std::shared_ptr<Constraint>);
void remove_constraint(std::shared_ptr<Constraint>);
int current_con_ndx = 0;
};
#endif
```
|
```javascript
import macro from 'vtk.js/Sources/macros';
import vtkBoundingBox from 'vtk.js/Sources/Common/DataModel/BoundingBox';
function vtkBoundsMixin(publicAPI, model) {
const sourceBounds = [];
const bbox = [...vtkBoundingBox.INIT_BOUNDS];
publicAPI.containsPoint = (x, y, z) => {
if (Array.isArray(x)) {
return vtkBoundingBox.containsPoint(bbox, x[0], x[1], x[2]);
}
return vtkBoundingBox.containsPoint(bbox, x, y, z);
};
publicAPI.placeWidget = (bounds) => {
model.bounds = [];
const center = [
(bounds[0] + bounds[1]) / 2.0,
(bounds[2] + bounds[3]) / 2.0,
(bounds[4] + bounds[5]) / 2.0,
];
for (let i = 0; i < 6; i++) {
const axisCenter = center[Math.floor(i / 2)];
sourceBounds[i] = bounds[i];
model.bounds[i] =
(bounds[i] - axisCenter) * model.placeFactor + axisCenter;
}
vtkBoundingBox.setBounds(bbox, model.bounds);
publicAPI.invokeBoundsChange(model.bounds);
publicAPI.modified();
};
publicAPI.setPlaceFactor = (factor) => {
if (model.placeFactor !== factor) {
model.placeFactor = factor;
model.bounds = [];
const center = [
(sourceBounds[0] + sourceBounds[1]) / 2.0,
(sourceBounds[2] + sourceBounds[3]) / 2.0,
(sourceBounds[4] + sourceBounds[5]) / 2.0,
];
for (let i = 0; i < 6; i++) {
const axisCenter = center[Math.floor(i / 2)];
model.bounds[i] =
(sourceBounds[i] - axisCenter) * model.placeFactor + axisCenter;
}
vtkBoundingBox.setBounds(bbox, model.bounds);
publicAPI.invokeBoundsChange(model.bounds);
publicAPI.modified();
}
};
}
// your_sha256_hash------------
const DEFAULT_VALUES = {
bounds: [-1, 1, -1, 1, -1, 1],
placeFactor: 1,
};
// your_sha256_hash------------
export function extend(publicAPI, model, initialValues = {}) {
Object.assign(model, DEFAULT_VALUES, initialValues);
macro.setGetArray(publicAPI, model, ['bounds'], 6);
macro.get(publicAPI, model, ['placeFactor']);
macro.event(publicAPI, model, 'BoundsChange');
model.bounds = model.bounds.slice();
vtkBoundsMixin(publicAPI, model);
}
// your_sha256_hash------------
export default { extend };
```
|
Clare Baker (23 November 1885 – 7 December 1947) was an English cricketer. He was notably included in the Harrow XI team in 1905 and later featured in 58 innings, with a notable personal best of 53 runs achieved against Yorkshire at Sheffield in 1910, for Middlesex between 1906 and 1912. Outside of cricket, Baker was a member of the prestigious London Stock Exchange.
See also
List of Middlesex County Cricket Club players
References
External links
1885 births
1947 deaths
English cricketers
Middlesex cricketers
Cricketers from Marylebone
Marylebone Cricket Club cricketers
|
```java
/// Source : path_to_url
/// Author : liuyubobobo
/// Time : 2020-11-14
/// Memory Search
/// One by one
/// Time Complexity: O(R * C * in * ex * (1 << C))
/// Space Complexity: O(R * C * in * ex * (1 << C))
class Solution2 {
private int statemax = 1, mod = 0, R = 0, C = 0;
private int[][][][][] dp;
public int getMaxGridHappiness(int m, int n, int introvertsCount, int extrovertsCount) {
R = m;
C = n;
for(int i = 0; i < n; i ++) statemax *= 3;
mod = statemax / 3;
dp = new int[m][n][introvertsCount + 1][extrovertsCount + 1][statemax];
return dfs(0, 0, introvertsCount, extrovertsCount, 0);
}
private int dfs(int x, int y, int in, int ex, int last){
if(x == R) return 0;
if(y == C) return dfs(x + 1, 0, in, ex, last);
if(dp[x][y][in][ex][last] != 0) return dp[x][y][in][ex][last];
int res = dfs(x, y + 1, in, ex, last % mod * 3);
if(in != 0) {
int t1 = 120, up = last / mod, left = last % 3;
if (x - 1 >= 0 && up != 0) {
t1 -= 30;
t1 += up == 1 ? -30 : 20;
}
if (y - 1 >= 0 && left != 0) {
t1 -= 30;
t1 += left == 1 ? -30 : 20;
}
res = Math.max(res, t1 + dfs(x, y + 1, in - 1, ex, last % mod * 3 + 1));
}
if(ex != 0) {
int t2 = 40, up = last / mod, left = last % 3;;
if (x - 1 >= 0 && up != 0) {
t2 += 20;
t2 += up == 1 ? -30 : 20;
}
if (y - 1 >= 0 && left != 0) {
t2 += 20;
t2 += left == 1 ? -30 : 20;
}
res = Math.max(res, t2 + dfs(x, y + 1, in, ex - 1, last % mod * 3 + 2));
}
return dp[x][y][in][ex][last] = res;
}
}
```
|
```php
<?php
return [
'data_rows' => [
'author' => 'Autor',
'avatar' => 'Avatar',
'body' => 'Cos',
'category' => 'Categoria',
'created_at' => 'Creat per',
'display_name' => 'Nom a Mostrar',
'email' => 'Correu Electrnic',
'excerpt' => 'Extracte',
'featured' => 'Destacat',
'id' => 'ID',
'meta_description' => 'Meta Descripci',
'meta_keywords' => 'Meta Paraules Clau',
'name' => 'Nom',
'order' => 'Ordre',
'page_image' => 'Imatge de la pgina',
'parent' => 'Pare',
'password' => 'Constrasenya',
'post_image' => 'Imatge del Post',
'remember_token' => 'Token de Recordatori',
'role' => 'Rol',
'seo_title' => 'Ttol SEO',
'slug' => 'Slug',
'status' => 'Estat',
'title' => 'Ttol',
'updated_at' => 'Actualitzat a',
],
'data_types' => [
'category' => [
'singular' => 'Categoria',
'plural' => 'Categories',
],
'menu' => [
'singular' => 'Men',
'plural' => 'Mens',
],
'page' => [
'singular' => 'Pgina',
'plural' => 'Pgines',
],
'post' => [
'singular' => 'Post',
'plural' => 'Posts',
],
'role' => [
'singular' => 'Rol',
'plural' => 'Rols',
],
'user' => [
'singular' => 'Usuari',
'plural' => 'Usuaris',
],
],
'menu_items' => [
'bread' => 'BREAD',
'categories' => 'Categories',
'compass' => 'Comps',
'dashboard' => 'Taulell',
'database' => 'Base de Dades',
'media' => 'Media',
'menu_builder' => 'Disenyador de Men',
'pages' => 'Pgines',
'posts' => 'Posts',
'roles' => 'Rols',
'settings' => 'Configuraci',
'tools' => 'Eines',
'users' => 'Usuaris',
],
'roles' => [
'admin' => 'Administrador',
'user' => 'Usuari Normal',
],
'settings' => [
'admin' => [
'background_image' => 'Imatge de Fons del Administrador',
'description' => 'Descripci del Administrador',
'description_value' => 'Benvingut a Voyager. L\'administrador que faltava a Laravel',
'google_analytics_client_id' => 'ID de Client per a Google Analytics (fet servir al taulell)',
'icon_image' => 'Imatge de l\'Icona del Administrador',
'loader' => 'Imatge de Crrega del Administrador',
'title' => 'Ttol del Administrador',
],
'site' => [
'description' => 'Descripci del Lloc',
'google_analytics_tracking_id' => 'ID de Rastreig de Google Analytics',
'logo' => 'Logo del Lloc',
'title' => 'Ttol del Lloc',
],
],
];
```
|
David 'Dave' Hewitt (15 January 1980) was an Irish rugby union player. In his career playing at full-back and out-half he has represented Clontarf, Lansdowne, Old Belvedere R.F.C., Leinster, Connacht and Racing Métro 92 Paris.
References
Irish rugby union players
Lansdowne Football Club players
Clontarf FC players
Leinster Rugby players
Connacht Rugby players
Living people
1980 births
Ireland international rugby sevens players
|
Markgraf (margrave) is a Germanic title, equivalent of marquis (marquess)
Markgraf may also refer to:
People
Friedrich Markgraf (1897–1987), German botanist
Kate Markgraf (born 1976), American soccer defender
Maida Markgraf (born 1991), Montenegrin footballer
Other uses
SMS Markgraf, a König-class battleship
See also
Horst-Tanu Margraf (1903−1978), German conductor
Georg Marcgrave (Marggraf) (1610–1644), German naturalist and astronomer
Margrave (disambiguation)
Marquis (disambiguation)
Marquess (disambiguation)
Occupational surnames
|
```public key
-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
your_sha256_hash
your_sha256_hash
bC5jb20+iJkEExYKAEEWIQRSlaR3/8gGTXBXsZH6fmXJUfEkOQUCZlZ1MQIbAwUJ
your_sha256_hash
wdx8AF8QdITRvY299R6Y9348N4EIa9mq6bYeh+d0HwD7BPEkKquPNncuUmqJ8EAe
uGOQX0xs+0YyynMIHulnnQi4OARmVnUxEgorBgEEAZdVAQUBAQdAOvF6kho3KmjN
OQQX/bxng+Tgy4hz34BJojWJdSpn/gYDAQgHiH4EGBYKACYWIQRSlaR3/8gGTXBX
sZH6fmXJUfEkOQUCZlZ1MQIbDAUJBaOagAAKCRD6fmXJUfEkOaVeAP4rJD+kvC0D
your_sha256_hash
2MU5hr1pnbZNfQQ=
=3tMW
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
```
|
Maplesville is a town in Chilton County, Alabama, United States. At the 2020 census, the population was 637. It is located approximately halfway between Tuscaloosa and Montgomery on U.S. Route 82.
The mayor of Maplesville is W. C. Hayes, Jr.
History
The town of Maplesville first began to grow in a location east of its present location, near Mulberry Creek. European settlers migrated to the area from Georgia and the Carolinas following the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in 1814, after the Native Americans who had been living there were defeated. The town was named after Stephen W. Maples, a merchant and the town's first postmaster.
The town was located at the crossroads of two important trading routes: the Elyton Road from Selma to Birmingham, and the Fort Jackson Road from Tuscaloosa to Montgomery. By 1850, the original town of Maplesville had a population of 809. The town had two horse-racing tracks, which brought visitors to the town, and had several inns and taverns to accommodate the stagecoach traffic.
The original town site began to decline in the early 1850s, after two railway lines were completed 3 miles west of the town. The Alabama & Tennessee River Railway was constructed through in 1853. That same year, a depot was constructed at that location. Residents and businesspeople from the original Maplesville began moving closer to the railroad, and when the Maplesville Post Office was relocated to the railroad town in 1856, the new town was renamed Maplesville. The original town site gradually became deserted, and all that remains today is the Old Maplesville Cemetery along Highway 191. The Old Maplesville Cemetery contains many of the town's original inhabitants. This cemetery is also home to the oldest grave in Chilton County, dating back to 1833. However, the cemetery is just a fraction of its former size. Today, roughly 50 of the original tombstones remain. During the construction of Highway 191, several of the graves were destroyed during the process.
Because of Maplesville's abundant rail access, it became a shipping point for cotton and other goods from the surrounding area. In 1865, the train depot was destroyed in a raid by Union general James H. Wilson, as Wilson's Raiders marched on to Selma. It was replaced soon after the Civil War, but was destroyed by fire in 1911.
Maplesville continued to prosper after the Mobile and Ohio Railroad ran a line through the town in 1897, and many of the historic buildings in the town today were built during that period. In 1901, a lumber mill opened near the town, and the town's population grew as people moved to Maplesville to work at the mill. Maplesville incorporated in 1914, but the incorporation soon lapsed because the town failed to hold elections after the initial round. It reincorporated in 1947, and by 1951 had established a telephone system, garbage pick-up, and water system.
A new town hall was completed in 1975.
There are four historic sites currently recognized in Maplesville. The Walker-Klinner Farm is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and the following three locations are listed on the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage:
Maplesville Depot (circa 1912; listed November 23, 1976).
Maplesville Methodist Episcopal Church (circa 1870–1890; listed December 4, 1992).
Maplesville Railroad Historic District (19th–20th century; listed September 26, 2003).
Geography
Maplesville is located in southwestern Chilton County at 32°46'54.800" North, 86°52'31.861" West (32.781889, -86.875517). It is located along U.S. Route 82, which runs northwest to southeast on the south side of town. Tuscaloosa is 55 mi (89 km) to the northwest, and Montgomery is 49 mi (79 km) to the southeast, both via US-82. Alabama State Route 22 runs west to east through the center of town, leading east 15 mi (24 km) to Clanton, the Chilton County seat, and southwest 29 mi (47 km) to Selma.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , of which is land and , or 1.22%, is water.
Demographics
2020 census
As of the 2020 United States census, there were 637 people, 246 households, and 163 families residing in the town.
2007
As of the census of 2007, there were 2500 people, 268 households, and 183 families residing in the town. The population density was . There were 313 housing units at an average density of . The racial makeup of the town was 69.94% White, 29.61% Black or African American and 0.45% Native American. 0.89% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.
There were 268 households, out of which 32.8% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 52.2% were married couples living together, 11.9% had a female householder with no husband present, and 31.7% were non-families. 30.2% of all households were made up of individuals, and 12.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.51 and the average family size was 3.13.
In the town, the population was spread out, with 25.3% under the age of 18, 10.1% from 18 to 24, 26.9% from 25 to 44, 23.5% from 45 to 64, and 14.1% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 37 years. For every 100 females, there were 95.9 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 88.0 males.
The median income for a household in the town was $27,500, and the median income for a family was $36,250. Males had a median income of $31,042 versus $22,361 for females. The per capita income for the town was $12,777. About 12.6% of families and 20.1% of the population were below the poverty line, including 26.7% of those under age 18 and 16.0% of those age 65 or over.
Local attractions
Attractions
Noah's Motorcross Park
Perry Mountain Motorcycle Club
L & M Auctions & Appraisals
Minooka Park
Snake Pit Racing
Norman Smith Pottery
Numerous scenic walking trails
Places of worship
Maplesville Baptist Church
Maplesville United Methodist Church
Pilgrim Rest Baptist Church
Happy Church, Inc./Christian Life Church Learning Center
Historic cemeteries
Goodwin Family Cemetery
Atchison Family Cemetery
Abney Family Cemetery
Old Maplesville Cemetery
Historic buildings
Walker-Klinner Farm
Maplesville Depot
Maplesville Methodist Church
Maplesville Railroad Historic District
Ebenezer Baptist Church
Notable people
Tommie Agee, former Auburn and NFL player
Randall Atcheson, classical pianist
Harold Morrow, former Auburn and NFL fullback
James "Anthony" Sullivan, Stillman College, Public Servant, Politics (Birmingham AL)|neighborhood president, Birmingham Board of Education
Gallery
References
External links
Town of Maplesville official website
Towns in Alabama
Towns in Chilton County, Alabama
Birmingham metropolitan area, Alabama
|
```python
from urh import settings
from urh.ui.painting.VerticalSelection import VerticalSelection
from urh.ui.painting.ZoomableScene import ZoomableScene
class SpectrogramScene(ZoomableScene):
def __init__(self, parent=None):
super().__init__(parent)
self.removeItem(self.selection_area)
self.selection_area = VerticalSelection(
0, 0, 0, 0, fillcolor=settings.SELECTION_COLOR, opacity=0.6
)
self.selection_area.setZValue(1)
self.addItem(self.selection_area)
def width_spectrogram(self):
return self.spectrogram_image.pixmap().width()
```
|
```php
<?php
/**
* My Sites dashboard.
*
* @package WordPress
* @subpackage Multisite
* @since 3.0.0
*/
require_once( dirname( __FILE__ ) . '/admin.php' );
if ( !is_multisite() )
wp_die( __( 'Multisite support is not enabled.' ) );
if ( ! current_user_can('read') )
wp_die( __( 'You do not have sufficient permissions to access this page.' ) );
$action = isset( $_POST['action'] ) ? $_POST['action'] : 'splash';
$blogs = get_blogs_of_user( $current_user->ID );
$updated = false;
if ( 'updateblogsettings' == $action && isset( $_POST['primary_blog'] ) ) {
check_admin_referer( 'update-my-sites' );
$blog = get_blog_details( (int) $_POST['primary_blog'] );
if ( $blog && isset( $blog->domain ) ) {
update_user_option( $current_user->ID, 'primary_blog', (int) $_POST['primary_blog'], true );
$updated = true;
} else {
wp_die( __( 'The primary site you chose does not exist.' ) );
}
}
$title = __( 'My Sites' );
$parent_file = 'index.php';
get_current_screen()->add_help_tab( array(
'id' => 'overview',
'title' => __('Overview'),
'content' =>
'<p>' . __('This screen shows an individual user all of their sites in this network, and also allows that user to set a primary site. They can use the links under each site to visit either the front end or the dashboard for that site.') . '</p>' .
'<p>' . __('Up until WordPress version 3.0, what is now called a Multisite Network had to be installed separately as WordPress MU (multi-user).') . '</p>'
) );
get_current_screen()->set_help_sidebar(
'<p><strong>' . __('For more information:') . '</strong></p>' .
'<p>' . __('<a href="path_to_url" target="_blank">Documentation on My Sites</a>') . '</p>' .
'<p>' . __('<a href="path_to_url" target="_blank">Support Forums</a>') . '</p>'
);
require_once( ABSPATH . 'wp-admin/admin-header.php' );
if ( $updated ) { ?>
<div id="message" class="updated notice is-dismissible"><p><strong><?php _e( 'Settings saved.' ); ?></strong></p></div>
<?php } ?>
<div class="wrap">
<h1><?php
echo esc_html( $title );
if ( in_array( get_site_option( 'registration' ), array( 'all', 'blog' ) ) ) {
/** This filter is documented in wp-login.php */
$sign_up_url = apply_filters( 'wp_signup_location', network_site_url( 'wp-signup.php' ) );
printf( ' <a href="%s" class="page-title-action">%s</a>', esc_url( $sign_up_url ), esc_html_x( 'Add New', 'site' ) );
}
?></h1>
<?php
if ( empty( $blogs ) ) :
echo '<p>';
_e( 'You must be a member of at least one site to use this page.' );
echo '</p>';
else :
?>
<form id="myblogs" method="post">
<?php
choose_primary_blog();
/**
* Fires before the sites list on the My Sites screen.
*
* @since 3.0.0
*/
do_action( 'myblogs_allblogs_options' );
?>
<br clear="all" />
<ul class="my-sites striped">
<?php
/**
* Enable the Global Settings section on the My Sites screen.
*
* By default, the Global Settings section is hidden. Passing a non-empty
* string to this filter will enable the section, and allow new settings
* to be added, either globally or for specific sites.
*
* @since MU
*
* @param string $settings_html The settings HTML markup. Default empty.
* @param object $context Context of the setting (global or site-specific). Default 'global'.
*/
$settings_html = apply_filters( 'myblogs_options', '', 'global' );
if ( $settings_html != '' ) {
echo '<h3>' . __( 'Global Settings' ) . '</h3>';
echo $settings_html;
}
reset( $blogs );
foreach ( $blogs as $user_blog ) {
echo "<li>";
echo "<h3>{$user_blog->blogname}</h3>";
/**
* Filter the row links displayed for each site on the My Sites screen.
*
* @since MU
*
* @param string $string The HTML site link markup.
* @param object $user_blog An object containing the site data.
*/
echo "<p class='my-sites-actions'>" . apply_filters( 'myblogs_blog_actions', "<a href='" . esc_url( get_home_url( $user_blog->userblog_id ) ). "'>" . __( 'Visit' ) . "</a> | <a href='" . esc_url( get_admin_url( $user_blog->userblog_id ) ) . "'>" . __( 'Dashboard' ) . "</a>", $user_blog ) . "</p>";
/** This filter is documented in wp-admin/my-sites.php */
echo apply_filters( 'myblogs_options', '', $user_blog );
echo "</li>";
}?>
</ul>
<?php
if ( count( $blogs ) > 1 || has_action( 'myblogs_allblogs_options' ) || has_filter( 'myblogs_options' ) ) {
?><input type="hidden" name="action" value="updateblogsettings" /><?php
wp_nonce_field( 'update-my-sites' );
submit_button();
}
?>
</form>
<?php endif; ?>
</div>
<?php
include( ABSPATH . 'wp-admin/admin-footer.php' );
```
|
Kasu Mela Kasu () is a 2018 Indian Tamil-language comedy drama film directed by K. S. Pazhani and starring Shahrukh and Gayatri Rema.
Cast
Rishi R Assistent Director
Priya V Make up
Shahrukh as Murali
Gayatri Rema as Myna
Mayilsamy as Periyasamy, Murali's father
Kovai Sarala as beggar and Myna's mother
Nalini as Murali' s paternal aunt
Swaminathan as Murali' s maternal uncle
R.srimati
Lollu Sabha Easter as kidnapper
K. S. Pazhani as Myna's father
Jangiri Madhumitha as Myna's step mother
Sangeetha Balan
Vasathakumar as Priest
Ganja Karuppu (cameo appearance)
Lollu Sabha Mullai (special appearance)
KPY Kothandam (special appearance)
Release
The Times of India gave the film a rating of one out of five stars and wrote that "Going by the primitive filmmaking and storytelling in this film, it feels quite a meta statement!". The New Indian Express wrote that "Throughout its painfully long runtime of 130 minutes, this KS Palani-directorial fails to evoke as much as a grin".
References
External links
2018 comedy-drama films
2018 films
Indian comedy-drama films
|
Shahr Dar-e Bala (, also Romanized as Shahr Dar-e Bālā; also known as Shahr Dar and Shahr-i-dār) is a village in Zarabad-e Gharbi Rural District, Zarabad District, Konarak County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 437, in 82 families.
References
Populated places in Konarak County
|
Serrata fusulina is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Marginellidae, the margin snails.
Description
The length of the shell attains 4.5 mm.
Distribution
This marine species occurs off New Caledonia (depth range 675-680 m).
References
Boyer, F. (2008). The genus Serrata Jousseaume, 1875 (Caenogastropoda: Marginellidae) in New Caledonia. in: Héros, V. et al. (Ed.) Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos 25. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (1993). 196: 389-436.
Marginellidae
Gastropods described in 2008
|
```javascript
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wmissing-prototypes"
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wmissing-braces"
#include <metal_stdlib>
#include <simd/simd.h>
using namespace metal;
template<typename T, size_t Num>
struct spvUnsafeArray
{
T elements[Num ? Num : 1];
thread T& operator [] (size_t pos) thread
{
return elements[pos];
}
constexpr const thread T& operator [] (size_t pos) const thread
{
return elements[pos];
}
device T& operator [] (size_t pos) device
{
return elements[pos];
}
constexpr const device T& operator [] (size_t pos) const device
{
return elements[pos];
}
constexpr const constant T& operator [] (size_t pos) const constant
{
return elements[pos];
}
threadgroup T& operator [] (size_t pos) threadgroup
{
return elements[pos];
}
constexpr const threadgroup T& operator [] (size_t pos) const threadgroup
{
return elements[pos];
}
};
struct Foobar
{
float a;
float b;
};
constant spvUnsafeArray<float4, 3> _37 = spvUnsafeArray<float4, 3>({ float4(1.0), float4(2.0), float4(3.0) });
constant spvUnsafeArray<float4, 2> _49 = spvUnsafeArray<float4, 2>({ float4(1.0), float4(2.0) });
constant spvUnsafeArray<float4, 2> _54 = spvUnsafeArray<float4, 2>({ float4(8.0), float4(10.0) });
constant spvUnsafeArray<spvUnsafeArray<float4, 2>, 2> _55 = spvUnsafeArray<spvUnsafeArray<float4, 2>, 2>({ spvUnsafeArray<float4, 2>({ float4(1.0), float4(2.0) }), spvUnsafeArray<float4, 2>({ float4(8.0), float4(10.0) }) });
struct main0_out
{
float4 FragColor [[color(0)]];
};
struct main0_in
{
int index [[user(locn0)]];
};
fragment main0_out main0(main0_in in [[stage_in]])
{
spvUnsafeArray<Foobar, 2> _75 = spvUnsafeArray<Foobar, 2>({ Foobar{ 10.0, 40.0 }, Foobar{ 90.0, 70.0 } });
main0_out out = {};
out.FragColor = ((_37[in.index] + _55[in.index][in.index + 1]) + float4(30.0)) + float4(_75[in.index].a + _75[in.index].b);
return out;
}
```
|
Chess Players Association of India (CPAI) is an association of chess players in India affiliated to the All India Chess Federation. The objective of this association is to serve a common forum for players for Indian chess players and promote the game in particular.
History
The CPAI had formed to protest a 10% prize money cut imposed on the players by the All India Chess Federation in mid-2004. The association has stuck ever since catering to the needs of the players and forming a group to protect the rights of the Indian chess players
References
External links
Official Website
News
Editor of CPAI
Chess organizations
|
Henry Boyd McKeen (September 18, 1835 – June 3, 1864) was an officer and brigade commander in the union army during the American Civil War. He was killed in the Battle of Cold Harbor.
Biography
H. Boyd McKeen was a native of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and a graduate of Princeton University, class of 1853. He was a lumber merchant in Camden, New Jersey, at the beginning of the War. He began the war as a First Lieutenant and Adjutant of the 81st Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment, commissioned on October 27, 1861. McKeen was promoted to the rank of major on June 1, 1862, during the Peninsula Campaign. As major he led the regiment in first division II Corps at the Battle of Antietam. Promoted to colonel in November 1862, McKeen commanded the regiment at the Battle of Fredericksburg and the Battle of Chancellorsville. He was wounded in both battles. (The 81st Pennsylvania served in the temporary fifth brigade first division II Corps at Chancellorsville.)
McKeen entered the Battle of Gettysburg still commanding 81st Pennsylvania. Col Edward E. Cross, commander of the brigade, also gave him responsibility for the 148th Pennsylvania Infantry. When Cross was mortally wounded on July 2, 1863, in the Wheatfield, Col McKeen became acting commander of his brigade. McKeen wrote the official report of the brigade's actions at Gettysburg. He records his command's role on the third day of the battle, watching the repulse of the Florida brigade under David Lang. The regiment’s memorial stands in the Wheatfield, where it did its hardest fighting. Col McKeen was back in regimental command at the Battle of Bristoe Station and the Mine Run Campaign. During an absence of Col Nelson Miles, McKeen led the brigade once more during the winter of 1863-1864.
Col McKeen also led the 81st Pennsylvania at the Battle of the Wilderness. When BG Alexander S. Webb was wounded at the Battle of Spotsylvania, McKeen was assigned command of his brigade in second division II Corps. Col McKeen was mortally wounded, shot through the body, in the Battle of Cold Harbor on June 3, 1864, leading a charge. His brigade had been in the second line of BG John Gibbon's second division at the beginning of the assault, but the brigade in front of it had been driven to seek cover by heavy fire. McKeen's command had tried unsuccessfully to go forward under the same fire.
McKeen is buried in The Woodlands Cemetery in Philadelphia.
Fort McKeen in Dakota Territory was named in his honor when it was established in 1872. It was later renamed Fort Abraham Lincoln.
References
Raus, Edmund. A Generation on the March: The Army of the Potomac at Gettysburg, Gettysburg: Thomas Publications, 1996.
81st Pennsylvania Infantry
Pfanz, Harry W., Gettysburg the Second Day, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1987.
Rhea, Gordon C., Cold Harbor: Grant and Lee May 26 - June 3, 1864, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2002.
Union Army colonels
People of Pennsylvania in the American Civil War
Union military personnel killed in the American Civil War
Year of birth unknown
1864 deaths
1835 births
Military personnel from Philadelphia
Burials at The Woodlands Cemetery
|
Scott T. Rumana (born July 18, 1964) is an Assyrian-American Republican Party politician, and was a member of the New Jersey General Assembly, where he represented the 40th legislative district from January 8, 2008 until his resignation on October 20, 2016. On October 20, 2016, he was confirmed by the New Jersey Senate as a judge of the New Jersey Superior Court for Passaic County. He has also served as the mayor and as a councilman in Wayne and is a former member of the Passaic County Board of Chosen Freeholders.
Biography
Rumana is the descendant of an Assyrian tailor from Paterson. He was raised in Wayne where his interest in public service was sparked by his godfather Robert A. Roe, for whom Rumana later served as an intern while Roe was in Congress.
Rumana was awarded a B.A. from Hartwick College with a major in management in 1987, and earned a J.D. from New York Law School in June 1991. He is an attorney with the firm of Hunziker, Jones and Sweeney. A resident of Wayne, he is married to Laura and has one son.
Early political career
Rumana served on the Wayne Township Council from 1994 to 1996. He served until his appointment to the Passaic County Board of Chosen Freeholders.
In December 1996, Rumana was appointed to the Freeholder Board to replace Republican John C. Morley III, who resigned due to a conflict with him running the county's garbage collection agency. At the time of his appointment, the Republican Party had a majority of the seats on the Passaic County Freeholder Board. In his first bid for a full three-year term, Rumana finished in the top three in the 1997 election, joining Democratic newcomers Jim Gallagher and Lois A. Cuccinello; however, the majority control of the board shifted to the Democrats in this election. Due to the fall from grace of former Passaic County Chairman Peter Murphy and the resulting "corruption costs you money" campaign of the Democrats, Rumana finished fourth behind incumbents Gallagher and Cuccinello and newcomer Sonia Rosado in the 2000 election, losing his seat whilst filing a lawsuit against his opponents for allegedly tying Rumana to another county official under investigation.
Rumana launched a successful comeback the next year defeating incumbent Wayne mayor Judy Orson in the June Republican primary then defeating Chris McIntyre in the general election. He was re-elected to the position in 2005 and in 2006 was elected to head the Passaic County Republican Committee, a position he held until 2012. Under Rumana's leadership as Passaic County Republican Chairman, the Democratic 7-0 hold on the freeholder board of the past decade was broken. Michael Marotta, Deborah Ciambrone and Ed O'Connell were elected to the Board of Chosen Freeholders and Kristen Corrado was also elected County Clerk during his tenure.
Assembly career
In 2007 upon the selection of Assemblyman Kevin J. O'Toole to run for a State Senate seat, Rumana was elected in the primary election along with incumbent David C. Russo to be the Republican candidates in the general election for the General Assembly in the 40th District. He was re-elected to two-year terms with Russo thereafter.
Rumana served in the Assembly on the Environment and Solid Waste Committee, the Transportation and Independent Authorities Committee, and the Legislative Services Commission. He previously served as the Assistant Republican Leader from 2008 to 2009 and the Deputy Conference Leader/Policy Co-Chair in 2010 to 2011. Since 2012, he has been the Republican Whip in the Assembly.
As a legislator, Rumana advanced opposition to Council on Affordable Housing mandates and the advancement of clean energy initiatives. Scott Rumana voted against a bill legalizing same sex marriage in 2012 and voted against the override of Governor Chris Christie's veto of the bill in 2013.
In 2011, a former opponent in an Assembly election filed state ethics complaints against Rumana alleging that Rumana's appearance at a Board of Public Utilities advocating for a not-for-profit energy company grant was in conflict with his position as a state legislator. Though the Joint Legislation Committee on Ethics dismissed the charges in September 2011, a Superior Court judge overturned the dismissal in February 2012 claiming that the vote to dismiss was per the committee's bylaws. A state appellate court reinstated the dismissal of charges in 2013.
District 40
Each of the forty districts in the New Jersey Legislature has one representative in the New Jersey Senate and two members in the New Jersey General Assembly. The other representatives from the 40th District for the 2016–2017 Legislative Session are:
Senator Kevin J. O'Toole
Assemblyman David C. Russo
References
External links
Assemblyman Rumana's Legislative Webpage, New Jersey Legislature
New Jersey Legislature financial disclosure forms
2010 2009 2008 2007
1964 births
Living people
American politicians of Assyrian descent
Hartwick College alumni
New York Law School alumni
New Jersey lawyers
Mayors of places in New Jersey
Politicians from Passaic County, New Jersey
Republican Party members of the New Jersey General Assembly
County commissioners in New Jersey
New Jersey city council members
People from Wayne, New Jersey
21st-century American politicians
|
Lorin Ranier (born June 26, 1965), is an American businessman. He is best known as the former owner of the NASCAR team Ranier Racing with MDM and for currently serving as the head of Chevrolet's driver development with the Drivers Edge Development program and Pinnacle Racing Group. He is the son of former NASCAR team owner Harry Ranier.
Racing career
Ranier started spotting for various teams across NASCAR's top 3 divisions in 1995. By 2010 he was spotting for David Ragan in the No. 6 for Roush-Fenway Racing.
In 2015 Ranier had started back up his fathers team, Ranier-Lundy Racing in partnership with Mike Hillman. The next year in 2016 Ranier in partnership with MDM Motorsports would reopen their NASCAR Camping World Truck Series program which had closed in 1997.
When Ranier reopened his race team in 2015 he created along with it a driver development program called Ranier Racing Development which is still in use today as it serves as Chevrolet program for their driver development. Others in the Chevrolet camp in NASCAR have also used his services in recent years including JR Motorsports and GMS Racing through their Drivers Edge Development program which Ranier spearheaded from 2019 to 2022 and most recently Pinnacle Racing Group in 2023.
Personal life
Ranier graduated Lafayette Senior High School in 1983.
Ranier is the son of the late Harry Ranier who most famously owned the No. 28 for Cale Yarborough in the NASCAR Winston Cup Series from 1983 to 1986.
References
External links
1965 births
Living people
NASCAR team owners
Businesspeople from Kentucky
People from Davidson, North Carolina
Driver's education
Racing schools
|
```javascript
(eval, a = 10) => 42
```
|
Hakea trifurcata, commonly known as two-leaf, two-leaved hakea, or kerosene bush, is a shrub, endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. The species has two leaf forms, needle-like or oblong egg-shaped. Unlike most hakea species the fruit remain green at maturity and resemble the broader leaf form. The mimicry creates a camouflage, reducing predation of the seed by granivores in particular cockatoos.
Description
Hakea trifurcata is an open or dense shrub high and about wide. It does not form a lignotuber. The branchlets have white or rusty coloured flattened, short soft silky hairs or are densely covered in soft hairs and quickly become smooth. The shrub has two forms of leaves usually needle-like, curved, straight or may be divided in segments, long and wide, grooved below and ending in a sharp point. The second form is wider, oblong to egg-shaped long, wide with a central vein and is either wedge-shaped at the apex or narrows gradually. Both leaf shapes have flattened, dense, silky rusty or white hairs but quickly become smooth. The inflorescence consists of between one and ten sweetly, strongly scented cream, white or pink flowers often with red styles. The clusters of flowers appear in leaf axils, producing nectar attractive to bees and birds. However the flower scent is conversely described by editors in Flora of Australia as "a strong smell, sometimes described as fetid".
The flowers are surrounded by overlapping bracts long. The pedicels are long and covered with cream or rusty coloured hairs that are either short, soft and thickly matted or with flattened silky hairs, both forms extending onto the long perianth. The green fruit are smooth, obliquely egg-shaped and appear to resemble flat leaves, long and wide. The fruit of this Hakea species are not beaked or woody.
Flowering occurs between April and October.
Taxonomy and naming
Hakea trifurcata was first formally described by Robert Brown in 1810 and published the description in Transactions of the Linnean Society of London. Hakea trifurcata is named from the Latin (tres), referring to the three forked leaves.
Distribution and habitat
Two-leaf hakea is a widespread species growing from north of Geraldton to east of Esperance two-leaved hakea grows in a variety of soils including sand or laterite in mallee or low heathland.
Ecology
Hakea trifurcata has two distinct leaf forms, either needle-shaped or a broader oblong leaf visually similar to the fruit. The broader leaves only form when the shrub reaches sexual maturity and produces fruit. Unlike that of most other hakeas the fruit of Hakea trifurcata remain green at maturity and resemble the broader leaves of the species in shape and colour. Trials were conducted at the Perth Zoo to determine whether the broad leaves deterred granivores from foraging the fruit by the short-billed black cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus funereus latirostris) . A paper by Groom, Lamont and Duff suggested the leaves adjacent to the fruit, create camouflage protecting and shielding the fruit from predation. The broader leaf tends to double over shielding the fruit, the mimicry making it difficult to distinguish by the white-tailed cockatoo the most frequent predator of hakea fruit. The broader leaves increase in size the further away from the fruit, again possibly diverting the cockatoos from consuming the follicles. It is believed these adaptations evolved as a mechanism to reduce the destruction of seeds by granivores. It was noted by botanist and ornithologist Richard Schodde "that the short-billed black cockatoo and the yellow-tailed black cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus funereus) actively predate Hakea species, perching in the bushes to open up 'green' follicles with their bills". This species grows in fire-prone locations and does not resprout after fire, therefore continued populations require a "seed bank" to maintain numbers.
Conservation status
Hakea trifurcata is classified as "not threatened" by the Western Australian Government Department of Parks and Wildlife.
References
trifurcata
Eudicots of Western Australia
Plants described in 1810
|
Joseph Desanat (1796-1873) was a French Provençal poet and journal editor.
Early life
Joseph Desanat was born in 1796 in Tarascon.
Career
Desanat was first a courtier. He then moved to Marseille, where he made charcuterie.
In 1841, Desanat founded Lou Bouil-Abaïsso, a literary journal of Provençal poetry published in Marseille. The journal ran from 1841 to 1842, and from 1844 to 1846. Desanat encouraged his friend Jean-Baptiste Gaut to submit poems, leading to a career as a poet and an advocacy of the Félibrige movement.
A prolific Provençal poet himself, Desanat's use of the language is remarkable as it predates Frédéric Mistral's spelling rules.
Death
He died in 1873.
Legacy
The Boulevard Joseph Desanat in Tarascon was named in his honour.
References
1796 births
1873 deaths
People from Tarascon
French male poets
19th-century French poets
|
```c++
//
//
// path_to_url
//
#include "pxr/base/trace/reporterDataSourceCollection.h"
#include "pxr/pxr.h"
PXR_NAMESPACE_OPEN_SCOPE
TraceReporterDataSourceCollection::TraceReporterDataSourceCollection(
CollectionPtr collection)
: _data({collection})
{}
TraceReporterDataSourceCollection::TraceReporterDataSourceCollection(
std::vector<CollectionPtr> collections)
: _data(std::move(collections))
{}
void
TraceReporterDataSourceCollection::Clear()
{
using std::swap;
std::vector<CollectionPtr> newData;
swap(_data,newData);
}
std::vector<TraceReporterDataSourceBase::CollectionPtr>
TraceReporterDataSourceCollection::ConsumeData()
{
using std::swap;
std::vector<CollectionPtr> result;
swap(_data,result);
return result;
}
PXR_NAMESPACE_CLOSE_SCOPE
```
|
The Choral Public Domain Library (CPDL) is a sheet music archive which focuses on choral and vocal music in the public domain or otherwise freely available for printing and performing (such as via permission from the copyright holder).
It is a 501(c)(3), tax-deductible organization, whose contents are published under a specific copyright license, and editing articles can be allowed only for registered contributors.
Overview
The site CPDL.org was launched in December 1998 by Rafael Ornes. In 2005 CPDL was ported, or converted, to wiki format, and is known as ChoralWiki. In July 2008, Ornes stepped back from the site administration and turned the operational responsibilities to a group of the site administrators. A transition committee was formed which subsequently incorporated CPDL as a non-profit under California state law and now operates CPDL.
In addition to making sheet music scores available, the wiki format supports additional features including:
original texts, their sources and translations;
cross-indexing of choral music using criteria including musical genre, period, and number and voicing of choral parts;
composer information;
description and performance considerations can be included for works;
contents of collections of choral music;
community discussion such as through "Talk" pages related to composers or specific works.
advertising web banner for link exchange and for crowdfunding via credit card or PayPal.
Music is available for free download in a variety of formats, including score images in PDF, PS and TIFF format, sound files in MIDI and MP3 formats, and in the notation formats supported by various notation programs, including Finale, Sibelius, NoteWorthy Composer, Encore, and the open source GNU LilyPond. Most scores on CPDL are distributed under an open-source license. As of 1 December 2017, CPDL archives over 27,800 scores by more than 2,900 composers, contributed by over 1,200 editors and contributors. It includes large numbers of scores from the Renaissance and Baroque eras, including nearly complete vocal works by William Byrd and Tomás Luis de Victoria in excellent editions.
CPDL is suggested as a resource by departmental or faculty websites at Kent State University, Northern Illinois University, the University of Oregon, the University of Western Ontario, the Internet Public Library of the University of Michigan, the University at Albany, The State University of New York, by the UCLA Music Library, by the libraries at the Universities of Boston and Stanford and by inclusion by faculty members in syllabi for courses at the University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh. It is recommended by the Iowa and Massachusetts chapters of the American Choral Directors Association, and is included in the resource database of Intute, an association of Institutions in the UK.
Jason Sickel has described the CPDL as a Gold Mine for Choral Directors.
License terms
Contents are published under a specific copyright license, if not otherwise specified and based on the GNU GPL license.
License is based on the principle that if users distribute copies of a musical work under the CPDL license, whether gratis or for a fee, they must give the recipients all the rights that they already have. Any modified Edition must be caused with the related date and any distributed copy must refer the copyright notice, whether gratis, or for a fee.
In that way, the same right of asking a fee may also be applied by the copyright holder, possibly with an exception for works listed in the U.S. public domain. As a copyright license, even if derived by GNU GPL, the license terms can be radically modified anytime, while they don't provide the universal and fundamental rights into a specific and permanent section of the license terms, that can be modified only under a very large agreement of the community, or not be modifiable at all.
From a more operative point of view, it underlines and implies that all the source code in any article can be viewed by anyone, copied, reproduced on different Wiki engines or long-time preserved on specific websites like the Internet Archive or archive.is.
See also
List of online music databases
Public domain resources
Werner Icking Music Archive
Mutopia Project
Kantoreiarchiv
International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
References
External links
American music websites
Choral music
Discipline-oriented digital libraries
Internet properties established in 1998
MediaWiki websites
Music libraries
Online music and lyrics databases
Public domain music
Charities based in California
|
```javascript
export default {
"hljs": {
"display": "block",
"overflowX": "auto",
"padding": "0.5em",
"background": "#eee",
"color": "black"
},
"hljs-link": {
"color": "#070"
},
"hljs-emphasis": {
"color": "#070",
"fontStyle": "italic"
},
"hljs-attribute": {
"color": "#070"
},
"hljs-addition": {
"color": "#070"
},
"hljs-strong": {
"color": "#d14",
"fontWeight": "bold"
},
"hljs-string": {
"color": "#d14"
},
"hljs-deletion": {
"color": "#d14"
},
"hljs-quote": {
"color": "#998",
"fontStyle": "italic"
},
"hljs-comment": {
"color": "#998",
"fontStyle": "italic"
},
"hljs-section": {
"color": "#900"
},
"hljs-title": {
"color": "#900"
},
"hljs-class .hljs-title": {
"color": "#458"
},
"hljs-type": {
"color": "#458"
},
"hljs-variable": {
"color": "#336699"
},
"hljs-template-variable": {
"color": "#336699"
},
"hljs-bullet": {
"color": "#997700"
},
"hljs-meta": {
"color": "#3344bb"
},
"hljs-code": {
"color": "#099"
},
"hljs-number": {
"color": "#099"
},
"hljs-literal": {
"color": "#099"
},
"hljs-keyword": {
"color": "#099"
},
"hljs-selector-tag": {
"color": "#099"
},
"hljs-regexp": {
"backgroundColor": "#fff0ff",
"color": "#880088"
},
"hljs-symbol": {
"color": "#990073"
},
"hljs-tag": {
"color": "#007700"
},
"hljs-name": {
"color": "#007700"
},
"hljs-selector-id": {
"color": "#007700"
},
"hljs-selector-class": {
"color": "#007700"
}
}
```
|
The Scola Tower - or tower of St. John the Baptist - is a former military building located just beyond the northeastern tip (called tip Scola) of Palmaria (island) in Porto Venere, in the Gulf of Poets in the province of La Spezia, Italy.
It is part of, along with the Fort Cavour and Umberto I and the Batteria Semaforo, the defensive positions of Palmaria.
History and Description
As with other coastal towers and lookouts of the Ligurian coast, the Scola Tower is part of a defensive system originally desired by the Senate of the Republic of Genoa in the 16th and 17th centuries for the purposes of protecting the coast and, consequently, the towns and villages. According to some studies, the tower may have been built in the early 17th century for an estimated cost of 56,000 Genoese liras, and was in response to new ballistic technologies which forced the Senate of Genoa to a rapid conversion of existing defensive sites and the creation of new ones.
The tower is pentagonal in shape with an average wall thickness of about , which accommodates up to eight people (eight soldiers, including a captain and a master "bombardero") and ten cannons, and guards the Bay of Palmaria, Porto Venere and Lerici.
During the Napoleonic Wars, it was at the center of a naval engagement on January 23, 1800 between the British and French fleets, and was damaged by the British through their efforts to remove the latter from the Gulf of La Spezia, leaving it in a state of total neglect for the first half of the 19th century.
Used for target practice by the Marina Militare and scheduled for demolition in 1915, it was saved by catching the interest of Ubaldo Mazzini, a local official at the Ministry of Education, and it was eventually decided to convert the tower to a lighthouse. Between 1976 and 1980, the structure has undergone major restoration and consolidation of the perimeter wall.
See also
List of islands of Italy
References
External links
Other info
Buildings and structures in Liguria
17th-century establishments in the Republic of Genoa
|
Paul Lawrence Adderley (August 15, 1928 – September 19, 2012) was a Bahamian politician and lawyer. He was the longest serving Attorney General of the 20th century, holding the post for 17 years.
Career
Adderley was originally a member of the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) under Lynden Oscar Pindling. However, Adderley left the PLP in 1965 and established the National Development Party (NDP) political party. He returned to the PLP shortly before the Bahamas achieved independence from the United Kingdom in 1973.
On 1 March 1973, he was appointed Minister of External Affairs and on July 10, 1973 became the country's first and, ultimately, longest-serving Attorney-General. Adderley served as the Minister of Finance from 1990 to 1992.
Adderley served as acting Governor-General of the Bahamas from December 1, 2005 until February 1, 2006.
Adderley retired from politics, remaining an active attorney as of 2010. In September 2010, he appeared in the documentary film On the Wings of Men, about Lynden Oscar Pindling by Bahamian filmmaker Calvin Harris.
Death and legacy
Adderley died on September 19, 2012, aged 84, and was given a state funeral on September 28.
At a ceremony on June 27, 2014, the building housing the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) and the Ministry of Legal Affairs was named in honour of Paul L. Adderley.
References
Governors-General of the Bahamas
Progressive Liberal Party politicians
1928 births
2012 deaths
National Development Party (Bahamas) politicians
Attorneys General of the Bahamas
Finance ministers of the Bahamas
20th-century Bahamian lawyers
21st-century Bahamian lawyers
|
```html
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII">
<title>buffers_adapter</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="../../../../../../doc/src/boostbook.css" type="text/css">
<meta name="generator" content="DocBook XSL Stylesheets V1.79.1">
<link rel="home" href="../../index.html" title="Chapter 1. Boost.Beast">
<link rel="up" href="../ref.html" title="This Page Intentionally Left Blank 2/2">
<link rel="prev" href="boost__beast__buffers.html" title="buffers">
<link rel="next" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/buffers_adapter.html" title="buffers_adapter::buffers_adapter">
</head>
<body bgcolor="white" text="black" link="#0000FF" vlink="#840084" alink="#0000FF">
<table cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr>
<td valign="top"><img alt="Boost C++ Libraries" width="277" height="86" src="../../../../../../boost.png"></td>
<td align="center"><a href="../../../../../../index.html">Home</a></td>
<td align="center"><a href="../../../../../../libs/libraries.htm">Libraries</a></td>
<td align="center"><a href="path_to_url">People</a></td>
<td align="center"><a href="path_to_url">FAQ</a></td>
<td align="center"><a href="../../../../../../more/index.htm">More</a></td>
</tr></table>
<hr>
<div class="spirit-nav">
<a accesskey="p" href="boost__beast__buffers.html"><img src="../../../../../../doc/src/images/prev.png" alt="Prev"></a><a accesskey="u" href="../ref.html"><img src="../../../../../../doc/src/images/up.png" alt="Up"></a><a accesskey="h" href="../../index.html"><img src="../../../../../../doc/src/images/home.png" alt="Home"></a><a accesskey="n" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/buffers_adapter.html"><img src="../../../../../../doc/src/images/next.png" alt="Next"></a>
</div>
<div class="section">
<div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title">
<a name="beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter"></a><a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter.html" title="buffers_adapter">buffers_adapter</a>
</h4></div></div></div>
<p>
Adapts a <span class="bold"><strong>MutableBufferSequence</strong></span> into a <span class="bold"><strong>DynamicBuffer</strong></span>.
</p>
<h5>
<a name="beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.h0"></a>
<span class="phrase"><a name="beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.synopsis"></a></span><a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter.html#beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.synopsis">Synopsis</a>
</h5>
<p>
Defined in header <code class="literal"><<a href="../../../../../../boost/beast/core/buffers_adapter.hpp" target="_top">boost/beast/core/buffers_adapter.hpp</a>></code>
</p>
<pre class="programlisting"><span class="keyword">template</span><span class="special"><</span>
<span class="keyword">class</span> <a href="../../../../../../doc/html/boost_asio/reference/MutableBufferSequence.html" target="_top"><span class="bold"><strong>MutableBufferSequence</strong></span></a><span class="special">></span>
<span class="keyword">class</span> <span class="identifier">buffers_adapter</span>
</pre>
<h5>
<a name="beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.h1"></a>
<span class="phrase"><a name="beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.types"></a></span><a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter.html#beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.types">Types</a>
</h5>
<div class="informaltable"><table class="table">
<colgroup>
<col>
<col>
</colgroup>
<thead><tr>
<th>
<p>
Name
</p>
</th>
<th>
<p>
Description
</p>
</th>
</tr></thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p>
<a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/const_buffers_type.html" title="buffers_adapter::const_buffers_type"><span class="bold"><strong>const_buffers_type</strong></span></a>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
The type used to represent the input sequence as a list of buffers.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p>
<a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/mutable_buffers_type.html" title="buffers_adapter::mutable_buffers_type"><span class="bold"><strong>mutable_buffers_type</strong></span></a>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
The type used to represent the output sequence as a list of buffers.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table></div>
<h5>
<a name="beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.h2"></a>
<span class="phrase"><a name="beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.member_functions"></a></span><a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter.html#beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.member_functions">Member
Functions</a>
</h5>
<div class="informaltable"><table class="table">
<colgroup>
<col>
<col>
</colgroup>
<thead><tr>
<th>
<p>
Name
</p>
</th>
<th>
<p>
Description
</p>
</th>
</tr></thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p>
<a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/buffers_adapter.html" title="buffers_adapter::buffers_adapter"><span class="bold"><strong>buffers_adapter</strong></span></a>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
Move constructor.
</p>
<p>
Copy constructor.
</p>
<p>
Construct a buffers adapter.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p>
<a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/capacity.html" title="buffers_adapter::capacity"><span class="bold"><strong>capacity</strong></span></a>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
Returns the maximum sum of the sizes of the input sequence and
output sequence the buffer can hold without requiring reallocation.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p>
<a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/commit.html" title="buffers_adapter::commit"><span class="bold"><strong>commit</strong></span></a>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
Move bytes from the output sequence to the input sequence.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p>
<a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/consume.html" title="buffers_adapter::consume"><span class="bold"><strong>consume</strong></span></a>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
Remove bytes from the input sequence.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p>
<a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/data.html" title="buffers_adapter::data"><span class="bold"><strong>data</strong></span></a>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
Get a list of buffers that represents the input sequence.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p>
<a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/max_size.html" title="buffers_adapter::max_size"><span class="bold"><strong>max_size</strong></span></a>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
Returns the largest size output sequence possible.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p>
<a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/operator_eq_.html" title="buffers_adapter::operator="><span class="bold"><strong>operator=</strong></span></a>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
Move assignment.
</p>
<p>
Copy assignment.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p>
<a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/prepare.html" title="buffers_adapter::prepare"><span class="bold"><strong>prepare</strong></span></a>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
Get a list of buffers that represents the output sequence, with
the given size.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p>
<a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/size.html" title="buffers_adapter::size"><span class="bold"><strong>size</strong></span></a>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
Get the size of the input sequence.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table></div>
<h5>
<a name="beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.h3"></a>
<span class="phrase"><a name="beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.description"></a></span><a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter.html#beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.description">Description</a>
</h5>
<p>
This class wraps a <span class="bold"><strong>MutableBufferSequence</strong></span>
to meet the requirements of <span class="bold"><strong>DynamicBuffer</strong></span>.
Upon construction the input and output sequences are empty. A copy of the
mutable buffer sequence object is stored; however, ownership of the underlying
memory is not transferred. The caller is responsible for making sure that
referenced memory remains valid for the duration of any operations.
</p>
<p>
The size of the mutable buffer sequence determines the maximum number of
bytes which may be prepared and committed.
</p>
<h5>
<a name="beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.h4"></a>
<span class="phrase"><a name="beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.template_parameters"></a></span><a class="link" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter.html#beast.ref.boost__beast__buffers_adapter.template_parameters">Template
Parameters</a>
</h5>
<div class="informaltable"><table class="table">
<colgroup>
<col>
<col>
</colgroup>
<thead><tr>
<th>
<p>
Type
</p>
</th>
<th>
<p>
Description
</p>
</th>
</tr></thead>
<tbody><tr>
<td>
<p>
<code class="computeroutput"><span class="identifier">MutableBufferSequence</span></code>
</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
The type of mutable buffer sequence to wrap.
</p>
</td>
</tr></tbody>
</table></div>
<p>
Convenience header <code class="literal"><<a href="../../../../../../boost/beast/core.hpp" target="_top">boost/beast/core.hpp</a>></code>
</p>
</div>
<table xmlns:rev="path_to_url~gregod/boost/tools/doc/revision" width="100%"><tr>
<td align="left"></td>
file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at <a href="path_to_url" target="_top">path_to_url
</p>
</div></td>
</tr></table>
<hr>
<div class="spirit-nav">
<a accesskey="p" href="boost__beast__buffers.html"><img src="../../../../../../doc/src/images/prev.png" alt="Prev"></a><a accesskey="u" href="../ref.html"><img src="../../../../../../doc/src/images/up.png" alt="Up"></a><a accesskey="h" href="../../index.html"><img src="../../../../../../doc/src/images/home.png" alt="Home"></a><a accesskey="n" href="boost__beast__buffers_adapter/buffers_adapter.html"><img src="../../../../../../doc/src/images/next.png" alt="Next"></a>
</div>
</body>
</html>
```
|
Alan Shoulder (born 4 February 1953) is an English football manager and former player.
A striker, he began his career with Leeholme Juniors, before joining Bishop Auckland in 1972. In 1977, he joined Blyth Spartans and featured in their run to the fifth round of the FA Cup. In December 1978, he was transferred to Newcastle United for £20,000, where he scored 38 goals in 117 games. In 1982, he joined Carlisle United on a free transfer, then in 1985 joined Hartlepool United, again on a free transfer. An eye injury forced him to retire as a professional player in December 1988, but he continued playing with Ferryhill Athletic. He later became assistant manager at Gretna, and then a coach at Newcastle Blue Star. He has since managed several clubs, including Coundon, Crook Town, Bishop Auckland, Willington, West Auckland Town and Blyth Spartans.
Honours
Individual
Newcastle United Player of the Year: 1979–80
References
1953 births
Living people
Footballers from Bishop Auckland
English men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Bishop Auckland F.C. players
Blyth Spartans A.F.C. players
Newcastle United F.C. players
Carlisle United F.C. players
Hartlepool United F.C. players
Ferryhill Athletic F.C. players
English Football League players
English football managers
Crook Town A.F.C. managers
Gateshead F.C. managers
Blyth Spartans A.F.C. managers
Bishop Auckland F.C. managers
Willington A.F.C. players
West Auckland Town F.C. managers
|
is a Japanese former gymnast who competed in the 1984 Summer Olympics. Kajitani is a graduate of the Nippon College of Physical Education.
References
1955 births
Living people
Japanese male artistic gymnasts
Olympic gymnasts for Japan
Gymnasts at the 1984 Summer Olympics
Olympic silver medalists for Japan
Olympic bronze medalists for Japan
Olympic medalists in gymnastics
Asian Games medalists in gymnastics
Gymnasts at the 1978 Asian Games
Gymnasts at the 1982 Asian Games
Asian Games silver medalists for Japan
Medalists at the 1978 Asian Games
Medalists at the 1982 Asian Games
Medalists at the 1984 Summer Olympics
Academic staff of Okayama University
20th-century Japanese people
|
Muri District is a district in the Swiss Canton of Aargau with the administrative capital of Muri. It covers the central and southern part of Freiamt and has a population of (as of ).
Geography
The Muri district has an area, , of . Of this area, or 68.8% is used for agricultural purposes, while or 19.3% is forested. Of the rest of the land, or 9.8% is settled (buildings or roads).
Coat of arms
The blazon of the district coat of arms is Gules a Wall in fess embattled Argent masoned Sable..
Demographics
The Muri district has a population () of . , 13.2% of the population are foreign nationals.
Economy
there were 15,053 workers who lived in the district. Of these, 10,391 or about 69.0% of the residents worked outside the Muri district while 4,675 people commuted into the district for work. There were a total of 9,337 jobs (of at least 6 hours per week) in the district.
Religion
From the , 18,897 or 66.9% were Roman Catholic, while 4,960 or 17.6% belonged to the Swiss Reformed Church. Of the rest of the population, there were 18 individuals (or about 0.06% of the population) who belonged to the Christian Catholic faith.
Education
Of the school age population (), there are 2,724 students attending primary school, there are 935 students attending secondary school, there are 569 students attending tertiary or university level schooling, and there are 14 students who are seeking a job after school in the municipality.
Municipalities
Mergers
The following changes to the district's municipalities have occurred since 2000:
On 1 January 2012 the municipality of Benzenschwil merged into Merenschwand.
References
Districts of Aargau
|
Chital is a village in Amreli Taluka of Amreli district, Gujarat, India.
Demographics
The population of Chital according to the census of 1872 was 3908 and according to that of 1881 3959 souls.
Notes
References
Princely states of Gujarat
Villages in Amreli district
|
```java
package com.eventyay.organizer.common.di.module.android;
import com.eventyay.organizer.core.attendee.checkin.AttendeeCheckInFragment;
import dagger.Module;
import dagger.android.ContributesAndroidInjector;
@Module
public abstract class BarcodeFragmentBuildersModule {
@ContributesAndroidInjector
abstract AttendeeCheckInFragment contributeAttendeeCheckinFragment();
}
```
|
Ivan Bošnjak (; born 6 February 1979) is a Croatian retired professional footballer who played as a forward. He spent most of his career playing for boyhood club HNK Cibalia, Dinamo Zagreb and Hajduk Split in his native Croatia, as well as Genk in Belgium and Chongqing Lifan in China.
Club career
Bošnjak started his professional career at local club HNK Cibalia in the 1996–97 season. He went on to move to Hajduk Split in 2000 and left the club after two seasons for Al-Ittihad Tripoli from Libya, where he spent a season without getting a chance to make a single appearance in an official match. He came back to Croatia by signing with Dinamo Zagreb in 2004. At the club level, he had his biggest personal successes while being named the best player of the Croatian First League in 2000 and becoming the league's top goalscorer in 2006 with 22 goals scored. He transferred to China League One club Chongqing Lifan at season 2011. In March 2012, Bošnjak joined Rijeka. It is reported that Bošnjak has agreed to terms with Brunei's DPMM FC on a transfer in February 2013. on 2014 Bošnjak has agreed to terms with Persija Jakarta.
International career
Bošnjak played for the Croatia national team and collected a total of 14 international caps in which he managed to score one goal. He made his debut for the Croatian team in their friendly match against Slovakia on 16 August 2000 in Bratislava, but subsequently made only one more appearance for the team over a timespan of more than four years before eventually becoming their regular member in 2005 by making six appearances in the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualifying. He went on to score his first goal for Croatia in their friendly match against Hong Kong at the 2006 Carlsberg Cup in Hong Kong and was then also selected to be part of the Croatian squad at the 2006 World Cup finals in Germany, but played at the tournament for only four minutes of regular time in Croatia's second group match against Japan.
International appearances
Honours
Club
Cibalia
Croatian Second League: 1997–98 (East)
Hajduk Split
Croatian First League: 2000–01
Al-Ittihad Tripoli
Libyan Premier League: 2002–03
Libyan Super Cup: 2002
Dinamo Zagreb
Croatian First League: 2005–06
Croatian Cup: 2004
Genk
Belgian Cup: 2009
Individual
SN Yellow Shirt Award: 2000
Heart of Hajduk Award: 2001
Croatian First League Top Scorer: 2006
References
External links
1979 births
Living people
Footballers from Vinkovci
Men's association football forwards
Croatian men's footballers
Croatia men's under-21 international footballers
Croatia men's international footballers
2006 FIFA World Cup players
HNK Cibalia players
HNK Hajduk Split players
Al-Ittihad Club (Tripoli) players
GNK Dinamo Zagreb players
K.R.C. Genk players
Iraklis F.C. (Thessaloniki) players
Chongqing Liangjiang Athletic F.C. players
HNK Rijeka players
DPMM FC players
Persija Jakarta players
Croatian Football League players
Libyan Premier League players
Belgian Pro League players
Super League Greece players
China League One players
Singapore Premier League players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Croatian expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Libya
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Libya
Expatriate men's footballers in Belgium
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Belgium
Expatriate men's footballers in Greece
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Greece
Expatriate men's footballers in China
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in China
Expatriate men's footballers in Brunei
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Brunei
Expatriate men's footballers in Indonesia
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Indonesia
|
```java
package com.lcodecore.twinklingrefreshlayout.adapter;
import android.content.Context;
import android.support.v4.view.ViewPager;
import android.view.View;
import android.view.ViewGroup;
import android.widget.LinearLayout;
import com.lcodecore.twinklingrefreshlayout.R;
import com.lcodecore.twinklingrefreshlayout.adapter.base.CommonHolder;
import com.lcodecore.twinklingrefreshlayout.beans.Card;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.List;
import butterknife.Bind;
public class ViewPagerHolder extends CommonHolder<Void> {
private LoopViewPagerAdapter viewPagerAdapter;
private List<Card> cards = new ArrayList<>();
@Bind(R.id.viewPager)
ViewPager viewPager;
@Bind(R.id.indicators)
LinearLayout indicators;
public ViewPagerHolder(Context context, ViewGroup root) {
super(context, root, R.layout.layout_viewpager);
// cards.add(new Card("", "",R.drawable.card_cover6));
// cards.add(new Card("Music Player", "",R.drawable.card_cover7));
// cards.add(new Card("el", "",R.drawable.card_cover8));
// cards.add(new Card("God of Light", "",R.drawable.card_cover1));
// cards.add(new Card("BlackLight", "",R.drawable.card_cover3));
}
@Override
public void bindData(Void aVoid) {
}
@Override
public void bindHeadData() {
if(viewPager.getAdapter() == null){
viewPagerAdapter = new LoopViewPagerAdapter(viewPager, indicators);
viewPager.setAdapter(viewPagerAdapter);
viewPager.addOnPageChangeListener(viewPagerAdapter);
viewPagerAdapter.setList(cards);
}/*else{
viewPagerAdapter.setList(pics);
}*/
}
}
```
|
Beverly of Graustark is a 1926 American silent romantic comedy film directed by Sidney Franklin and starring Marion Davies, Antonio Moreno, and Creighton Hale. The film's screenplay was written by Agnes Christine Johnston based on the novel by George Barr McCutcheon, and set in the fictional land of Graustark. The film features a final sequence in Technicolor. It was the first film by Sidney Franklin for MGM.
The story was filmed before in 1914 by the Biograph Company.
Copies of the film are held at Turner Broadcasting and the Library of Congress. Click on the Library of Congress external link below to watch the 1914 version of the film.
Premise
Beverly Calhoun (Davies) impersonates the Prince of Graustark to claim his birthright while he recovers from a skiing injury. In the meantime, she falls for her bodyguard Dantan (Moreno).
Cast
Marion Davies as Beverly Calhoun
Antonio Moreno as Dantan
Creighton Hale as Prince Oscar
Roy D'Arcy as General Marlanax
Albert Gran as Duke Travina
Paulette Duval as Carlotta
Max Barwyn as Saranoff
Charles Clary as Mr. Calhoun
Production
In her 22nd film, Marion Davies starred in yet another dual role as the American Beverly Calhoun who masquerades as her cousin Oscar, who happens to be the Prince of Graustark, a small European monarchy. This was the second time that Davies masqueraded as a male (see Little Old New York), and critics and audiences applauded the effort. The film is often cited as Davies' most profitable film because of low production costs and big box office. The only problem in filming was Davies' 10-day bout with the flu. This was her first teaming with Antonio Moreno, who played the royal bodyguard. The film boasted a 2-strip Technicolor finale (which survives). Davies' severe haircut, dubbed the "Beverly Bob," caused a fashion craze.
Restoration
The Library of Congress restored the 1926 film in 2019, scanning an original-release 35mm nitrate print in the Marion Davies Collection that included the 2-color Technicolor sequence in the 2nd half of the film's last reel. This 4K restoration was screened in October 2019 at the Pordenone Silent Film Festival. Undercrank Productions released the restoration on Blu-ray and DVD in April 2022, featuring a new musical score by Ben Model.
See also
List of early color feature films
References
External links
Library of Congress viewable copy of the 1914 film (57 min. 4 sec.)
Still of Hale and Davies (University of Washington, Sayre collection)
1926 romantic comedy films
1920s color films
1926 films
American LGBT-related films
American silent feature films
Films directed by Sidney Franklin
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
Silent films in color
LGBT-related romantic comedy films
Films set in Europe
1920s LGBT-related films
1920s American films
Silent American romantic comedy films
|
Ariostea () was an Italian professional cycling team from 1984 to 1993. Its first team manager was Giorgio Vannucci; he was replaced in 1986 by Giancarlo Ferretti, who remained manager until the team was disbanded in 1993.
History
The first major victories were the two stage wins at the 1986 Giro d'Italia by Sergio Santimaria (1st stage, maglia rosa for one day) and Norwegian rider Dag Erik Pedersen (15th stage). The highest placed Ariostea rider in the general classification was Alfio Vandi, who finished 11th, 12 minutes and 40 seconds behind the winner.
In the late 1980s the team became a more prominent presence in the peloton. One of its successful riders was Rolf Sørensen who won Paris–Tours in 1990 and the Tirreno–Adriatico of 1992. Moreno Argentin won the team its first "monument", the 1990 Tour of Flanders, followed by a victory at the La Flèche Wallonne. 1990 also saw the team's first Tour de France stage win (Argentin) and two more Girostages (Adriano Baffi).
In 1991, Argentin scored another double in Belgium, with wins in La Flèche Wallonne and Liège–Bastogne–Liège. Davide Cassani won three major classics in Italy (Milano–Torino, Giro dell'Emilia and Coppa Agostoni), while Massimiliano Lelli won two Giro stages - finishing third overall. More success followed at the Tour de France as stage wins for Bruno Cenghialta, Argentin and Marco Lietti registered a Tour triple triumph on consecutive days. That followed a team time trial win on Stage 2 into Chassieu that put Rolf Sørensen in the yellow jersey as leader of the general classification for four days.
Ariostea dominated the 1992 Tirreno–Adriatico with five stage wins and the general classification (Sørensen). Giorgio Furlan won the Tour de Suisse, Rolf Gölz the Tour Méditerranéen. There was another stage win in the Giro, this time for Marco Saligari. Roberto Conti finished 9th in the general classification.
In 1993, its final year, Ariostea was victorious in the Amstel Gold Race (Rolf Järmann). Bjarne Riis won a Giro stage and placed 5th in the general classification in the Tour de France. Saligari also won a stage in the Giro, and was the winner that year's Tour de Suisse. By far the most successful rider of the team this year was Pascal Richard of Switzerland. He won the Giro del Lazio, Giro di Lombardia, the Tour de Romandie and a handful of stages and one day races throughout the year. In the team's final race, the 1993 Giro di Lombardia, Ariostea riders Pascal Richard and Giorgio Furlan finished first and second, breaking away for the final 6 miles of the race.
Team manager Ferretti and a number of riders went to the next year.
Major results
1985
Overall Giro di Puglia, Silvano Contini
Overall GP du Midi-Libre, Silvano Contini
Stage 1, Silvano Contini
Coppa Placci, Silvano Contini
1986
Stage 1 Giro d'Italia, Sergio Santimaria
Stage 15 Giro d'Italia, Dag Erik Pedersen
1987
Stage 8 Tour de Suisse, Alessandro Paganessi
1988
Stage 6 Settimana Siciliana, Rolf Sørensen
Stage 3 Giro d'Italia, Stephan Joho
Stages 1 & 9 Tour de Suisse, Stephan Joho
Stage 7 Tour de Suisse, Francesco Cesarini
Stage 1b Zürich, Stephan Joho
Stage 4 Tour of Denmark, Rolf Sørensen
Overall Schwanenbrau Cup, Bruno Cenghialta
Stage 2, Rolf Sørensen
1989
Giro di Campania, Luciano Rabottini
Stage 7a Paris–Nice, Adriano Baffi
Stages 2 & 3 Driedaagse van De Panne, Adriano Baffi
GP Pino Cerami, Stephan Joho
Stage 6 Giro d'Italia, Stephan Joho
Winterthur Criterium, Stephan Joho
Coppa Bernocchi, Rolf Sørensen
Omloop van de Vlasstreek, Rolf Sørensen
Six Days of Zürich, Adriano Baffi
1990
Overall Settimana Siciliana, Rolf Sørensen
Stage 1, Rolf Sørensen
Stage 5, Adriano Baffi
Trofeo Laigueglia, Rolf Sørensen
Stage 5 Paris–Nice, Adriano Baffi
Giro dei Sei Comuni, Stephan Joho
Tour of Flanders, Moreno Argentin
La Flèche Wallonne, Moreno Argentin
Stage 2 Giro del Trentino, Adriano Baffi
Stages 11 & 18 Giro d'Italia, Adriano Baffi
Stage 9 Tour de Suisse, Moreno Argentin
Stage 3 Tour de France, Moreno Argentin
Stage 2 Tour of Belgium, Adriano Baffi
Stage 5b Tour of Belgium, Stephan Joho
Coppa Bernocchi, Davide Cassani
Stage 6 Volta a Catalunya, Marco Lietti
Overall Schwanenbrau Cup, Stephan Joho
Stage 3, Stephan Joho
Giro dell'Emilia, Davide Cassani
Coppa Sabatini, Moreno Argentin
Paris–Tours, Rolf Sørensen
1991
La Flèche Wallonne, Moreno Argentin
Liège–Bastogne–Liège, Moreno Argentin
Young rider classification Giro d'Italia, Massimiliano Lelli
Stage 8, Davide Cassani
Stages 12 & 16, Massimiliano Lelli
Stage 9 Tour de Suisse, Rolf Sørensen
Stage 2 (TTT) Tour de France
Stage 14 Tour de France, Bruno Cenghialta
Stage 15 Tour de France, Moreno Argentin
Stage 16 Tour de France, Marco Lietti
Coppa Bernocchi, Giorgio Furlan
Coppa Agostoni, Davide Cassani
Giro dell'Emilia, Davide Cassani
Milano–Torino, Davide Cassani
1992
Overall Tour Méditerranéen, Rolf Gölz
Stages 1 & 5, Rolf Gölz
Giro di Campania, Davide Cassani
Stage 8 Paris–Nice, Adriano Baffi
Stage 2 Critérium International, Giorgio Furlan
La Flèche Wallonne, Giorgio Furlan
Overall Giro di Calabria, Marco Saligari
Overall Hofbrau Cup, Alberto Elli
Stage 2, Alberto Elli
Stage 3a, Rolf Sørensen
Stage 13 Giro d'Italia, Giorgio Furlan
Stage 15 Giro d'Italia, Marco Saligari
Stage 4 Tour de Luxembourg, Alberto Elli
Overall Tour de Suisse, Giorgio Furlan
Stage 2, Giorgio Furlan
Stage 12 Tour de France, Rolf Järmann
Paris–Brussel, Rolf Sørensen
Linz Criterium, Adriano Baffi
1993
Stage 1 Critérium International, Pascal Richard
Stage 9 Settimana Ciclistica Lombarda, Fabio Casartelli
Amstel Gold Race, Rolf Järmann
GP Industria & Artigianato, Marco Saligari
Overall Tour de Romandie, Pascal Richard
Stage 3, Pascal Richard
Stage 7 Giro d'Italia, Bjarne Riis
Stage 9 Giro d'Italia, Giorgio Furlan
Stage 15 Giro d'Italia, Davide Cassani
Stage 17 Giro d'Italia, Marco Saligari
Overall Tour de Suisse, Marco Saligari
Stage 2, Giorgio Furlan
Stage 7 , Rolf Järmann
Stage 8, Pascal Richard
Stage 7 Tour de France, Bjarne Riis
Coppa Agostoni, Davide Cassani
Giro di Lombardia, Pascal Richard
References
External links
Defunct cycling teams based in Italy
Cycling teams based in Italy
Cycling teams established in 1984
Cycling teams disestablished in 1993
|
```yaml
models:
- columns:
- name: id
tests:
- unique
- not_null
- relationships:
field: id
to: ref('node_0')
name: node_1691
version: 2
```
|
Turpilia is a genus of phaneropterine katydids in the family Tettigoniidae. There are about nine described species in Turpilia.
Species
These nine species belong to the genus Turpilia:
Turpilia albineura Zayas, 1965
Turpilia appendiculata Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1878
Turpilia obtusangula Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1878
Turpilia opaca Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1878
Turpilia plana (Walker, 1869)
Turpilia punctata Stål, 1874
Turpilia rostrata (Rehn & Hebard, 1905) (narrow-beaked katydid)
Turpilia rugulosa Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1878
Turpilia vigens (Walker, 1869)
References
Further reading
Phaneropterinae
Articles created by Qbugbot
|
Tregorrick () is a hamlet south of St Austell in mid Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.
The hamlet was part of the Penrice estate and today consists of some 52 dwellings and has a population of approximately 65 people.
There is some evidence of tin smelting at the bottom of the village near the river and Pentewan road. Several of the houses in the hamlet are constructed in cob and are some 300 years old. There are some 15 houses which were built in the 1960s. The village is dissected by a series of footpaths and narrow lanes.
There are no shops, church or pub in the village; however, there is a strong tradition of self-reliance, barter and community action.
References
Hamlets in Cornwall
|
```javascript
// CodeMirror, copyright (c) by Marijn Haverbeke and others
// Distributed under an MIT license: path_to_url
/*
* This file is part of Moeditor.
*
*
* Moeditor is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* Moeditor is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
*
* along with Moeditor. If not, see <path_to_url
*/
(function(mod) {
if (typeof exports == "object" && typeof module == "object") // CommonJS
mod(require("../../../node_modules/codemirror/lib/codemirror"), require("../../../node_modules/codemirror/mode/xml/xml"), require("../../../node_modules/codemirror/mode/meta"));
else if (typeof define == "function" && define.amd) // AMD
define(["../../../node_modules/codemirror/lib/codemirror", "../../../node_modules/codemirror/mode/xml/xml", "../../../node_modules/codemirror/mode/meta"], mod);
else // Plain browser env
mod(CodeMirror);
})(function(CodeMirror) {
"use strict";
CodeMirror.defineMode("markdown_math", function(cmCfg, modeCfg) {
var htmlMode = CodeMirror.getMode(cmCfg, "text/html");
var htmlModeMissing = htmlMode.name == "null"
function getMode(name) {
if (CodeMirror.findModeByName) {
var found = CodeMirror.findModeByName(name);
if (found) name = found.mime || found.mimes[0];
}
var mode = CodeMirror.getMode(cmCfg, name);
return mode.name == "null" ? null : mode;
}
// Should characters that affect highlighting be highlighted separate?
// Does not include characters that will be output (such as `1.` and `-` for lists)
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting === undefined)
modeCfg.highlightFormatting = false;
// Maximum number of nested blockquotes. Set to 0 for infinite nesting.
// Excess `>` will emit `error` token.
if (modeCfg.maxBlockquoteDepth === undefined)
modeCfg.maxBlockquoteDepth = 0;
// Should underscores in words open/close em/strong?
if (modeCfg.underscoresBreakWords === undefined)
modeCfg.underscoresBreakWords = true;
// Use `fencedCodeBlocks` to configure fenced code blocks. false to
// disable, string to specify a precise regexp that the fence should
// match, and true to allow three or more backticks or tildes (as
// per CommonMark).
// Turn on task lists? ("- [ ] " and "- [x] ")
if (modeCfg.taskLists === undefined) modeCfg.taskLists = false;
// Turn on strikethrough syntax
if (modeCfg.strikethrough === undefined)
modeCfg.strikethrough = false;
// Allow token types to be overridden by user-provided token types.
if (modeCfg.tokenTypeOverrides === undefined)
modeCfg.tokenTypeOverrides = {};
var tokenTypes = {
header: "header",
code: "comment",
math: "math",
quote: "quote",
list1: "variable-2",
list2: "variable-3",
list3: "keyword",
hr: "hr",
image: "image",
imageAltText: "image-alt-text",
imageMarker: "image-marker",
formatting: "formatting",
linkInline: "link",
linkEmail: "link",
linkText: "link",
linkHref: "string",
em: "em",
strong: "strong",
strikethrough: "strikethrough"
};
for (var tokenType in tokenTypes) {
if (tokenTypes.hasOwnProperty(tokenType) && modeCfg.tokenTypeOverrides[tokenType]) {
tokenTypes[tokenType] = modeCfg.tokenTypeOverrides[tokenType];
}
}
var hrRE = /^([*\-_])(?:\s*\1){2,}\s*$/
, ulRE = /^[*\-+]\s+/
, olRE = /^[0-9]+([.)])\s+/
, taskListRE = /^\[(x| )\](?=\s)/ // Must follow ulRE or olRE
, atxHeaderRE = modeCfg.allowAtxHeaderWithoutSpace ? /^(#+)/ : /^(#+)(?: |$)/
, setextHeaderRE = /^ *(?:\={1,}|-{1,})\s*$/
, textRE = /^[^#!\[\]*_\\<>\$` "'(~]+/
, fencedCodeRE = new RegExp("^(" + (modeCfg.fencedCodeBlocks === true ? "~~~+|```+" : modeCfg.fencedCodeBlocks) +
")[ \\t]*([\\w+#\-]*)");
function switchInline(stream, state, f) {
state.f = state.inline = f;
return f(stream, state);
}
function switchBlock(stream, state, f) {
state.f = state.block = f;
return f(stream, state);
}
function lineIsEmpty(line) {
return !line || !/\S/.test(line.string)
}
// Blocks
function blankLine(state) {
// Reset linkTitle state
state.linkTitle = false;
// Reset EM state
state.em = false;
// Reset STRONG state
state.strong = false;
// Reset strikethrough state
state.strikethrough = false;
// Reset state.quote
state.quote = 0;
// Reset state.indentedCode
state.indentedCode = false;
if (htmlModeMissing && state.f == htmlBlock) {
state.f = inlineNormal;
state.block = blockNormal;
}
// Reset state.trailingSpace
state.trailingSpace = 0;
state.trailingSpaceNewLine = false;
// Mark this line as blank
state.prevLine = state.thisLine
state.thisLine = null
return null;
}
function blockNormal(stream, state) {
var sol = stream.sol();
var prevLineIsList = state.list !== false,
prevLineIsIndentedCode = state.indentedCode;
state.indentedCode = false;
if (prevLineIsList) {
if (state.indentationDiff >= 0) { // Continued list
if (state.indentationDiff < 4) { // Only adjust indentation if *not* a code block
state.indentation -= state.indentationDiff;
}
state.list = null;
} else if (state.indentation > 0) {
state.list = null;
} else { // No longer a list
state.list = false;
}
}
var match = null;
if (state.indentationDiff >= 4) {
stream.skipToEnd();
if (prevLineIsIndentedCode || lineIsEmpty(state.prevLine)) {
state.indentation -= 4;
state.indentedCode = true;
return tokenTypes.code;
} else {
return null;
}
} else if (stream.eatSpace()) {
return null;
} else if ((match = stream.match(atxHeaderRE)) && match[1].length <= 6) {
state.header = match[1].length;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "header";
state.f = state.inline;
return getType(state);
} else if (!lineIsEmpty(state.prevLine) && !state.quote && !prevLineIsList &&
!prevLineIsIndentedCode && (match = stream.match(setextHeaderRE))) {
state.header = match[0].charAt(0) == '=' ? 1 : 2;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "header";
state.f = state.inline;
return getType(state);
} else if (stream.eat('>')) {
state.quote = sol ? 1 : state.quote + 1;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "quote";
stream.eatSpace();
return getType(state);
} else if (stream.peek() === '[') {
return switchInline(stream, state, footnoteLink);
} else if (stream.match(hrRE, true)) {
state.hr = true;
return tokenTypes.hr;
} else if ((lineIsEmpty(state.prevLine) || prevLineIsList) && (stream.match(ulRE, false) || stream.match(olRE, false))) {
var listType = null;
if (stream.match(ulRE, true)) {
listType = 'ul';
} else {
stream.match(olRE, true);
listType = 'ol';
}
state.indentation = stream.column() + stream.current().length;
state.list = true;
// While this list item's marker's indentation
// is less than the deepest list item's content's indentation,
// pop the deepest list item indentation off the stack.
while (state.listStack && stream.column() < state.listStack[state.listStack.length - 1]) {
state.listStack.pop();
}
// Add this list item's content's indentation to the stack
state.listStack.push(state.indentation);
if (modeCfg.taskLists && stream.match(taskListRE, false)) {
state.taskList = true;
}
state.f = state.inline;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = ["list", "list-" + listType];
return getType(state);
} else if (modeCfg.fencedCodeBlocks && (match = stream.match(fencedCodeRE, true))) {
state.fencedChars = match[1]
// try switching mode
state.localMode = getMode(match[2]);
if (state.localMode) state.localState = CodeMirror.startState(state.localMode);
state.f = state.block = local;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "code-block";
state.code = -1
return getType(state);
}
return switchInline(stream, state, state.inline);
}
function htmlBlock(stream, state) {
var style = htmlMode.token(stream, state.htmlState);
if (!htmlModeMissing) {
var inner = CodeMirror.innerMode(htmlMode, state.htmlState)
if ((inner.mode.name == "xml" && inner.state.tagStart === null &&
(!inner.state.context && inner.state.tokenize.isInText)) ||
(state.md_inside && stream.current().indexOf(">") > -1)) {
state.f = inlineNormal;
state.block = blockNormal;
state.htmlState = null;
}
}
return style;
}
function local(stream, state) {
if (state.fencedChars && stream.match(state.fencedChars, false)) {
state.localMode = state.localState = null;
state.f = state.block = leavingLocal;
return null;
} else if (state.localMode) {
return state.localMode.token(stream, state.localState);
} else {
stream.skipToEnd();
return tokenTypes.code;
}
}
function leavingLocal(stream, state) {
stream.match(state.fencedChars);
state.block = blockNormal;
state.f = inlineNormal;
state.fencedChars = null;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "code-block";
state.code = 1
var returnType = getType(state);
state.code = 0
return returnType;
}
// Inline
function getType(state) {
var styles = [];
if (state.formatting) {
styles.push(tokenTypes.formatting);
if (typeof state.formatting === "string") state.formatting = [state.formatting];
for (var i = 0; i < state.formatting.length; i++) {
styles.push(tokenTypes.formatting + "-" + state.formatting[i]);
if (state.formatting[i] === "header") {
styles.push(tokenTypes.formatting + "-" + state.formatting[i] + "-" + state.header);
}
// Add `formatting-quote` and `formatting-quote-#` for blockquotes
// Add `error` instead if the maximum blockquote nesting depth is passed
if (state.formatting[i] === "quote") {
if (!modeCfg.maxBlockquoteDepth || modeCfg.maxBlockquoteDepth >= state.quote) {
styles.push(tokenTypes.formatting + "-" + state.formatting[i] + "-" + state.quote);
} else {
styles.push("error");
}
}
}
}
if (state.taskOpen) {
styles.push("meta");
return styles.length ? styles.join(' ') : null;
}
if (state.taskClosed) {
styles.push("property");
return styles.length ? styles.join(' ') : null;
}
if (state.linkHref) {
styles.push(tokenTypes.linkHref, "url");
} else { // Only apply inline styles to non-url text
if (state.strong) { styles.push(tokenTypes.strong); }
if (state.em) { styles.push(tokenTypes.em); }
if (state.strikethrough) { styles.push(tokenTypes.strikethrough); }
if (state.linkText) { styles.push(tokenTypes.linkText); }
if (state.code) { styles.push(tokenTypes.code); }
if (state.math) { styles.push(tokenTypes.math); }
if (state.image) { styles.push(tokenTypes.image); }
if (state.imageAltText) { styles.push(tokenTypes.imageAltText, "link"); }
if (state.imageMarker) { styles.push(tokenTypes.imageMarker); }
}
if (state.header) { styles.push(tokenTypes.header, tokenTypes.header + "-" + state.header); }
if (state.quote) {
styles.push(tokenTypes.quote);
// Add `quote-#` where the maximum for `#` is modeCfg.maxBlockquoteDepth
if (!modeCfg.maxBlockquoteDepth || modeCfg.maxBlockquoteDepth >= state.quote) {
styles.push(tokenTypes.quote + "-" + state.quote);
} else {
styles.push(tokenTypes.quote + "-" + modeCfg.maxBlockquoteDepth);
}
}
if (state.list !== false) {
var listMod = (state.listStack.length - 1) % 3;
if (!listMod) {
styles.push(tokenTypes.list1);
} else if (listMod === 1) {
styles.push(tokenTypes.list2);
} else {
styles.push(tokenTypes.list3);
}
}
if (state.trailingSpaceNewLine) {
styles.push("trailing-space-new-line");
} else if (state.trailingSpace) {
styles.push("trailing-space-" + (state.trailingSpace % 2 ? "a" : "b"));
}
return styles.length ? styles.join(' ') : null;
}
function handleText(stream, state) {
if (stream.match(textRE, true)) {
return getType(state);
}
return undefined;
}
function inlineNormal(stream, state) {
var style = state.text(stream, state);
if (typeof style !== 'undefined')
return style;
if (state.list) { // List marker (*, +, -, 1., etc)
state.list = null;
return getType(state);
}
if (state.taskList) {
var taskOpen = stream.match(taskListRE, true)[1] !== "x";
if (taskOpen) state.taskOpen = true;
else state.taskClosed = true;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "task";
state.taskList = false;
return getType(state);
}
state.taskOpen = false;
state.taskClosed = false;
if (state.header && stream.match(/^#+$/, true)) {
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "header";
return getType(state);
}
// Get sol() value now, before character is consumed
var sol = stream.sol();
var ch = stream.next();
// Matches link titles present on next line
if (state.linkTitle) {
state.linkTitle = false;
var matchCh = ch;
if (ch === '(') {
matchCh = ')';
}
matchCh = (matchCh+'').replace(/([.?*+^$[\]\\(){}|-])/g, "\\$1");
var regex = '^\\s*(?:[^' + matchCh + '\\\\]+|\\\\\\\\|\\\\.)' + matchCh;
if (stream.match(new RegExp(regex), true)) {
return tokenTypes.linkHref;
}
}
// If this block is changed, it may need to be updated in GFM mode
if (ch === '`') {
var previousFormatting = state.formatting;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "code";
stream.eatWhile('`');
var count = stream.current().length
if (state.code == 0) {
state.code = count
return getType(state)
} else if (count == state.code) { // Must be exact
var t = getType(state)
state.code = 0
return t
} else {
state.formatting = previousFormatting
return getType(state)
}
} else if (state.code) {
return getType(state);
}
// Inline / display math
if (ch === '$') {
var previousFormatting = state.formatting;
state.formatting = "math";
stream.eatWhile('$');
var count = stream.current().length
if (state.math == 0) {
state.math = count
return getType(state)
} else if (count == state.math) { // Must be exact
var t = getType(state)
state.math = 0
return t
} else {
state.formatting = previousFormatting
return getType(state)
}
} else if (state.math) {
return getType(state);
}
if (ch === '\\') {
stream.next();
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) {
var type = getType(state);
var formattingEscape = tokenTypes.formatting + "-escape";
return type ? type + " " + formattingEscape : formattingEscape;
}
}
if (ch === '!' && stream.match(/\[[^\]]*\] ?(?:\(|\[)/, false)) {
state.imageMarker = true;
state.image = true;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "image";
return getType(state);
}
if (ch === '[' && state.imageMarker) {
state.imageMarker = false;
state.imageAltText = true
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "image";
return getType(state);
}
if (ch === ']' && state.imageAltText) {
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "image";
var type = getType(state);
state.imageAltText = false;
state.image = false;
state.inline = state.f = linkHref;
return type;
}
if (ch === '[' && stream.match(/[^\]]*\](\(.*\)| ?\[.*?\])/, false) && !state.image) {
state.linkText = true;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "link";
return getType(state);
}
if (ch === ']' && state.linkText && stream.match(/\(.*?\)| ?\[.*?\]/, false)) {
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "link";
var type = getType(state);
state.linkText = false;
state.inline = state.f = linkHref;
return type;
}
if (ch === '<' && stream.match(/^(https?|ftps?):\/\/(?:[^\\>]|\\.)+>/, false)) {
state.f = state.inline = linkInline;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "link";
var type = getType(state);
if (type){
type += " ";
} else {
type = "";
}
return type + tokenTypes.linkInline;
}
if (ch === '<' && stream.match(/^[^> \\]+@(?:[^\\>]|\\.)+>/, false)) {
state.f = state.inline = linkInline;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "link";
var type = getType(state);
if (type){
type += " ";
} else {
type = "";
}
return type + tokenTypes.linkEmail;
}
if (ch === '<' && stream.match(/^(!--|\w)/, false)) {
var end = stream.string.indexOf(">", stream.pos);
if (end != -1) {
var atts = stream.string.substring(stream.start, end);
if (/markdown\s*=\s*('|"){0,1}1('|"){0,1}/.test(atts)) state.md_inside = true;
}
stream.backUp(1);
state.htmlState = CodeMirror.startState(htmlMode);
return switchBlock(stream, state, htmlBlock);
}
if (ch === '<' && stream.match(/^\/\w*?>/)) {
state.md_inside = false;
return "tag";
}
var ignoreUnderscore = false;
if (!modeCfg.underscoresBreakWords) {
if (ch === '_' && stream.peek() !== '_' && stream.match(/(\w)/, false)) {
var prevPos = stream.pos - 2;
if (prevPos >= 0) {
var prevCh = stream.string.charAt(prevPos);
if (prevCh !== '_' && prevCh.match(/(\w)/, false)) {
ignoreUnderscore = true;
}
}
}
}
if (ch === '*' || (ch === '_' && !ignoreUnderscore)) {
if (sol && stream.peek() === ' ') {
// Do nothing, surrounded by newline and space
} else if (state.strong === ch && stream.eat(ch)) { // Remove STRONG
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "strong";
var t = getType(state);
state.strong = false;
return t;
} else if (!state.strong && stream.eat(ch)) { // Add STRONG
state.strong = ch;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "strong";
return getType(state);
} else if (state.em === ch) { // Remove EM
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "em";
var t = getType(state);
state.em = false;
return t;
} else if (!state.em) { // Add EM
state.em = ch;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "em";
return getType(state);
}
} else if (ch === ' ') {
if (stream.eat('*') || stream.eat('_')) { // Probably surrounded by spaces
if (stream.peek() === ' ') { // Surrounded by spaces, ignore
return getType(state);
} else { // Not surrounded by spaces, back up pointer
stream.backUp(1);
}
}
}
if (modeCfg.strikethrough) {
if (ch === '~' && stream.eatWhile(ch)) {
if (state.strikethrough) {// Remove strikethrough
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "strikethrough";
var t = getType(state);
state.strikethrough = false;
return t;
} else if (stream.match(/^[^\s]/, false)) {// Add strikethrough
state.strikethrough = true;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "strikethrough";
return getType(state);
}
} else if (ch === ' ') {
if (stream.match(/^~~/, true)) { // Probably surrounded by space
if (stream.peek() === ' ') { // Surrounded by spaces, ignore
return getType(state);
} else { // Not surrounded by spaces, back up pointer
stream.backUp(2);
}
}
}
}
if (ch === ' ') {
if (stream.match(/ +$/, false)) {
state.trailingSpace++;
} else if (state.trailingSpace) {
state.trailingSpaceNewLine = true;
}
}
return getType(state);
}
function linkInline(stream, state) {
var ch = stream.next();
if (ch === ">") {
state.f = state.inline = inlineNormal;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "link";
var type = getType(state);
if (type){
type += " ";
} else {
type = "";
}
return type + tokenTypes.linkInline;
}
stream.match(/^[^>]+/, true);
return tokenTypes.linkInline;
}
function linkHref(stream, state) {
// Check if space, and return NULL if so (to avoid marking the space)
if(stream.eatSpace()){
return null;
}
var ch = stream.next();
if (ch === '(' || ch === '[') {
state.f = state.inline = getLinkHrefInside(ch === "(" ? ")" : "]", 0);
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "link-string";
state.linkHref = true;
return getType(state);
}
return 'error';
}
var linkRE = {
")": /^(?:[^\\\(\)]|\\.|\((?:[^\\\(\)]|\\.)*\))*?(?=\))/,
"]": /^(?:[^\\\[\]]|\\.|\[(?:[^\\\[\\]]|\\.)*\])*?(?=\])/
}
function getLinkHrefInside(endChar) {
return function(stream, state) {
var ch = stream.next();
if (ch === endChar) {
state.f = state.inline = inlineNormal;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "link-string";
var returnState = getType(state);
state.linkHref = false;
return returnState;
}
stream.match(linkRE[endChar])
state.linkHref = true;
return getType(state);
};
}
function footnoteLink(stream, state) {
if (stream.match(/^([^\]\\]|\\.)*\]:/, false)) {
state.f = footnoteLinkInside;
stream.next(); // Consume [
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "link";
state.linkText = true;
return getType(state);
}
return switchInline(stream, state, inlineNormal);
}
function footnoteLinkInside(stream, state) {
if (stream.match(/^\]:/, true)) {
state.f = state.inline = footnoteUrl;
if (modeCfg.highlightFormatting) state.formatting = "link";
var returnType = getType(state);
state.linkText = false;
return returnType;
}
stream.match(/^([^\]\\]|\\.)+/, true);
return tokenTypes.linkText;
}
function footnoteUrl(stream, state) {
// Check if space, and return NULL if so (to avoid marking the space)
if(stream.eatSpace()){
return null;
}
// Match URL
stream.match(/^[^\s]+/, true);
// Check for link title
if (stream.peek() === undefined) { // End of line, set flag to check next line
state.linkTitle = true;
} else { // More content on line, check if link title
stream.match(/^(?:\s+(?:"(?:[^"\\]|\\\\|\\.)+"|'(?:[^'\\]|\\\\|\\.)+'|\((?:[^)\\]|\\\\|\\.)+\)))?/, true);
}
state.f = state.inline = inlineNormal;
return tokenTypes.linkHref + " url";
}
var mode = {
startState: function() {
return {
f: blockNormal,
prevLine: null,
thisLine: null,
block: blockNormal,
htmlState: null,
indentation: 0,
inline: inlineNormal,
text: handleText,
formatting: false,
linkText: false,
linkHref: false,
linkTitle: false,
code: 0,
math: 0,
em: false,
strong: false,
header: 0,
hr: false,
taskList: false,
list: false,
listStack: [],
quote: 0,
trailingSpace: 0,
trailingSpaceNewLine: false,
strikethrough: false,
fencedChars: null
};
},
copyState: function(s) {
return {
f: s.f,
prevLine: s.prevLine,
thisLine: s.thisLine,
block: s.block,
htmlState: s.htmlState && CodeMirror.copyState(htmlMode, s.htmlState),
indentation: s.indentation,
localMode: s.localMode,
localState: s.localMode ? CodeMirror.copyState(s.localMode, s.localState) : null,
inline: s.inline,
text: s.text,
formatting: false,
linkTitle: s.linkTitle,
code: s.code,
math: s.math,
em: s.em,
strong: s.strong,
strikethrough: s.strikethrough,
header: s.header,
hr: s.hr,
taskList: s.taskList,
list: s.list,
listStack: s.listStack.slice(0),
quote: s.quote,
indentedCode: s.indentedCode,
trailingSpace: s.trailingSpace,
trailingSpaceNewLine: s.trailingSpaceNewLine,
md_inside: s.md_inside,
fencedChars: s.fencedChars
};
},
token: function(stream, state) {
// Reset state.formatting
state.formatting = false;
if (stream != state.thisLine) {
var forceBlankLine = state.header || state.hr;
// Reset state.header and state.hr
state.header = 0;
state.hr = false;
if (stream.match(/^\s*$/, true) || forceBlankLine) {
blankLine(state);
if (!forceBlankLine) return null
state.prevLine = null
}
state.prevLine = state.thisLine
state.thisLine = stream
// Reset state.taskList
state.taskList = false;
// Reset state.trailingSpace
state.trailingSpace = 0;
state.trailingSpaceNewLine = false;
state.f = state.block;
var indentation = stream.match(/^\s*/, true)[0].replace(/\t/g, ' ').length;
state.indentationDiff = Math.min(indentation - state.indentation, 4);
state.indentation = state.indentation + state.indentationDiff;
if (indentation > 0) return null;
}
return state.f(stream, state);
},
innerMode: function(state) {
if (state.block == htmlBlock) return {state: state.htmlState, mode: htmlMode};
if (state.localState) return {state: state.localState, mode: state.localMode};
return {state: state, mode: mode};
},
blankLine: blankLine,
getType: getType,
fold: "markdown"
};
return mode;
}, "xml");
CodeMirror.defineMIME("text/x-markdown_math", "markdown_math");
});
```
|
The Hecht Company Warehouse in Washington, D.C. is a Streamline Moderne style building. Designed by engineer Gilbert V. Steel of the New York engineering firm Abbott and Merkt, and prominently located on New York Avenue in Ivy City, it served as the central warehouse for The Hecht Company from its construction in 1937 and expansion in 1948. The building uses glass block extensively, culminating in a twelve-pointed star-shaped cupola at the corner, which is illuminated at night. Black brick interspersed with glass block spells out "The Hecht Co" at the fifth floor.
At its opening, the building featured an in-house vehicle repair shop, air conditioning for the basement and first two floors, and three railroad track platforms.
A careful rehabilitation was carried out in 1992, using matching materials. The site and surrounding area are currently under redevelopment to turn the building into a mixed-use retail and residential complex called the Hecht Warehouse District.
See also
Woodward & Lothrop Service Warehouse
References
Warehouses in the United States
Industrial buildings completed in 1937
Industrial buildings and structures on the National Register of Historic Places in Washington, D.C.
Warehouses on the National Register of Historic Places
Art Deco architecture in Washington, D.C.
Streamline Moderne architecture in Washington, D.C.
|
```objective-c
/*
* uriparser - RFC 3986 URI parsing library
*
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
*
* * Redistributions of source code must retain the above
* copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
* disclaimer.
*
* * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
* copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
* disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials
* provided with the distribution.
*
* * Neither the name of the <ORGANIZATION> nor the names of its
* contributors may be used to endorse or promote products
* derived from this software without specific prior written
* permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
* "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
* LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
* FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
* COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
* INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
* (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
* SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
* STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
* ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED
* OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
/**
* @file UriIp4.h
* Holds the IPv4 parser interface.
* NOTE: This header includes itself twice.
*/
#if (defined(URI_PASS_ANSI) && !defined(URI_IP4_TWICE_H_ANSI)) \
|| (defined(URI_PASS_UNICODE) && !defined(URI_IP4_TWICE_H_UNICODE)) \
|| (!defined(URI_PASS_ANSI) && !defined(URI_PASS_UNICODE))
/* What encodings are enabled? */
#include "UriDefsConfig.h"
#if (!defined(URI_PASS_ANSI) && !defined(URI_PASS_UNICODE))
/* Include SELF twice */
# ifdef URI_ENABLE_ANSI
# define URI_PASS_ANSI 1
# include "UriIp4.h"
# undef URI_PASS_ANSI
# endif
# ifdef URI_ENABLE_UNICODE
# define URI_PASS_UNICODE 1
# include "UriIp4.h"
# undef URI_PASS_UNICODE
# endif
/* Only one pass for each encoding */
#elif (defined(URI_PASS_ANSI) && !defined(URI_IP4_TWICE_H_ANSI) \
&& defined(URI_ENABLE_ANSI)) || (defined(URI_PASS_UNICODE) \
&& !defined(URI_IP4_TWICE_H_UNICODE) && defined(URI_ENABLE_UNICODE))
# ifdef URI_PASS_ANSI
# define URI_IP4_TWICE_H_ANSI 1
# include "UriDefsAnsi.h"
# else
# define URI_IP4_TWICE_H_UNICODE 1
# include "UriDefsUnicode.h"
# include <wchar.h>
# endif
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
#ifndef URI_DOXYGEN
# include "UriBase.h"
#endif
/**
* Converts a IPv4 text representation into four bytes.
*
* @param octetOutput Output destination
* @param first First character of IPv4 text to parse
* @param afterLast Position to stop parsing at
* @return Error code or 0 on success
*/
URI_PUBLIC int URI_FUNC(ParseIpFourAddress)(unsigned char * octetOutput,
const URI_CHAR * first, const URI_CHAR * afterLast);
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
#endif
#endif
```
|
```java
package com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.core.redis.rdb.parser;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.AbstractTest;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.api.utils.ControllableFile;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.core.redis.operation.RedisOp;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.core.redis.rdb.RdbParseListener;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.core.redis.rdb.RdbParser;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.utils.DefaultControllableFile;
import io.netty.buffer.ByteBuf;
import io.netty.buffer.Unpooled;
import org.junit.Before;
import org.junit.Test;
import java.io.File;
import java.nio.ByteBuffer;
import java.util.Map;
/**
* @author lishanglin
* date 2022/6/14
*/
public class ManualRdbParseTest extends AbstractTest implements RdbParseListener {
private String filePath = "/Users/ccsa/prog/demo/redis-test/redis6379/data/dump6379.rdb";
private DefaultRdbParser rdbParser;
@Before
public void setupManualRdbParseTest() {
rdbParser = new DefaultRdbParser();
rdbParser.registerListener(this);
rdbParser.needFinishNotify(true);
}
@Test
public void parseRdbFileTest() throws Exception {
File file = new File(filePath);
if (!file.exists() || !file.isFile()) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("file not exist or not file");
}
ControllableFile controllableFile = new DefaultControllableFile(file);
ByteBuf byteBuf = null;
controllableFile.getFileChannel().position(0);
while (controllableFile.size() > controllableFile.getFileChannel().position()) {
ByteBuffer cmdBuffer = ByteBuffer.allocateDirect(512);
byteBuf = Unpooled.wrappedBuffer(cmdBuffer);
controllableFile.getFileChannel().read(cmdBuffer);
if (cmdBuffer.position() < cmdBuffer.capacity()) {
byteBuf.capacity(cmdBuffer.position());
}
rdbParser.read(byteBuf);
}
}
@Override
public void onRedisOp(RedisOp redisOp) {
logger.info("[onRedisOp] {}", redisOp);
}
@Override
public void onAux(String key, String value) {
logger.info("[onAux] {} {}", key, value);
}
@Override
public void onFinish(RdbParser<?> parser) {
logger.info("[onFinish] {}", parser);
}
@Override
public void onAuxFinish(Map<String, String> auxMap) {
logger.info("[onAuxFinish] {}", auxMap);
}
}
```
|
Clifford Smith may refer to:
Clifford Smith (director) (1894-1937), American film director
Clifford V. Smith, Jr. (born 1931), chancellor of University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, 1986–1990
Clifford Smith (cricketer) (1902–1959), English cricketer
Method Man, rapper Clifford Smith Jr. (born 1971)
Mr. Vegas, Jamaican dancehall star Clifford Smith (born 1974)
See also
Cliff Smith (disambiguation)
Clifford Smyth (born 1934), historian and politician
|
Hughes de Beaumont (26 October 1874 – 6 June 1947) was a French painter and engraver of genre, portraits, landscapes and still lifes.
Beaumont studied under Albert Mangan and Theobald Chartran, and then under Gustave Moreau between 1892 and 1898. He exhibited at the Salon of French artists in Paris 1892 and 1945; and at the Salon of the Societe Nationale des Beaux-Arts in Paris 1902. He has exhibited in Barcelona in 1912, Chicago in 1919, Wiesbaden in 1920, 1926 in Amsterdam, Brussels and 1928 in Tokyo. He was awarded the Légion d'honneur in 1930, and had two retrospective of his works were presented in Paris in 1927 and 1945.
Beaumont produced work in the "intimiste" style which often depicted bourgeois settings. The term was coined by Édouard Vuillard who used it to describe his own style. Other practitioners include Maurice Lobre, René Georges Hermann-Paul, Henri Matisse, Rene Prinet and Ernest Laurent. The Intimists first collective exhibition was shown at Henry Grave's galleries in 1905. The exhibition included several works by Hughes de Beaumont.
He was known for his figure scenes and portraits of wealthy people, but also depicted landscapes and still lifes. Beaumont used a sombre palette for his still-life, usually consisting of a green and blue colour scheme, with the paint applied in an expressionistic way, on the small lightweight wooden panel. His impasto and broad brushstrokes gives the paintings a forceful and intense impact on the viewer.
Beaumont's works have been exhibited and collected by major museums and galleries throughout the world, including:
Aix-en-Provence - Musée Granet
Boston - Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Cork - Crawford Art Gallery
Glasgow - Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum
Lyon - Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon
Montpellier - Musée Fabre
Paris - Musée du Luxembourg
Tours - Musée des Beaux-Arts de Tours
References
19th-century French painters
19th-century French male artists
French male painters
20th-century French painters
20th-century French male artists
1874 births
1947 deaths
|
```go
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
// of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
// in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
// to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
// copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
// furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
// all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
// IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
// AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
// LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
// OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
// THE SOFTWARE.
package segment
import (
"errors"
"github.com/m3db/m3/src/m3ninx/doc"
"github.com/m3db/m3/src/m3ninx/index"
"github.com/m3db/m3/src/m3ninx/postings"
)
// ErrClosed is the error returned when attempting to perform operations on a
// segment that has already been closed.
var ErrClosed = errors.New("segment has been closed")
// Segment is a sub-collection of documents within an index.
type Segment interface {
// FieldsIterable returns an iterable fields, for which is not
// safe for concurrent use. For concurrent use call FieldsIterable
// multiple times.
FieldsIterable() FieldsIterable
// TermsIterable returns an iterable terms, for which is not
// safe for concurrent use. For concurrent use call TermsIterable
// multiple times.
TermsIterable() TermsIterable
// Size returns the number of documents within the Segment. It returns
// 0 if the Segment has been closed.
Size() int64
// ContainsID returns a bool indicating if the Segment contains the provided ID.
ContainsID(docID []byte) (bool, error)
// ContainsField returns a bool indicating if the Segment contains the provided field.
ContainsField(field []byte) (bool, error)
// Reader returns a point-in-time accessor to search the segment.
Reader() (Reader, error)
// Close closes the segment and releases any internal resources.
Close() error
}
// Reader extends index reader interface to allow for reading
// of fields and terms.
type Reader interface {
index.Reader
FieldsIterable
TermsIterable
FieldsPostingsListIterable
// ContainsField returns a bool indicating if the Segment contains the provided field.
ContainsField(field []byte) (bool, error)
}
// FieldsIterable can iterate over segment fields, it is not by default
// concurrency safe.
type FieldsIterable interface {
// Fields returns an iterator over the list of known fields, in order
// by name, it is not valid for reading after mutating the
// builder by inserting more documents.
Fields() (FieldsIterator, error)
}
// FieldsPostingsListIterable can iterate over segment fields/postings lists, it is not by default
// concurrency safe.
type FieldsPostingsListIterable interface {
// Fields returns an iterator over the list of known fields, in order
// by name, it is not valid for reading after mutating the
// builder by inserting more documents.
FieldsPostingsList() (FieldsPostingsListIterator, error)
}
// TermsIterable can iterate over segment terms, it is not by default
// concurrency safe.
type TermsIterable interface {
// Terms returns an iterator over the known terms values for the given
// field, in order by name, it is not valid for reading after mutating the
// builder by inserting more documents.
Terms(field []byte) (TermsIterator, error)
}
// OrderedBytesIterator iterates over a collection of []bytes in lexicographical order.
type OrderedBytesIterator interface {
// Next returns a bool indicating if there are any more elements.
Next() bool
// Current returns the current element.
// NB: the element returned is only valid until the subsequent call to Next().
Current() []byte
// Err returns any errors encountered during iteration.
Err() error
// Close releases any resources held by the iterator.
Close() error
}
// FieldsPostingsListIterator iterates over all known fields.
type FieldsPostingsListIterator interface {
Iterator
// Current returns the current field and associated postings list.
// NB: the field returned is only valid until the subsequent call to Next().
Current() ([]byte, postings.List)
}
// FieldsIterator iterates over all known fields.
type FieldsIterator interface {
Iterator
// Current returns the current field.
// NB: the field returned is only valid until the subsequent call to Next().
Current() []byte
// Empty returns true if there are no fields in the iterator.
Empty() bool
}
// TermsIterator iterates over all known terms for the provided field.
type TermsIterator interface {
Iterator
// Current returns the current element.
// NB: the element returned is only valid until the subsequent call to Next().
Current() (term []byte, postings postings.List)
// Empty returns true if there are no terms.
Empty() bool
}
// Iterator holds common iterator methods.
type Iterator interface {
// Next returns a bool indicating if there are any more elements.
Next() bool
// Err returns any errors encountered during iteration.
Err() error
// Close releases any resources held by the iterator.
Close() error
}
// MutableSegment is a segment which can be updated.
type MutableSegment interface {
Segment
DocumentsBuilder
// Fields returns an iterator over the list of known fields, in order
// by name, it is not valid for reading after mutating the
// builder by inserting more documents.
Fields() (FieldsIterator, error)
// Seal marks the Mutable Segment immutable.
Seal() error
// IsSealed returns true iff the segment is open and un-sealed.
IsSealed() bool
}
// ImmutableSegment is segment that has been written to disk.
type ImmutableSegment interface {
Segment
FreeMmap() error
}
// Builder is a builder that can be used to construct segments.
type Builder interface {
FieldsPostingsListIterable
TermsIterable
// Reset resets the builder for reuse.
Reset()
// Docs returns the current docs slice, this is not safe to modify
// and is invalidated on a call to reset.
Docs() []doc.Metadata
// AllDocs returns an iterator over the documents known to the Reader.
AllDocs() (index.IDDocIterator, error)
}
// DocumentsBuilder is a builder that has documents written to it.
type DocumentsBuilder interface {
Builder
index.Writer
// SetIndexConcurrency sets the concurrency used for building the segment.
SetIndexConcurrency(value int)
// IndexConcurrency returns the concurrency used for building the segment.
IndexConcurrency() int
}
// CloseableDocumentsBuilder is a builder that has documents written to it and has freeable resources.
type CloseableDocumentsBuilder interface {
DocumentsBuilder
Close() error
}
// SegmentsBuilder is a builder that is built from segments.
type SegmentsBuilder interface {
Builder
// SetFilter sets a filter on which documents to retain
// when building the segment.
SetFilter(keep DocumentsFilter)
// AddSegments adds segments to build from.
AddSegments(segments []Segment) error
// SegmentMetadatas returns the segment builder segment metadata.
SegmentMetadatas() ([]SegmentsBuilderSegmentMetadata, error)
}
// SegmentsBuilderSegmentMetadata is a set of metadata about a segment
// that was used to build a compacted segment.
type SegmentsBuilderSegmentMetadata struct {
Segment Segment
Offset postings.ID
// NegativeOffsets is a lookup of document IDs are duplicates or should be skipped,
// that is documents that are already contained by other segments or should
// not be included in the output segment and hence should not be returned
// when looking up documents. If this is the case offset is -1.
// If a document ID is not a duplicate or skipped then the offset is
// the shift that should be applied when translating this postings ID
// to the result postings ID.
NegativeOffsets []int64
Skips int64
}
// DocumentsFilter is a documents filter.
type DocumentsFilter interface {
// Contains is true if the document passes the filter.
ContainsDoc(d doc.Metadata) bool
// OnDuplicateDoc is a callback for when a duplicate document is
// encountered which is then removed from the resulting segment.
OnDuplicateDoc(d doc.Metadata)
}
```
|
```objective-c
#pragma once
#include <arm_neon.h>
#include "VecTools.h"
#if defined(__arm__)
#define FASTSIMD_USE_ARMV7
#endif
namespace FastSIMD
{
struct NEON_i32x4
{
FASTSIMD_INTERNAL_TYPE_SET( NEON_i32x4, int32x4_t );
FS_INLINE static NEON_i32x4 Zero()
{
return vdupq_n_s32( 0 );
}
FS_INLINE static NEON_i32x4 Incremented()
{
alignas(16) const int32_t f[4]{ 0, 1, 2, 3 };
return vld1q_s32( f );
}
FS_INLINE explicit NEON_i32x4( int32_t i )
{
*this = vdupq_n_s32( i );
}
FS_INLINE explicit NEON_i32x4( int32_t i0, int32_t i1, int32_t i2, int32_t i3 )
{
alignas(16) const int32_t f[4]{ i0, i1, i2, i3 };
*this = vld1q_s32( f );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4& operator+=( const NEON_i32x4& rhs )
{
*this = vaddq_s32( *this, rhs );
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4& operator-=( const NEON_i32x4& rhs )
{
*this = vsubq_s32( *this, rhs );
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4& operator*=( const NEON_i32x4& rhs )
{
*this = vmulq_s32( *this, rhs );
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4& operator&=( const NEON_i32x4& rhs )
{
*this = vandq_s32( *this, rhs );
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4& operator|=( const NEON_i32x4& rhs )
{
*this = vorrq_s32( *this, rhs );
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4& operator^=( const NEON_i32x4& rhs )
{
*this = veorq_s32( *this, rhs );
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4& operator>>=( const int32_t rhs )
{
int32x4_t rhs2 = vdupq_n_s32( -rhs );
*this = vshlq_s32(*this, rhs2);//use shift right by constant for faster execution
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4& operator<<=( const int32_t rhs )
{
int32x4_t rhs2 = vdupq_n_s32( rhs );
*this = vshlq_s32(*this, rhs2);//use shift left by constant for faster execution
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator~() const
{
return vmvnq_s32( *this );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator-() const
{
return vnegq_s32( *this );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator<( const NEON_i32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcltq_s32( *this, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator>( const NEON_i32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcgtq_s32( *this, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator<=( const NEON_i32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcleq_s32( *this, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator>=( const NEON_i32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcgeq_s32( *this, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator!=( const NEON_i32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vmvnq_u32 (vceqq_s32( *this, b ) ) );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator==( const NEON_i32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vceqq_s32( *this, b ) );
}
};
FASTSIMD_INTERNAL_OPERATORS_INT( NEON_i32x4, int32_t )
struct NEON_f32x4
{
FASTSIMD_INTERNAL_TYPE_SET( NEON_f32x4, float32x4_t );
FS_INLINE static NEON_f32x4 Zero()
{
return vdupq_n_f32( 0 );
}
FS_INLINE static NEON_f32x4 Incremented()
{
alignas(16) const float f[4]{ 0.0f, 1.0f, 2.0f, 3.0f };
return vld1q_f32( f );
}
FS_INLINE explicit NEON_f32x4( float f )
{
*this = vdupq_n_f32( f );
}
FS_INLINE explicit NEON_f32x4( float f0, float f1, float f2, float f3 )
{
alignas(16) const float f[4]{ f0, f1, f2, f3 };
*this = vld1q_f32( f );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_f32x4& operator+=( const NEON_f32x4& rhs )
{
*this = vaddq_f32( *this, rhs );
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_f32x4& operator-=( const NEON_f32x4& rhs )
{
*this = vsubq_f32( *this, rhs );
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_f32x4& operator*=( const NEON_f32x4& rhs )
{
*this = vmulq_f32( *this, rhs );
return *this;
}
#ifdef FASTSIMD_USE_ARMV7
FS_INLINE NEON_f32x4& operator/=( const NEON_f32x4& rhs )
{
float32x4_t reciprocal = vrecpeq_f32( rhs );
// use a couple Newton-Raphson steps to refine the estimate. Depending on your
// application's accuracy requirements, you may be able to get away with only
// one refinement (instead of the two used here). Be sure to test!
reciprocal = vmulq_f32( vrecpsq_f32( rhs, reciprocal ), reciprocal );
reciprocal = vmulq_f32( vrecpsq_f32( rhs, reciprocal ), reciprocal );
// and finally, compute a/b = a*(1/b)
*this = vmulq_f32( *this, reciprocal );
return *this;
}
#else
FS_INLINE NEON_f32x4& operator/=( const NEON_f32x4& rhs )
{
/*
float32x4_t reciprocal = vrecpeq_f32( rhs );
reciprocal = vmulq_f32( vrecpsq_f32( rhs, reciprocal ), reciprocal );
reciprocal = vmulq_f32( vrecpsq_f32( rhs, reciprocal ), reciprocal );
*this = vmulq_f32( *this, reciprocal );
*/
*this = vdivq_f32( *this, rhs );
return *this;
}
#endif
FS_INLINE NEON_f32x4& operator&=( const NEON_f32x4& rhs )
{
*this = vreinterpretq_f32_s32( vandq_s32( vreinterpretq_s32_f32( *this ), vreinterpretq_s32_f32( rhs ) ) );
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_f32x4& operator|=( const NEON_f32x4& rhs )
{
*this = vreinterpretq_f32_s32( vorrq_s32( vreinterpretq_s32_f32( *this ), vreinterpretq_s32_f32( rhs ) ) );
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_f32x4& operator^=( const NEON_f32x4& rhs )
{
*this = vreinterpretq_f32_s32( veorq_s32( vreinterpretq_s32_f32( *this ), vreinterpretq_s32_f32( rhs ) ) );
return *this;
}
FS_INLINE NEON_f32x4 operator-() const
{
return vnegq_f32( *this );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_f32x4 operator~() const
{
return vreinterpretq_f32_u32( vmvnq_u32( vreinterpretq_u32_f32(*this) ) );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator<( const NEON_f32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcltq_f32( *this, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator>( const NEON_f32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcgtq_f32( *this, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator<=( const NEON_f32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcleq_f32( *this, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator>=( const NEON_f32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcgeq_f32( *this, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator!=( const NEON_f32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vmvnq_u32 (vceqq_f32( *this, b ) ) );
}
FS_INLINE NEON_i32x4 operator==( const NEON_f32x4 &b ) const
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vceqq_f32( *this, b ) );
}
};
FASTSIMD_INTERNAL_OPERATORS_FLOAT( NEON_f32x4 )
template<eLevel LEVEL_T>
class NEON_T
{
public:
static constexpr eLevel SIMD_Level = FastSIMD::Level_NEON;
template<size_t ElementSize>
static constexpr size_t VectorSize = (128 / 8) / ElementSize;
typedef NEON_f32x4 float32v;
typedef NEON_i32x4 int32v;
typedef NEON_i32x4 mask32v;
FS_INLINE static float32v Load_f32( void const* p )
{
return vld1q_f32( reinterpret_cast<float const*>(p) );
}
FS_INLINE static int32v Load_i32( void const* p )
{
return vld1q_s32( reinterpret_cast<int32_t const*>(p) );
}
// Store
FS_INLINE static void Store_f32( void* p, float32v a )
{
vst1q_f32( reinterpret_cast<float*>(p), a );
}
FS_INLINE static void Store_i32( void* p, int32v a )
{
vst1q_s32( reinterpret_cast<int32_t*>(p), a );
}
// Cast
FS_INLINE static float32v Casti32_f32( int32v a )
{
return vreinterpretq_f32_s32( a );
}
FS_INLINE static int32v Castf32_i32( float32v a )
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_f32( a );
}
// Convert
FS_INLINE static float32v Converti32_f32( int32v a )
{
return vcvtq_f32_s32( a );
}
FS_INLINE static int32v Convertf32_i32( float32v a )
{
return vcvtq_s32_f32( Round_f32(a) );
}
// Comparisons
FS_INLINE static mask32v Equal_f32( float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vceqq_f32( a, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE static mask32v GreaterThan_f32( float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcgtq_f32( a, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE static mask32v LessThan_f32( float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcltq_f32( a, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE static mask32v GreaterEqualThan_f32( float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcgeq_f32( a, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE static mask32v LessEqualThan_f32( float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcleq_f32( a, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE static mask32v Equal_i32( int32v a, int32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vceqq_s32( a, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE static mask32v GreaterThan_i32( int32v a, int32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcgtq_s32( a, b ) );
}
FS_INLINE static mask32v LessThan_i32( int32v a, int32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32( vcltq_s32( a, b ) );
}
// Select
FS_INLINE static float32v Select_f32( mask32v m, float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vbslq_f32( vreinterpretq_u32_s32( m ), a, b );
}
FS_INLINE static int32v Select_i32( mask32v m, int32v a, int32v b )
{
return vbslq_s32( vreinterpretq_u32_s32( m ), a, b );
}
// Min, Max
FS_INLINE static float32v Min_f32( float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vminq_f32( a, b );
}
FS_INLINE static float32v Max_f32( float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vmaxq_f32( a, b );
}
FS_INLINE static int32v Min_i32( int32v a, int32v b )
{
return vminq_s32( a, b );
}
FS_INLINE static int32v Max_i32( int32v a, int32v b )
{
return vmaxq_s32( a, b );
}
// Bitwise
FS_INLINE static float32v BitwiseAnd_f32( float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_f32_u32( vandq_u32( vreinterpretq_u32_f32( a ), vreinterpretq_u32_f32( b ) ) );
}
/*
FS_INLINE static float32v BitwiseOr_f32( float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_f32_u32( vorrq_u32( vreinterpretq_u32_f32( a ), vreinterpretq_u32_f32( b ) ) );
}
FS_INLINE static float32v BitwiseXor_f32( float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_f32_u32( veorq_u32( vreinterpretq_u32_f32( a ), vreinterpretq_u32_f32( b ) ) );
}
FS_INLINE static float32v BitwiseNot_f32( float32v a )
{
return vreinterpretq_f32_u32( vmvnq_u32( vreinterpretq_u32_f32( a ) ) );
}
*/
FS_INLINE static float32v BitwiseAndNot_f32( float32v a, float32v b )
{
return vreinterpretq_f32_u32( vandq_u32( vreinterpretq_u32_f32( a ), vmvnq_u32( vreinterpretq_u32_f32( b ) ) ) );
}
FS_INLINE static int32v BitwiseAndNot_i32( int32v a, int32v b )
{
return vandq_s32( a , vmvnq_s32( b ) );
}
// Abs
FS_INLINE static float32v Abs_f32( float32v a )
{
return vabsq_f32( a );
}
FS_INLINE static int32v Abs_i32( int32v a )
{
return vabsq_s32( a );
}
FS_INLINE static float32v InvSqrt_f32( float32v a )
{
return vrsqrteq_f32( a );
}
// Floor, Ceil, Round:
#ifdef FASTSIMD_USE_ARMV7
FS_INLINE static float32v IntFloor_f32(float32v a)
{
static const float32x4_t cmpval = vcvtq_f32_s32( vdupq_n_s32( 0x7FFFFFFF ) );
uint32x4_t cmp1 = vcagtq_f32( a, cmpval );
uint32x4_t cmp2 = vcaleq_f32( a, cmpval );
float32x4_t tr = vcvtq_f32_s32( vcvtq_s32_f32( a ) );
uint32x4_t xcmp1 = vandq_u32(cmp1, vreinterpretq_u32_f32( a ) );
uint32x4_t xcmp2 = vandq_u32(cmp2, vreinterpretq_u32_f32( tr ) );
uint32x4_t res0 = vorrq_u32( xcmp1, xcmp2 );
float32x4_t res1 = vreinterpretq_f32_u32( res0 );
return res1;
}
FS_INLINE static float32v Floor_f32(float32v a)
{
static const float32x4_t zerox = vdupq_n_f32( 0 );
float32x4_t ifl = IntFloor_f32(a);
uint32x4_t cond1 = vmvnq_u32(vceqq_f32(a, ifl));
uint32x4_t cond2 = vcltq_f32(a, zerox);
uint32x4_t cmpmask = vandq_u32(cond1, cond2);
float32x4_t addx = vcvtq_f32_s32( vreinterpretq_s32_u32(cmpmask) );
float32x4_t ret0 = vaddq_f32(ifl, addx);
return ret0;
}
FS_INLINE static float32v Ceil_f32(float32v a)
{
static const float32x4_t zerox = vdupq_n_f32( 0 );
float32x4_t ifl = IntFloor_f32(a);
uint32x4_t cond1 = vmvnq_u32(vceqq_f32(a, ifl));
uint32x4_t cond2 = vcgeq_f32(a, zerox);
uint32x4_t cmpmask = vandq_u32(cond1, cond2);
float32x4_t addx = vcvtq_f32_s32( vreinterpretq_s32_u32(cmpmask) );
float32x4_t ret0 = vsubq_f32(ifl, addx);
return ret0;
}
FS_INLINE static float32v Round_f32(float32v a)
{
static const float32x4_t zerox = vdupq_n_f32( 0 );
static const float32x4_t halfx = vdupq_n_f32( 0.5f );
static const float32x4_t onex = vdupq_n_f32( 1.0f );
float32x4_t a2 = vaddq_f32(vabsq_f32(a), halfx);
float32x4_t ifl = IntFloor_f32(a2);
uint32x4_t cmpmask = vcltq_f32(a, zerox);
float32x4_t rhs = vcvtq_f32_s32( vreinterpretq_s32_u32(cmpmask) );
float32x4_t rhs2 = vaddq_f32(vmulq_n_f32(rhs, 2.0f), onex);
return vmulq_f32(ifl, rhs2);
}
FS_INLINE static float32v Sqrt_f32( float32v a )
{
return Reciprocal_f32(InvSqrt_f32(a));
}
#else
FS_INLINE static float32v Floor_f32( float32v a )
{
return vrndmq_f32( a );
}
FS_INLINE static float32v Ceil_f32( float32v a )
{
return vrndpq_f32( a );
}
FS_INLINE static float32v Round_f32( float32v a )
{
return vrndnq_f32( a );
}
FS_INLINE static float32v Sqrt_f32( float32v a )
{
return vsqrtq_f32( a );
}
#endif
// Mask
FS_INLINE static int32v Mask_i32( int32v a, mask32v m )
{
return a & m;
}
FS_INLINE static int32v NMask_i32( int32v a, mask32v m )
{
return BitwiseAndNot_i32(a, m);
}
FS_INLINE static float32v Mask_f32( float32v a, mask32v m )
{
return BitwiseAnd_f32( a, vreinterpretq_f32_s32( m ) );
}
FS_INLINE static float32v NMask_f32( float32v a, mask32v m )
{
return BitwiseAndNot_f32( a, vreinterpretq_f32_s32( m ) );
}
FS_INLINE static float Extract0_f32( float32v a )
{
return vgetq_lane_f32(a, 0);
}
FS_INLINE static int32_t Extract0_i32( int32v a )
{
return vgetq_lane_s32(a, 0);
}
FS_INLINE static float32v Reciprocal_f32( float32v a )
{
return vrecpeq_f32( a );
}
FS_INLINE static float32v BitwiseShiftRightZX_f32( float32v a, int32_t b )
{
int32x4_t rhs2 = vdupq_n_s32( -b );
return vreinterpretq_f32_u32 ( vshlq_u32( vreinterpretq_u32_f32(a), rhs2) );
}
FS_INLINE static int32v BitwiseShiftRightZX_i32( int32v a, int32_t b )
{
int32x4_t rhs2 = vdupq_n_s32( -b );
return vreinterpretq_s32_u32 (vshlq_u32( vreinterpretq_u32_s32(a), rhs2));
}
FS_INLINE static bool AnyMask_bool( mask32v m )
{
uint32x2_t tmp = vorr_u32(vget_low_u32(vreinterpretq_u32_s32(m)), vget_high_u32(vreinterpretq_u32_s32(m)));
return vget_lane_u32(vpmax_u32(tmp, tmp), 0);
}
};
#if FASTSIMD_COMPILE_NEON
typedef NEON_T<Level_NEON> NEON;
#endif
}
```
|
Thomas Younger Baird (January 27, 1885 – July 2, 1962) was an American baseball executive who served as the vice-president, co-owner, and eventual sole-owner of the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro leagues. Baird was associated with the Monarchs, and their founder and owner J. L. Wilkinson, from 1919 to 1955. Wilkinson sold the Monarchs to Baird in 1948, and Baird sold the team in 1955 to Ted Rasberry.
Early life
Baird was born in Madison County, Arkansas, and moved to Kansas City as a teen living in Argentine, Kansas. Baird played semipro baseball until he received two fractures in his legs working for Rock Island Railroad, leaving him with a permanent limp. After his athletic career was cut short, Baird turned to entrepreneurship, opening a pool hall and bowling alley before starting the Monarchs in 1919.
Ku Klux Klan
There is significant evidence to support that T.Y. Baird was a member of the Ku Klux Klan. The name T. Baird appears on a list of Klansmen in the papers of Kansas governor Henry Justin Allen. Allen led a crusade against the Klan, ultimately resulting in a state-wide organizational ban in 1927. Research by historian Timothy Rives found that Thomas Baird was the only adult man living in Wyandotte County, Kansas with this name.
According to census data and personal papers combined with Allen's list, Baird had personal, social, business and political ties to Klansmen in both Kansas City, Kansas and Kansas City, Missouri. Baird owned the building at 17th and Central where both Wyandotte Klan No. 5 and women's auxiliary Kamelia Kourt Klan were headquartered. The names of Baird's family members, neighbors, employees, dentist, family doctor, and real estate agent all appear on Allen's list.
References
External links
Tom Baird at Arkansas Baseball Encyclopedia
1885 births
1962 deaths
Negro league baseball executives
Kansas City Monarchs
American Ku Klux Klan members
|
This is a list of seasons completed by the Sheffield Steelers ice hockey team, presently of the British Elite League. This list documents the season-by-season records of the Sheffield Steelers from their inaugural season in 1991–92 to the present day. Since achieving promotion to the Premier League in 1993, the Steelers have become one of the most successful teams in the history of British ice hockey winning a total of 19 major titles.
The Steelers have won 7 league titles, in 1994–95, 1995–96, 2000–01, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2008–09, 2010–11 8 British Championships, in 1994–95, 1995–96, 1996–97, 2000–01, 2001–02, 2003–04, 2007–08 and 2008–09; 2 Autumn Cup titles, in 1995–96 and 2000–01; and four Challenge Cups, in 1998–99, 1999–00, 2000–01 and 2002–03. 20–20 Hockey Fest 2009. In addition, the club has appeared in five other cup finals. The Steelers have completed the Grand Slam of all trophies available during a season twice, in 1995–96 and 2000–01.
Footnotes
References
The Internet Hockey Database
Hockey Results & Tables - Malcolm Preen
Steelers Statistics Website
Sheffield Steelers
|
```c++
// or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
// distributed with this work for additional information
// regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
//
// path_to_url
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
// "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
// specific language governing permissions and limitations
#include "rpc/authentication-util.h"
#include <gutil/strings/escaping.h>
#include <gutil/strings/util.h>
#include <gutil/strings/split.h>
#include <gutil/strings/strcat.h>
#include <gutil/strings/strip.h>
#include "kudu/util/net/sockaddr.h"
#include "util/network-util.h"
#include "util/openssl-util.h"
#include "util/string-parser.h"
DEFINE_bool(cookie_require_secure, true,
"(Advanced) If true, authentication cookies will include the 'Secure' attribute, "
"indicating to clients that they should only be returned over SSL connections. For "
"testing only.");
DEFINE_int64(max_cookie_lifetime_s, 24 * 60 * 60,
"Maximum amount of time in seconds that an authentication cookie will remain valid. "
"Setting to 0 disables use of cookies. Defaults to 1 day.");
DEFINE_bool(samesite_strict, false,
"(Advanced) If true, authentication cookies will include SameSite=Strict.");
using namespace strings;
namespace impala {
// Used to separate values in cookies. All generated cookies will be of the form:
// <signature>&u=<username>&t=<timestamp>&r=<random number>
// This format was chosen to imitate the cookie format used by other Hadoop system such as
// Hive in order to facilitate interoperability with systems like Knox. See for example:
// service/src/java/org/apache/hive/service/auth/HttpAuthUtils.java in Hive
static const string COOKIE_SEPARATOR = "&";
static const string USERNAME_KEY = "u=";
static const string TIMESTAMP_KEY = "t=";
static const string RAND_KEY = "r=";
// Cookies generated and processed by the HTTP server will be of the form:
// COOKIE_NAME=<cookie>
static const string COOKIE_NAME = "impala.auth";
// The maximum lenth for the base64 encoding of a SHA256 hash.
static const int SHA256_BASE64_LEN =
CalculateBase64EscapedLen(AuthenticationHash::HashLen(), /* do_padding */ true);
// Since we only return cookies with a single name, well behaved clients should only ever
// return one cookie to us. To accommodate non-malicious but poorly behaved clients, we
// allow for checking a limited number of cookies, up to MAX_COOKIES_TO_CHECK or until we
// find the first one with COOKIE_NAME.
static const int MAX_COOKIES_TO_CHECK = 5;
Status AuthenticateCookie(
const AuthenticationHash& hash, const string& cookie_header,
string* username, string* rand) {
// The 'Cookie' header allows sending multiple name/value pairs separated by ';'.
vector<string> cookies = strings::Split(cookie_header, ";");
if (cookies.size() > MAX_COOKIES_TO_CHECK) {
LOG(WARNING) << "Received cookie header with large number of cookies: "
<< cookie_header << ". Only checking the first " << MAX_COOKIES_TO_CHECK
<< " cookies.";
}
for (int i = 0; i < cookies.size() && i < MAX_COOKIES_TO_CHECK; ++i) {
string cookie_pair = cookies[i];
StripWhiteSpace(&cookie_pair);
string cookie;
if (!TryStripPrefixString(cookie_pair, StrCat(COOKIE_NAME, "="), &cookie)) {
continue;
}
if (cookie[0] == '"' && cookie[cookie.length() - 1] == '"') {
cookie = cookie.substr(1, cookie.length() - 2);
}
// Split the cookie into the signature and the cookie value.
vector<string> cookie_split = Split(cookie, delimiter::Limit(COOKIE_SEPARATOR, 1));
if (cookie_split.size() != 2) {
return Status("The cookie has an invalid format.");
}
const string& base64_signature = cookie_split[0];
const string& cookie_value = cookie_split[1];
string signature;
if (!WebSafeBase64Unescape(base64_signature, &signature)) {
return Status("Unable to decode base64 signature.");
}
if (signature.length() != AuthenticationHash::HashLen()) {
return Status("Signature is an incorrect length.");
}
bool verified = hash.Verify(reinterpret_cast<const uint8_t*>(cookie_value.data()),
cookie_value.length(), reinterpret_cast<const uint8_t*>(signature.data()));
if (!verified) {
return Status("The signature is incorrect.");
}
// Split the cookie value into username, timestamp, and random number.
vector<string> cookie_value_split = Split(cookie_value, COOKIE_SEPARATOR);
if (cookie_value_split.size() != 3) {
return Status("The cookie value has an invalid format.");
}
string timestamp;
if (!TryStripPrefixString(cookie_value_split[1], TIMESTAMP_KEY, ×tamp)) {
return Status("The cookie timestamp value has an invalid format.");
}
StringParser::ParseResult result;
int64_t create_time = StringParser::StringToInt<int64_t>(
timestamp.c_str(), timestamp.length(), &result);
if (result != StringParser::PARSE_SUCCESS) {
return Status("Could not parse cookie timestamp.");
}
// Check that the timestamp contained in the cookie is recent enough for the cookie
// to still be valid.
if (MonotonicMillis() - create_time <= FLAGS_max_cookie_lifetime_s * 1000) {
if (!TryStripPrefixString(cookie_value_split[0], USERNAME_KEY, username)) {
return Status("The cookie username value has an invalid format.");
}
if (rand != nullptr) {
if (!TryStripPrefixString(cookie_value_split[2], RAND_KEY, rand)) {
return Status("The cookie rand value has an invalid format.");
}
}
// We've successfully authenticated.
return Status::OK();
} else {
return Status("Cookie is past its max lifetime.");
}
}
return Status(Substitute("Did not find expected cookie name: $0", COOKIE_NAME));
}
string GenerateCookie(const string& username, const AuthenticationHash& hash,
std::string* srand) {
// Its okay to use rand() here even though its a weak RNG because being able to guess
// the random numbers generated won't help an attacker. The important thing is that
// we're using a strong RNG to create the key and a strong HMAC function.
int cookie_rand = rand();
string cookie_rand_s = std::to_string(cookie_rand);
if (srand != nullptr) {
*srand = cookie_rand_s;
}
string cookie_value = StrCat(USERNAME_KEY, username, COOKIE_SEPARATOR, TIMESTAMP_KEY,
MonotonicMillis(), COOKIE_SEPARATOR, RAND_KEY, cookie_rand_s);
uint8_t signature[AuthenticationHash::HashLen()];
Status compute_status =
hash.Compute(reinterpret_cast<const uint8_t*>(cookie_value.data()),
cookie_value.length(), signature);
if (!compute_status.ok()) {
LOG(ERROR) << "Failed to compute cookie signature: " << compute_status;
return "";
}
DCHECK_EQ(SHA256_BASE64_LEN, 44);
char base64_signature[SHA256_BASE64_LEN + 1];
WebSafeBase64Escape(signature, AuthenticationHash::HashLen(), base64_signature,
SHA256_BASE64_LEN, /* do_padding */ true);
base64_signature[SHA256_BASE64_LEN] = '\0';
const char* secure_flag = FLAGS_cookie_require_secure ? ";Secure" : "";
const char* samesite_flag = FLAGS_samesite_strict ? ";SameSite=Strict" : "";
// Add SameSite=Strict to notify the browser it should avoid sending the cookie with
// requests from other domains.
return Substitute("$0=$1$2$3;HttpOnly;Max-Age=$4$5$6", COOKIE_NAME, base64_signature,
COOKIE_SEPARATOR, cookie_value, FLAGS_max_cookie_lifetime_s, secure_flag,
samesite_flag);
}
string GetDeleteCookie() {
return Substitute("$0=;HttpOnly;Max-Age=0", COOKIE_NAME);
}
bool IsTrustedDomain(const std::string& origin, const std::string& trusted_domain,
bool strict_localhost) {
if (trusted_domain.empty()) return false;
vector<string> split = Split(origin, delimiter::Limit(",", 1));
if (split.empty()) return false;
kudu::Sockaddr sock_addr = kudu::Sockaddr::Wildcard();
kudu::Status s = sock_addr.ParseString(split[0], 0);
string host_name;
if (!s.ok()) {
VLOG(2) << "Origin address did not parse as a valid IP address. Assuming it to be a "
"domain name. Reason: " << s.ToString();
// Remove port if its a part of the origin.
vector<string> host_n_port = Split(split[0], delimiter::Limit(":", 1));
host_name = host_n_port[0];
} else {
// If using strict localhost checks, only allow localhost to match 127.0.0.1
if (trusted_domain == "localhost" && strict_localhost) {
return sock_addr.host() == "127.0.0.1";
}
s = sock_addr.LookupHostname(&host_name);
if (!s.ok()) {
LOG(ERROR) << "DNS reverse-lookup failed for " << split[0]
<< " Error: " << s.ToString();
return false;
}
}
return HasSuffixString(host_name, trusted_domain);
}
Status BasicAuthExtractCredentials(
const string& token, string& username, string& password) {
if (token.empty()) {
return Status::Expected("Empty token");
}
string decoded;
if (!Base64Unescape(token, &decoded)) {
return Status::Expected("Failed to decode base64 basic authentication token.");
}
std::size_t colon = decoded.find(':');
if (colon == std::string::npos) {
return Status::Expected("Invalid basic authentication token format, must be in the "
"form '<username>:<password>'");
}
username = decoded.substr(0, colon);
password = decoded.substr(colon + 1);
return Status::OK();
}
} // namespace impala
```
|
```c
/* ripemd.c
*
*
* This file is part of wolfSSL.
*
* wolfSSL is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* wolfSSL is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
*
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1335, USA
*/
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#include <config.h>
#endif
#include <wolfssl/wolfcrypt/settings.h>
#ifdef WOLFSSL_RIPEMD
#include <wolfssl/wolfcrypt/ripemd.h>
#ifdef NO_INLINE
#include <wolfssl/wolfcrypt/misc.h>
#else
#define WOLFSSL_MISC_INCLUDED
#include <wolfcrypt/src/misc.c>
#endif
#include <wolfssl/wolfcrypt/error-crypt.h>
int wc_InitRipeMd(RipeMd* ripemd)
{
if (ripemd == NULL) {
return BAD_FUNC_ARG;
}
ripemd->digest[0] = 0x67452301L;
ripemd->digest[1] = 0xEFCDAB89L;
ripemd->digest[2] = 0x98BADCFEL;
ripemd->digest[3] = 0x10325476L;
ripemd->digest[4] = 0xC3D2E1F0L;
ripemd->buffLen = 0;
ripemd->loLen = 0;
ripemd->hiLen = 0;
return 0;
}
/* for all */
#define F(x, y, z) (x ^ y ^ z)
#define G(x, y, z) (z ^ (x & (y^z)))
#define H(x, y, z) (z ^ (x | ~y))
#define I(x, y, z) (y ^ (z & (x^y)))
#define J(x, y, z) (x ^ (y | ~z))
#define k0 0
#define k1 0x5a827999
#define k2 0x6ed9eba1
#define k3 0x8f1bbcdc
#define k4 0xa953fd4e
#define k5 0x50a28be6
#define k6 0x5c4dd124
#define k7 0x6d703ef3
#define k8 0x7a6d76e9
#define k9 0
/* for 160 and 320 */
#define Subround(f, a, b, c, d, e, x, s, k) \
a += f(b, c, d) + x + k;\
a = rotlFixed((word32)a, s) + e;\
c = rotlFixed((word32)c, 10U)
static void Transform(RipeMd* ripemd)
{
word32 a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2;
a1 = a2 = ripemd->digest[0];
b1 = b2 = ripemd->digest[1];
c1 = c2 = ripemd->digest[2];
d1 = d2 = ripemd->digest[3];
e1 = e2 = ripemd->digest[4];
Subround(F, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[ 0], 11, k0);
Subround(F, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[ 1], 14, k0);
Subround(F, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[ 2], 15, k0);
Subround(F, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 3], 12, k0);
Subround(F, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[ 4], 5, k0);
Subround(F, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[ 5], 8, k0);
Subround(F, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[ 6], 7, k0);
Subround(F, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[ 7], 9, k0);
Subround(F, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 8], 11, k0);
Subround(F, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[ 9], 13, k0);
Subround(F, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[10], 14, k0);
Subround(F, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[11], 15, k0);
Subround(F, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[12], 6, k0);
Subround(F, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[13], 7, k0);
Subround(F, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[14], 9, k0);
Subround(F, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[15], 8, k0);
Subround(G, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[ 7], 7, k1);
Subround(G, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[ 4], 6, k1);
Subround(G, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[13], 8, k1);
Subround(G, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[ 1], 13, k1);
Subround(G, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[10], 11, k1);
Subround(G, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[ 6], 9, k1);
Subround(G, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[15], 7, k1);
Subround(G, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 3], 15, k1);
Subround(G, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[12], 7, k1);
Subround(G, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[ 0], 12, k1);
Subround(G, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[ 9], 15, k1);
Subround(G, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[ 5], 9, k1);
Subround(G, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 2], 11, k1);
Subround(G, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[14], 7, k1);
Subround(G, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[11], 13, k1);
Subround(G, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[ 8], 12, k1);
Subround(H, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[ 3], 11, k2);
Subround(H, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[10], 13, k2);
Subround(H, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[14], 6, k2);
Subround(H, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[ 4], 7, k2);
Subround(H, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[ 9], 14, k2);
Subround(H, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[15], 9, k2);
Subround(H, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 8], 13, k2);
Subround(H, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[ 1], 15, k2);
Subround(H, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[ 2], 14, k2);
Subround(H, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[ 7], 8, k2);
Subround(H, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[ 0], 13, k2);
Subround(H, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 6], 6, k2);
Subround(H, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[13], 5, k2);
Subround(H, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[11], 12, k2);
Subround(H, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[ 5], 7, k2);
Subround(H, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[12], 5, k2);
Subround(I, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 1], 11, k3);
Subround(I, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[ 9], 12, k3);
Subround(I, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[11], 14, k3);
Subround(I, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[10], 15, k3);
Subround(I, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[ 0], 14, k3);
Subround(I, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 8], 15, k3);
Subround(I, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[12], 9, k3);
Subround(I, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[ 4], 8, k3);
Subround(I, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[13], 9, k3);
Subround(I, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[ 3], 14, k3);
Subround(I, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 7], 5, k3);
Subround(I, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[15], 6, k3);
Subround(I, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[14], 8, k3);
Subround(I, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[ 5], 6, k3);
Subround(I, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[ 6], 5, k3);
Subround(I, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 2], 12, k3);
Subround(J, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[ 4], 9, k4);
Subround(J, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[ 0], 15, k4);
Subround(J, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[ 5], 5, k4);
Subround(J, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[ 9], 11, k4);
Subround(J, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 7], 6, k4);
Subround(J, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[12], 8, k4);
Subround(J, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[ 2], 13, k4);
Subround(J, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[10], 12, k4);
Subround(J, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[14], 5, k4);
Subround(J, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[ 1], 12, k4);
Subround(J, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[ 3], 13, k4);
Subround(J, a1, b1, c1, d1, e1, ripemd->buffer[ 8], 14, k4);
Subround(J, e1, a1, b1, c1, d1, ripemd->buffer[11], 11, k4);
Subround(J, d1, e1, a1, b1, c1, ripemd->buffer[ 6], 8, k4);
Subround(J, c1, d1, e1, a1, b1, ripemd->buffer[15], 5, k4);
Subround(J, b1, c1, d1, e1, a1, ripemd->buffer[13], 6, k4);
Subround(J, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[ 5], 8, k5);
Subround(J, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[14], 9, k5);
Subround(J, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[ 7], 9, k5);
Subround(J, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[ 0], 11, k5);
Subround(J, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[ 9], 13, k5);
Subround(J, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[ 2], 15, k5);
Subround(J, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[11], 15, k5);
Subround(J, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[ 4], 5, k5);
Subround(J, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[13], 7, k5);
Subround(J, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[ 6], 7, k5);
Subround(J, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[15], 8, k5);
Subround(J, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 8], 11, k5);
Subround(J, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[ 1], 14, k5);
Subround(J, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[10], 14, k5);
Subround(J, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[ 3], 12, k5);
Subround(J, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[12], 6, k5);
Subround(I, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 6], 9, k6);
Subround(I, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[11], 13, k6);
Subround(I, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[ 3], 15, k6);
Subround(I, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[ 7], 7, k6);
Subround(I, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[ 0], 12, k6);
Subround(I, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[13], 8, k6);
Subround(I, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[ 5], 9, k6);
Subround(I, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[10], 11, k6);
Subround(I, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[14], 7, k6);
Subround(I, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[15], 7, k6);
Subround(I, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 8], 12, k6);
Subround(I, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[12], 7, k6);
Subround(I, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[ 4], 6, k6);
Subround(I, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[ 9], 15, k6);
Subround(I, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[ 1], 13, k6);
Subround(I, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 2], 11, k6);
Subround(H, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[15], 9, k7);
Subround(H, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[ 5], 7, k7);
Subround(H, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[ 1], 15, k7);
Subround(H, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[ 3], 11, k7);
Subround(H, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 7], 8, k7);
Subround(H, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[14], 6, k7);
Subround(H, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[ 6], 6, k7);
Subround(H, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[ 9], 14, k7);
Subround(H, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[11], 12, k7);
Subround(H, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 8], 13, k7);
Subround(H, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[12], 5, k7);
Subround(H, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[ 2], 14, k7);
Subround(H, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[10], 13, k7);
Subround(H, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[ 0], 13, k7);
Subround(H, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 4], 7, k7);
Subround(H, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[13], 5, k7);
Subround(G, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[ 8], 15, k8);
Subround(G, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[ 6], 5, k8);
Subround(G, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[ 4], 8, k8);
Subround(G, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 1], 11, k8);
Subround(G, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[ 3], 14, k8);
Subround(G, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[11], 14, k8);
Subround(G, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[15], 6, k8);
Subround(G, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[ 0], 14, k8);
Subround(G, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 5], 6, k8);
Subround(G, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[12], 9, k8);
Subround(G, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[ 2], 12, k8);
Subround(G, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[13], 9, k8);
Subround(G, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[ 9], 12, k8);
Subround(G, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 7], 5, k8);
Subround(G, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[10], 15, k8);
Subround(G, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[14], 8, k8);
Subround(F, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[12], 8, k9);
Subround(F, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[15], 5, k9);
Subround(F, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[10], 12, k9);
Subround(F, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[ 4], 9, k9);
Subround(F, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[ 1], 12, k9);
Subround(F, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[ 5], 5, k9);
Subround(F, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[ 8], 14, k9);
Subround(F, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 7], 6, k9);
Subround(F, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[ 6], 8, k9);
Subround(F, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[ 2], 13, k9);
Subround(F, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[13], 6, k9);
Subround(F, a2, b2, c2, d2, e2, ripemd->buffer[14], 5, k9);
Subround(F, e2, a2, b2, c2, d2, ripemd->buffer[ 0], 15, k9);
Subround(F, d2, e2, a2, b2, c2, ripemd->buffer[ 3], 13, k9);
Subround(F, c2, d2, e2, a2, b2, ripemd->buffer[ 9], 11, k9);
Subround(F, b2, c2, d2, e2, a2, ripemd->buffer[11], 11, k9);
c1 = ripemd->digest[1] + c1 + d2;
ripemd->digest[1] = ripemd->digest[2] + d1 + e2;
ripemd->digest[2] = ripemd->digest[3] + e1 + a2;
ripemd->digest[3] = ripemd->digest[4] + a1 + b2;
ripemd->digest[4] = ripemd->digest[0] + b1 + c2;
ripemd->digest[0] = c1;
}
static INLINE void AddLength(RipeMd* ripemd, word32 len)
{
word32 tmp = ripemd->loLen;
if ( (ripemd->loLen += len) < tmp)
ripemd->hiLen++; /* carry low to high */
}
int wc_RipeMdUpdate(RipeMd* ripemd, const byte* data, word32 len)
{
/* do block size increments */
byte* local;
if (ripemd == NULL || (data == NULL && len > 0)) {
return BAD_FUNC_ARG;
}
local = (byte*)ripemd->buffer;
while (len) {
word32 add = min(len, RIPEMD_BLOCK_SIZE - ripemd->buffLen);
XMEMCPY(&local[ripemd->buffLen], data, add);
ripemd->buffLen += add;
data += add;
len -= add;
if (ripemd->buffLen == RIPEMD_BLOCK_SIZE) {
#ifdef BIG_ENDIAN_ORDER
ByteReverseWords(ripemd->buffer, ripemd->buffer,
RIPEMD_BLOCK_SIZE);
#endif
Transform(ripemd);
AddLength(ripemd, RIPEMD_BLOCK_SIZE);
ripemd->buffLen = 0;
}
}
return 0;
}
int wc_RipeMdFinal(RipeMd* ripemd, byte* hash)
{
byte* local;
if (ripemd == NULL || hash == NULL) {
return BAD_FUNC_ARG;
}
local = (byte*)ripemd->buffer;
AddLength(ripemd, ripemd->buffLen); /* before adding pads */
local[ripemd->buffLen++] = 0x80; /* add 1 */
/* pad with zeros */
if (ripemd->buffLen > RIPEMD_PAD_SIZE) {
XMEMSET(&local[ripemd->buffLen], 0, RIPEMD_BLOCK_SIZE - ripemd->buffLen);
ripemd->buffLen += RIPEMD_BLOCK_SIZE - ripemd->buffLen;
#ifdef BIG_ENDIAN_ORDER
ByteReverseWords(ripemd->buffer, ripemd->buffer, RIPEMD_BLOCK_SIZE);
#endif
Transform(ripemd);
ripemd->buffLen = 0;
}
XMEMSET(&local[ripemd->buffLen], 0, RIPEMD_PAD_SIZE - ripemd->buffLen);
/* put lengths in bits */
ripemd->loLen = ripemd->loLen << 3;
ripemd->hiLen = (ripemd->loLen >> (8*sizeof(ripemd->loLen) - 3)) +
(ripemd->hiLen << 3);
/* store lengths */
#ifdef BIG_ENDIAN_ORDER
ByteReverseWords(ripemd->buffer, ripemd->buffer, RIPEMD_BLOCK_SIZE);
#endif
/* ! length ordering dependent on digest endian type ! */
XMEMCPY(&local[RIPEMD_PAD_SIZE], &ripemd->loLen, sizeof(word32));
XMEMCPY(&local[RIPEMD_PAD_SIZE + sizeof(word32)], &ripemd->hiLen,
sizeof(word32));
Transform(ripemd);
#ifdef BIG_ENDIAN_ORDER
ByteReverseWords(ripemd->digest, ripemd->digest, RIPEMD_DIGEST_SIZE);
#endif
XMEMCPY(hash, ripemd->digest, RIPEMD_DIGEST_SIZE);
return wc_InitRipeMd(ripemd); /* reset state */
}
#endif /* WOLFSSL_RIPEMD */
```
|
The grey shrikethrush or grey shrike-thrush (Colluricincla harmonica), formerly commonly known as grey thrush, is a songbird of Australasia. It is moderately common to common in most parts of Australia, but absent from the driest of the inland deserts. It is also found in New Guinea.
Taxonomy and systematics
The grey shrikethrush was originally described in the genus Turdus. Alternate names include the brown shrike-thrush, buff-bellied shrike-thrush, grey shrike-flycatcher, northern shrike-thrush and south-western shrike-thrush.
Subspecies
Five subspecies are recognized:
C. h. brunnea - Gould, 1841: Originally described as a separate species. Found in northern Australia and Melville Island
C. h. superciliosa - Masters, 1876: Originally described as a separate species. Found in eastern New Guinea, islands in the Torres Strait and north-eastern Australia
C. h. harmonica - (Latham, 1801): Found in eastern Australia
C. h. strigata - Swainson, 1838: Originally described as a separate species. Found in Tasmania and the islands in the Bass Strait (Australia)
Western shrikethrush (C. h. rufiventris) - Gould, 1841: Originally described as a separate species. Found in western, southern and central Australia
Description
Of medium size (about long) and lacking bright colours, the grey shrikethrush—usually just thrush in casual conversation—has an extraordinary gift for ringing melody, unmatched by any other Australasian species save perhaps the two lyrebirds and its northern relative, the sandstone shrikethrush.
Status
The grey shrikethrush is evaluated as least concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
Gallery
References
External links
Photos and recording by Graeme Chapman
Sonograms on Xeno-canto
Photos and recordings on eBird
grey shrikethrush
Birds of Australia
Birds of New Guinea
grey shrikethrush
Articles containing video clips
|
```javascript
// @flow
export const SET_SEARCH_TERM = 'SET_SEARCH_TERM';
export const ADD_API_DATA = 'ADD_API_DATA';
```
|
```objective-c
#import <React/RCTLog.h>
#import <ExpoModulesCore/EXReactLogHandler.h>
#import <ExpoModulesCore/EXDefines.h>
@implementation EXReactLogHandler
EX_REGISTER_SINGLETON_MODULE(ReactLogHandler);
- (void)error:(NSString *)message {
RCTLogError(@"%@", message);
}
- (void)fatal:(NSError *)error {
RCTFatal(error);
}
- (void)info:(NSString *)message {
RCTLogInfo(@"%@", message);
}
- (void)warn:(NSString *)message {
RCTLogWarn(@"%@", message);
}
@end
```
|
```java
//
//
// path_to_url
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
package google.registry.rde;
import static google.registry.model.rde.RdeMode.FULL;
import static google.registry.model.rde.RdeMode.THIN;
import com.google.common.collect.ImmutableSet;
import com.google.common.collect.ImmutableSortedSet;
import com.google.common.collect.Ordering;
import google.registry.model.rde.RdeMode;
import java.util.EnumSet;
/** Types of objects that get embedded in an escrow deposit. */
public enum RdeResourceType {
CONTACT("urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:rdeContact-1.0", EnumSet.of(FULL)),
DOMAIN("urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:rdeDomain-1.0", EnumSet.of(FULL, THIN)),
HOST("urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:rdeHost-1.0", EnumSet.of(FULL)),
REGISTRAR("urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:rdeRegistrar-1.0", EnumSet.of(FULL, THIN)),
IDN("urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:rdeIDN-1.0", EnumSet.of(FULL)),
HEADER("urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:rdeHeader-1.0", EnumSet.of(FULL, THIN));
private final String uri;
private final ImmutableSet<RdeMode> modes;
RdeResourceType(String uri, EnumSet<RdeMode> modes) {
this.uri = uri;
this.modes = ImmutableSet.copyOf(modes);
}
/** Returns RDE XML schema URI specifying resource. */
public String getUri() {
return uri;
}
/** Returns set indicating if resource is stored in BRDA thin deposits. */
public ImmutableSet<RdeMode> getModes() {
return modes;
}
/** Returns set of resource type URIs included in a deposit {@code mode}. */
public static ImmutableSortedSet<String> getUris(RdeMode mode) {
ImmutableSortedSet.Builder<String> builder =
new ImmutableSortedSet.Builder<>(Ordering.natural());
for (RdeResourceType resourceType : RdeResourceType.values()) {
if (resourceType.getModes().contains(mode)) {
builder.add(resourceType.getUri());
}
}
return builder.build();
}
}
```
|
The Revolutionary Left Party (, PIR) was a communist party in Bolivia. It was founded by Dr. José Antonio Arze and other Bolivian intellectuals on 26 July 1940 during a left-wing congress held in Oruro.
The PIR was sympathetic to the Communist International, but did not become an affiliate to the International. The PIR began to organize the country's miners, but it did so cautiously for fear that strikes would hinder supplies for the Allies during World War II. Except for the pro-Axis Gualberto Villarroel, the PIR generally supported all of Bolivia's war-time presidents to assure the nation remained an Allied power. Because of the party's hesitation to engage in domestic issues, it lost much of its working-class support to the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR) and the Revolutionary Workers' Party (POR).
In 1950, a section of the PIR membership broke away and founded the Communist Party of Bolivia (PCB). By the 1960s, the PCB had to a large extent replaced the PIR. Following the military coup in 1964, the PIR went underground and disintegrated into warring factions. A reconstituted PIR emerged in the late 1970s as a puppet party of the dictator Hugo Banzer. In 1979, it dissolved into Banzer's new Nationalist Democratic Action (ADN).
References
Sources
Jerry W. Knudson, The Impact of the Catavi Mine Massacre of 1942 on Bolivian Politics and Public Opinion. In: The Americas, Vol. 26, No. 3 (January 1970), 254-276.
Herbert S. Klein, A Concise History of Bolivia (Cambridge University Press, 2003).
1940 establishments in Bolivia
1979 disestablishments in Bolivia
Communist parties in Bolivia
Defunct political parties in Bolivia
Political parties disestablished in 1979
Political parties established in 1940
|
Hanns-Josef Ortheil (born 5 November 1951, in Cologne) is a German author, scholar of German literature, and pianist.
He has written many autobiographical and historical novels, some of which have been translated into 11 languages, according to WorldCat: French, Dutch, Modern Greek, Spanish, Chinese, Lithuanian, Japanese, Slovenian, and Russian.
Biography
He was born the fifth son in an educated family; his mother, Mary Catherine Ortheil, was a librarian and his father a railroad surveyor and director. As a child, he did not speak, because his mother had temporarily lost her speech, following the loss of four sons during the Second World War. When Ortheil learned to play the piano, this was for him the first time he could express himself and communicate with the world around him. He at first wanted to be a pianist, and studied for a period at the Rome Conservatory.
In Germany he attended the Mainz Rabanus-Maurus-Gymnasium, and then the Universities of Mainz, Göttingen, Paris and Rome. His subjects were musicology, philosophy, Germanic, and comparative literature. During this time, he worked as a film and music journalist for the Mainz Allgemeine Zeitung. In 1976 he wrote his doctoral dissertation on the theory of the novel in the era of the French Revolution at the German Institute of the University of Mainz.
Career
Among his published works is a travel narrative (Die Moselreise) he had already written as a boy of eleven, when his father took him on a tour of the Moselle. Ortheil was a feature writer and literary critic for the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, TIME, The World, Der Spiegel and the Neue Zürcher Zeitung. He is professor for creative writing and cultural journalism at the University of Hildesheim. In 2006 he was appointed as honorary professor at the University of Heidelberg. Since 2009, he is director of the newly established Institute for Literary Writing and Literary Studies at the Hildesheim Foundation University.
Publications
Non-fiction
Wilhelm Klemm – Ein Lyriker der "Menschheitsdämmerung", Stuttgart 1979
Der poetische Widerstand im Roman, Königstein/Taunus 1980
Mozart im Innern seiner Sprachen, Frankfurt/Main 1982
Jean Paul, Reinbek bei Hamburg 1984
Köder, Beute und Schatten. Suchbewegungen, Essays. Frankfurt/Main 1985
Schauprozesse. Beiträge zur Kultur der 80er Jahre, Essays, München 1990
Das Glück der Musik – Vom Vergnügen Mozart zu hören, München 2006
Wie Romane entstehen, München 2008, with Klaus Siblewski
Lesehunger. Ein Bücher-Menu in 12 Gängen, München 2009
Was ich liebe – und was nicht, München 2016
Fiction and historical fiction
Schwerenöter, München 1987
Faustinas Küsse, München 1998
Im Licht der Lagune, München 1999
Die Nacht des Don Juan, München 2000
Die Erfindung des Lebens, München 2009
Awards
1979 Aspekte-Literaturpreis
1981 Förderpreis des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen für Literatur
1982 Sonderpreis der Lektoren beim Ingeborg-Bachmann-Wettbewerb
1988 Literaturpreis der Stadt Stuttgart
1991 Villa Massimo Stipendium
2000 Brandenburgischer Literaturpreis
2000/2001 Mainzer Stadtschreiber
2001 Verdienstmedaille des Landes Baden-Württemberg
2002 Thomas Mann Prize of the City of Lübeck
2004
2005 Honorary literary citizen of the city of Venice
2006 Koblenzer Literaturpreis
2007 Nicolas Born Prize
2009
2016 Hannelore Greve Literature Prize
Lectureships in poetics
WS 1993/1994 Lectureship in poetics at the University of Paderborn
WS 1994/1995 Lectureship in poetics at Bielefeld University
WS 1998/1999 Poetics lectureship at the University of Heidelberg
WS 2005/2006 Poetics lectureship at the University of Zürich
SS 2007 Professorship in poetry at the University of Bamberg
References
Further reading
Manfred Durzak; Hartmut Steineck Hanns-Josef Ortheil, im Innern seiner Texte : Studien zu seinem Werk München : Piper, 1995.
Catani; Friedhelm Marx; Julia Schöl Kunst der Erinnerung, Poetik der Liebe : das erzählerische Werk Hanns-Josef Ortheils Göttingen : Wallstein, 2009 (Proceedings of a conference on Orthell's work held in summer 2007 at the Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg.)
Helmut Schmitz Der Landvermesser auf der Suche nach der poetischen Heimat. Stuttgart 1997.
External links
readings for listening and downloading by Hanns-Josef Ortheil on Lesungen.net
Hanns-Josef Ortheil in: NRW Literatur im Netz
1951 births
Living people
Writers from Cologne
People from the Rhine Province
Recipients of the Order of Merit of Baden-Württemberg
|
Alban Maginness (born 9 July 1950) is an Irish Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) politician who was a Member of the Northern Ireland Assembly (MLA) for Belfast North from 1998 to 2016.
Early life and education
Maginness was born in Holywood, County Down. He completed his grammar school education at St. Malachy's College, Belfast. He then attended the University of Ulster and Queen's University of Belfast where he undertook legal training. He was called to the Bar in 1984.
Whilst at university he became involved in the non-violent protests organised by the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association. Maginness participated in the famous civil rights march in Derry in 1972 at which British troops killed 14 unarmed civilians. This event, now termed Bloody Sunday, has gone down in Northern Ireland politics as one of the turning points in The Troubles that contributed to the development of the Provisional IRA.
Political career
Maginness became increasingly involved in politics and became a member of the Social Democratic and Labour Party. He stood unsuccessfully for the party in East Belfast in the 1975 Constitutional Convention election and North Belfast in the 1982 Assembly election.
He has been an elected member of Belfast City Council since 1985 and in 1997 he became the first Catholic politician to hold the position of Lord Mayor of Belfast. In 1998 he was elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly to represent Belfast North.
He was Chair of the SDLP from 1984 to 1991.
In November 2008 Maginness had his trademark moustache shaved off for the BBC's Children in Need.
Maginness was the SDLP candidate for the 2009 European Election.
Maginness accused the Secretary of State of interning dissident republican Marian Price without trial, saying "We do not support putting people away in prison because of intelligence or because of some political point of view and we are convinced that she has been detained without trial because of that by the secretary of state."
Having served as an MLA for North Belfast from 1998, Maginness decided not to stand for election in 2016. He was replaced by Nichola Mallon.
References
External links
Biography: NI Assembly
SDLP Councillor Alban Maginness MLA: Official Website
Northern Ireland Assembly | AIMS Portal | Plenary Item Details
1950 births
Living people
Members of Belfast City Council
Social Democratic and Labour Party MLAs
Members of the Northern Ireland Forum
Northern Ireland MLAs 1998–2003
Northern Ireland MLAs 2003–2007
Northern Ireland MLAs 2007–2011
Northern Ireland MLAs 2011–2016
People educated at St Malachy's College
Alumni of Queen's University Belfast
Alumni of Ulster University
Barristers from Northern Ireland
Members of the Bar of Northern Ireland
Lord Mayors of Belfast
People from Holywood, County Down
Lawyers from County Down
|
```shell
#!/bin/bash
# Prereq: Install and run Ailly
# npm install -g @ailly/cli
# Choose your engine, probably bedrock
export AILLY_ENGINE=bedrock
# Define languages and create directory structures
languages=("$1")
for lang in "${languages[@]}"; do
mkdir -p "$lang"
cp SPECIFICATION.md $lang/02_SPECIFICATION.md
pushd "$lang"
# Add .aillyrc file
cat << EOF > .aillyrc
---
parent: always
combined: true
---
EOF
# Add 03_README.md file
cat << EOF > 03_README.md
---
parent: always
prompt: |
Write me a README.md (in GitHub markdown) for a new Workflow Example.
This document will be informed by the Workflow Details and this template:
# Title and Overview:
Start with a concise title that captures the essence of the use case.
Provide an overview section that briefly describes the use case, its relevance, and how it integrates with AWS services. Mention any specific AWS limitations or challenges this example addresses.
# Supporting Infrastructure & Data:
Detail the AWS infrastructure components involved in the example (e.g., specific AWS services and resources).
Include a link to a AWS CloudFormation template in the `workflows/kinesis-firehose/resources` directory for setting up necessary resources, and mention its location.
Provide step-by-step commands for deploying the infrastructure using the CloudFormation.
Additionally, mention the need for users to create a sample_records.json file using the mock_data.py script located in the `workflows/kinesis-firehose/resources` directory.
# Deployment Instructions:
Provide step-by-step commands for running the script outlined in the SPECIFICATION.md file.
# Resource Generation and Cleanup:
Include instructions for cleaning up or deleting the resources created during the example to avoid unnecessary charges. This will be a simple CFN command.
# Example Implementation:
Link to implementation code samples in one or more programming languages relevant to the use case.
Provide brief descriptions of what each implementation does and how it contributes to solving the use case.
# Additional Resources and Reading:
Recommend further reading or documentation that can help users understand the concepts or AWS services used in the example.
Include a copyright notice and licensing information, specifying how users are permitted to use, modify, or distribute the example.'
---
EOF
# Create 03_FILES.md
cat << EOF > 03_FILES.md
---
prompt: |
Persona: You are a guru-level solutions engineer with expertise in $lang and AWS architecture.
Task: Sketch out a workflow using the AWS SDK for $lang to interface with the AWS services.
Requirements:
Summary of Application Needs:
- Key components for a basic terminal-based application in $lang.
- Requirements for the interpreter or compiler.
- External dependencies and operating environment specifics.
- Configuration and error handling protocols.
- Development Environment:
- Ensure compatibility with MacOS; include Windows-specific instructions as necessary.
Code and Configuration Files:
- List all necessary files, including source code in $lang. Do not provide infra setup files, such as CDK or CFN.
- Also include test files in $lang
Best Practices:
- Ensure all $lang code adheres to best practices.
Output:
- Provide a detailed list of files required to build, test, and run a fully functional example on a users laptop.
- Be as descriptive as possible regarding what these files should look like, without giving me the source code.
- For example, inputs, outputs, approach. Another LLM should be able to easily take the descriptions in your response and use it to create the actual files
---
EOF
# Create 03_FILES.md
cat << EOF > 04_PROCESS.md
---
prompt: |
Persona: You are a guru-level solutions engineer with expertise in $lang and AWS.
Task: Write code for a workflow using the AWS SDK for $lang to interface with the AWS services.
Output:
- Give me a perfectly-functional file based on the list of files you created in the previous step (03_FILES.md)
- Each file should be wrapped in <file></file> parent tags that will allow an automated process to interpret them
- Additionally, within these <file> tags, include a <name> tag identifying the file name and a <contents> tag with the raw file contents.
- Do not include ANY formatting. For example: ticks or any other markdown language formatting.
- Do not explain anything. Just provide the file contents in the format requested.
---
EOF
cat << EOF > generate_files.py
import os
import re
def create_files_from_md(file_path, target_dir):
# Create the target directory if it doesn't exist
os.makedirs(target_dir, exist_ok=True)
# Read the content of the markdown file
try:
with open(file_path, 'r', encoding='utf-8') as file:
content = file.read()
except FileNotFoundError:
print(f"File {file_path} not found.")
return
# Regex to find <file>...</file> blocks
file_blocks = re.findall(r'<file>(.*?)</file>', content, re.DOTALL)
for block in file_blocks:
# Extract the name and contents of the file
name = re.search(r'<name>(.*?)</name>', block, re.DOTALL)
contents = re.search(r'<contents>(.*?)</contents>', block, re.DOTALL)
if name and contents:
name = name.group(1).strip()
contents = contents.group(1).strip()
file_path = os.path.join(target_dir, name)
# Write the filtered contents to the respective file
try:
with open(file_path, 'w', encoding='utf-8') as new_file:
new_file.write(contents)
print(f"File created: {file_path}")
except IOError as e:
print(f"Failed to create file {name}. Error: {e}")
else:
print("Name or contents missing in one of the <file> tags.")
if __name__ == '__main__':
create_files_from_md('04_PROCESS.md', 'app')
EOF
cat << EOF > run.sh
#!/bin/bash
ailly 03_README.md
ailly 03_FILES.md
ailly 04_PROCESS.md
python3 generate_files.py
EOF
chmod +x run.sh
popd
done
# Add .aillyrc file
cat << EOF > .aillyrc
---
isolated: false
parent: always
---
TCX SDK Code Examples
The TCX SDK Code Examples team produces code examples that demonstrate how to automate AWS services to accomplish key user stories for developers and programmers. These code examples are quick and easy to find and use, are continually tested, and demonstrate AWS and community coding best practices.
Mission
We provide code examples for builders integrating AWS services into their applications and business workflows using the AWS Software Development Kits (SDKs). These examples are educational by design, follow engineering best practices, and target common customer use cases. Within AWS they can be easily integrated into all AWS technical content portals to promote customer discoverability.
Vision
We envision a best-in-class library of code examples for every AWS service and in every actively maintained SDK language. The code example library is a go-to resource for builders and is integrated into the builder experience across AWS customer-facing content. Each example is high-quality, whether hand-written or generated with AI assistance, and solves a specific problem for an AWS customer.
Tenets
These are our tenets, unless you know better ones:
We are educators. Comprehension and learnability always take precedence.
We are engineers. Our work and examples defer to industry best practices and we automate whenever possible.
Our examples address common user challenges. They do not deliberately mirror AWS service silos.
Our examples are discoverable. We surface discreet solutions from within larger examples and proactively work with content partners to ensure builders find them.
We are subject matter experts. We are the primary reference for code example standards in TCX.
A Workflow Example, as defined by the TCX Code Examples team, is an example scenario that is targeted to a particular real-world user story, use case, problem, or other common service integration. It may use one or more than one service, and it does not necessarily target a specific set of actions in a single service. Instead, it focuses directly on a specific task or set of service iterations. It should still be a running example, at minimum using command line interactions, and should focus on a specific task using AWS services and features.
EOF
# Add .aillyrc file
cat << EOF > .aillyrc
---
parent: always
combined: true
---
EOF
root=$PWD
for lang in "${languages[@]}"; do
cd "$root"/"$lang"
./run.sh
done
```
|
Ancemont () is a commune in the Meuse department in the Grand Est region in northeastern France.
Population
See also
Communes of the Meuse department
References
Communes of Meuse (department)
|
John Proctor was born in 1804 to the town of Andover, New Hampshire's village blacksmith. He left town in 1822, at the age of 18, only to return three decades later to revive the town. Proctor Academy is named in his honor.
William John Proctor (twin) was born on 19 August 1847 in Bristol, in Grafton County, New Hampshire. He died on 4 Oct 1847 at Andover, Merrimack County, New Hampshire.
References
People from Andover, New Hampshire
1804 births
Year of death missing
19th-century American inventors
|
Michael Richard Sefi LVO (born 11 December 1943) is a British philatelist and was the Keeper of the Royal Philatelic Collection from 1 January 2003.
Life
Sefi was born in London. When he was a child, his grandfather introduced him to stamp collecting. He began collecting stamps again in his early thirties when his own children received stamps and stamp albums as a gift and while he was looking for a hobby to ease the stress from the Mann Judd and Touche Ross merger. He specialized in collecting the first postage stamps of George V's reign.
He worked as a chartered accountant until he partially retired in 1983. He was a partner of Mann Judd, later Touche Ross, [later Deloitte] in the 1970s. He became an active member of the Great Britain Philatelic Society of which he was president between 2000/02 and 2012/14. Sefi was a member of Council of the Royal Philatelic Society London between 1990 and 2005 where he was a member of many decision-making bodies.
In September 1996, he was hired as deputy to the Keeper of the Royal Philatelic Collection, who was Charles Goodwyn. He helped him accelerate the mounting of the George VI postage stamp collection. Sefi participated in international philatelic exhibitions of parts of the Royal Philatelic Collection and in welcoming students and researchers. He played a major role in the move of the collection from Buckingham Palace to St James's Palace in 1999.
When Charles Goodwyn announced his retirement in late 2002, Sefi was chosen to succeed him among three other candidates by the Keeper of the Privy Purse.
He retired as Keeper of the Royal Philatelic Collection in September 2018.
He directed the preparations of The Queen's Own, a Royal Collection exhibit at the National Postal Museum in Washington, D.C., which was held in 2004.
To assist Sefi, he had the help of Surésh Dhargalkar, an architect and conservation specialist, who was Sefi's assistant from 2003.
To help him for the mounting, he hired George VI specialist, Rod Vousden, as assistant.
Honours
Sefi was appointed Lieutenant of the Royal Victorian Order (LVO) in the 2013 Queen's Birthday Honours List.
In 2016 He received the Queen Elizabeth II Version of the Royal Household Long and Faithful Service Medal for 20 years of service to the British Royal Family.
References and sources
References
Sources
Courtney, Nicholas (2004). The Queen's Stamps, The Authorised History of the Royal Philatelic Collection, éd. Methuen, 2004, .
External links
"In the Spotlight", interview of Sefi by Larry Rosenblum on 15 October 2004. Published in The Chronicle, journal of the Great Britain Collectors Club, January 2005. Reedited on the GBCC website, 28 May 2005, retrieved 20 December 2007.
Sefi, Michael. "A Collector's Tale", Royal Mail website, retrieved 20 December 2007.
British philatelists
Living people
1943 births
English accountants
Fellows of the Royal Philatelic Society London
Lieutenants of the Royal Victorian Order
|
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "path_to_url">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
<key>CFBundleDevelopmentRegion</key>
<string>en</string>
<key>CFBundleIdentifier</key>
<string>${PRODUCT_BUNDLE_IDENTIFIER}</string>
<key>CFBundleInfoDictionaryVersion</key>
<string>6.0</string>
<key>CFBundleName</key>
<string>${PRODUCT_NAME}</string>
<key>CFBundlePackageType</key>
<string>BNDL</string>
<key>CFBundleShortVersionString</key>
<string>2.1.2</string>
<key>CFBundleSignature</key>
<string>????</string>
<key>CFBundleVersion</key>
<string>1</string>
<key>NSPrincipalClass</key>
<string></string>
</dict>
</plist>
```
|
This is a list of films considered the best in national and international surveys of critics and the public.
Some surveys focus on all films, while others focus on a particular genre or country. Voting systems differ, and some surveys suffer from biases such as self-selection or skewed demographics, while others may be susceptible to forms of interference such as vote stacking.
Critics and filmmakers
Sight and Sound
Every decade, starting in 1952, the British film magazine Sight and Sound asks an international group of film critics to vote for the greatest film of all time. Since 1992, they have invited directors to vote in a separate poll. Sixty-three critics participated in 1952, 70 critics in 1962, 89 critics in 1972, 122 critics in 1982, 132 critics and 101 directors in 1992, 145 critics and 108 directors in 2002, 846 critics and 358 directors in 2012, and 1639 critics and 480 directors in 2022.
This poll is regarded as one of the most important "greatest ever film" lists. American critic Roger Ebert described it as "by far the most respected of the countless polls of great movies—the only one most serious movie people take seriously."
Bicycle Thieves (1948) topped the first poll in 1952 with 25 votes.
Citizen Kane (1941) stood at number 1 for five consecutive polls, with 22 votes in 1962, 32 votes in 1972, 45 votes in 1982, 43 votes in 1992, and 46 votes in 2002. It also topped the first two directors' polls, with 30 votes in 1992 and 42 votes in 2002.
Vertigo (1958) topped the critics' poll in 2012 with 191 votes, dethroning Citizen Kane.
Tokyo Story (1953) topped the directors' poll in 2012 with 48 votes, also dethroning Citizen Kane.
Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975) topped the critics' poll in 2022.
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) topped the directors' poll in 2022.
Other polls
Battleship Potemkin (1925) was ranked number 1 with 32 votes when the Festival Mondial du Film et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique asked 63 film professionals around the world, mostly directors, to vote for the best films of the half-century in 1951. It was also ranked number 1 when the Brussels World's Fair polled 117 experts from 26 countries in 1958.
Citizen Kane (1941) was ranked number 1 with 48 votes when French film magazine Cahiers du cinéma asked 78 French critics and historians to vote for the best films in 2007. It was also ranked number 1 with 48 votes when Chinese website Cinephilia.net asked 135 Chinese-speaking critics, scholars, curators, and cultural workers to vote for the best films in 2012. It was ranked number 1 with 49 votes when Spanish film magazine asked 150 Spanish film experts to vote for the best films in 1999.
Seven Samurai (1954) was voted the greatest foreign-language (non-English) film in BBC's 2018 poll of 209 critics in 43 countries.
Vertigo (1958) was ranked number 1 with 39 votes when German film magazine asked 174 critics and filmmakers to vote for their favorite films in 2007. It was also ranked number 1 with 25 votes when Iranian film magazine Film asked 92 Iranian critics to vote for the best films in 2009. It topped also the Télérama poll in 2018.
8½ (1963) was voted the best foreign (i.e. non-Swedish) sound film with 21 votes in a 1964 poll of 50 Swedish film professionals organized by Swedish film magazine . It was also ranked number 1 when the asked 279 Polish film professionals (filmmakers, critics, and professors) to vote for the best films in 2015.
The Godfather (1972) was ranked number 1 when Japanese film magazine Kinema Junpo asked 114 Japanese critics and film professionals to vote for the best foreign (i.e. non-Japanese) films in 2009. It was also voted the greatest film in a Hollywood Reporter poll of 2120 industry members, including every studio, agency, publicity firm and production house in Hollywood in 2014.
Boyz n the Hood (1991) topped the "Top Black Films of All Times" poll from the November 1998 edition of Ebony magazine.
The Piano (1993) was voted the best film made by a female director in a 2019 BBC poll of 368 film experts from 84 countries.
Mulholland Drive (2001) topped BBC's 100 Greatest Films of the 21st Century in 2016.
Audience polls
Gone with the Wind (1939) was voted the favorite film of Americans in a poll of 2,279 adults taken by Harris Interactive in 2008, and again in a follow-up poll of 2,276 adults in 2014.
Roman Holiday (1953) was voted the best foreign (i.e. non-Japanese) film of all time in a 1990 poll of about a million people organized by Japanese public broadcaster NHK.
The Godfather (1972) was voted number 1 by Entertainment Weeklys readers in 1999 and voted as number 1 in a Time Out readers' poll in 1998. The film was voted the "Greatest Movie of All Time" in September 2008 by 10,000 readers of Empire magazine, 150 people from the movie business, and 50 film critics. It also topped Empires June 2017 poll of 20,000 readers.
The Empire Strikes Back (1980) was voted the best film of all time by over 250,000 readers of the Empire film magazine in 2015.
The Shawshank Redemption (1994) was voted the greatest film of all time by Empire readers in "The 201 Greatest Movies of All Time" poll taken in March 2006.
Titanic (1997) was voted the greatest hit of all time in a poll of 6,000 movie fans conducted by English-language newspaper China Daily in March 2008.
Shiri (1999) was voted the favorite film of Koreans with 11,918 votes in a 2002 online poll of 54,013 people conducted by Korean movie channel Orion Cinema Network.
The Lord of the Rings trilogy (2001–2003) was voted the favorite film of Australians in an audience poll for the Australian television special My Favourite Film in 2005. It was also voted the best film in a poll of 120,000 German voters for the TV special Die besten Filme aller Zeiten ("The best films of all time") in 2004.
Genres or media
Action
Mad Max 2 (1981) was voted the greatest action film of all time in a readers' poll by American magazine Rolling Stone in 2015.
Die Hard (1988) was voted the best action film of all time with 21 votes in a 2014 poll of 50 directors, actors, critics, and experts conducted by Time Out New York.
Animation (shorts and features)
Pinocchio (1940) was voted the best animated movie ever made in a 2014 poll of animators, filmmakers, critics, journalists, and experts conducted by Time Out.
What's Opera, Doc? (1957), a Bugs Bunny cartoon, was selected as the greatest animated short film of all time by 1,000 animation professionals in the 1994 book The 50 Greatest Cartoons.
Hedgehog in the Fog (1975) was ranked number 1 in a poll at the 2003 Laputa Animation Festival where 140 animators from around the world voted for the best animated films of all time.
Tale of Tales (1979) was ranked number 1 with 17 votes in a poll at the Olympiad of Animation in 1984 where an international panel of 35 journalists, scholars, festival directors, and animation programmers voted for the best animated films. It was also ranked number 1 in a poll organized by the Channel 4 animation magazine Dope Sheet in 1997, as well as a poll organized by the Zagreb International Animation Festival, which announced the results in 2002.
Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (1984) was the highest-ranking film in a 2006 poll of the greatest animations conducted at the Japan Media Arts Festival, voted by 80,000 attendees.
Castle in the Sky (1986) was voted first place in a 2008 animation audience poll conducted by Oricon in Japan.
Toy Story (1995) was voted number 1 on the "Top 100 Animated Features of All Time" list by the Online Film Critics Society (published March 2003). Voters chose from a reminder list of more than 350 films. It also topped a poll of 4000 film fans for "greatest animated film of all time" in 2009, when it was re-released in 3D.
Christmas
It's a Wonderful Life (1946) was voted the greatest Christmas film by an audience poll conducted by Axios and SurveyMonkey in 2018.
Die Hard (1988) was voted the greatest Christmas movie by British film magazine Empire readers in 2015.
Comedy
Some Like It Hot (1959) was voted the best comedy film of all time in a poll of 253 film critics from 52 countries conducted by the BBC in 2017.
Blazing Saddles (1974) was voted the funniest movie of all time in a 2014 readers' poll by American magazine Rolling Stone.
Monty Python's Life of Brian (1979) was voted the greatest comedy of all time in a poll of over 22,000 people conducted by the British TV network Channel 4 in 2006. It was also voted the greatest comedy film in polls conducted by British film magazine Total Film in 2000, and British newspaper The Guardian in 2007.
This Is Spinal Tap (1984) was voted the best comedy movie of all time in a poll of over 70 stand-up comedians, actors, writers, and directors conducted by Time Out London in 2016.
Disaster
The Poseidon Adventure (1972) was voted best disaster movie in a poll of 500 members of the UCI Cinemas staff in May 2004.
Documentary
Man with a Movie Camera (1929) was voted the greatest documentary film of all time with 125 votes (100 critics and 25 filmmakers) in a 2014 Sight and Sound poll of 238 critics, curators, and academics (including many documentary specialists) and 103 filmmakers.
Hoop Dreams (1994) was ranked as the greatest documentary of all time by the International Documentary Association (IDA) in 2007. Voters selected from a list of over 700 films.
Bowling for Columbine (2002) heads the list of 20 all-time favorite non-fiction films selected by members of the IDA in 2002.
Fantasy
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001) was voted the greatest fantasy movie of all time in a reader's poll conducted by American magazine Wired in 2012, with its sequels The Two Towers (2002) and The Return of the King (2003) placing fourth and third respectively.
Horror
The Exorcist (1973) was voted the best horror film of all time with 53 votes in a 2012 poll of 150 experts conducted by Time Out London. It was also voted the best horror film with 67 votes in a 2015 poll of 104 horror professionals conducted by HitFix, and topped a readers' poll by Rolling Stone magazine in 2014.
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) was ranked number 1 on British film magazine Total Films 2005 list of the greatest horror films. In 2010 it was voted into first place in an additional Total Film poll of leading directors and stars of horror films.
LGBT
Brokeback Mountain (2005) was ranked as the top LGBT film in a 2016 poll of 28 directors, actors, and screenwriters, conducted by Time Out London.
Carol (2015) was ranked as the top LGBT film in a 2016 poll of more than 100 critics, filmmakers, programmers, writers, curators, and academics conducted by the British Film Institute.
Musical
West Side Story (1961) was chosen as the best screen musical by readers of British newspaper The Observer in a 2007 poll.
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) was voted the best movie musical by readers of Rolling Stone in a 2017 poll.
Romance
Casablanca (1942) was voted the best romance film of all time with 56 votes in a 1996 poll of 100 experts organized by Spanish film magazine .
Brief Encounter (1945) was voted the best romance film of all time with 25 votes in a 2013 poll of 101 experts conducted by Time Out London.
Titanic (1997) was voted the most romantic film of all time in a poll conducted by Fandango in February 2011.
Science fiction
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) was voted the best science fiction film of all time with 73 votes in a 2014 poll of 136 science fiction experts, filmmakers, science fiction writers, film critics, and scientists conducted by Time Out London. It was voted the best science fiction film of all time by 115 members of the Online Film Critics Society in 2002. It topped a readers' poll conducted by Rolling Stone magazine in 2014.
Blade Runner (1982) was voted the best science fiction film by a panel of 56 scientists assembled by the British newspaper The Guardian in 2004. In British magazine New Scientist, Blade Runner was voted "all-time favourite science fiction film" in the readers' poll in 2008, with 12 percent of thousands of votes. It topped a 2011 poll by Total Film magazine.
Serenity (2005) was voted the best science fiction movie in a 2007 poll of 3,000 people conducted by SFX magazine.
Silent
Battleship Potemkin (1925) was voted the best silent film with 32 votes in a 1964 poll of 50 Swedish film professionals organized by Swedish film magazine .
Sports
Rocky (1976) topped British website Digital Spy's "greatest ever sports movie" online poll in 2012, with 18.7% of the votes. Voters chose from a list of 25 films. It was also voted the best sports movie of all time in a 2020 poll organized by The Athletic. They asked 120 panelists to nominate their favorite sports movies, and then to rate each nomination from 1 to 100. Movies with at least 10 ratings qualified for the final list. Rocky had the highest average rating, 91.04.
Superhero
Superman (1978) was voted the greatest superhero movie in a poll of 1000 British adults conducted by Virgin Media in 2018.
The Dark Knight (2008) was voted the greatest superhero movie in a reader's poll conducted by American magazine Rolling Stone in 2014.
Time travel
Back to the Future (1985) was the most cited film in a 2012 poll, when IndieWire asked 53 critics "What is the best time travel movie ever made?"
War
Saving Private Ryan (1998) was voted as the greatest war film in a 2008 Channel 4 poll of the 100 greatest war films.
Western
Stagecoach (1939) was voted the best western film of all time with 54 votes in a 1996 poll of 100 experts organized by Spanish film magazine .
Johnny Guitar (1954) was the most cited film in the "Ten Best Westerns" lists of 27 French critics in Le Western.
National polls
Argentina
Prisioneros de la tierra was voted as the greatest Argentine film of all time in two polls carried out by the Museo del Cine Pablo Ducros Hicken in 1977 and 1984.
Crónica de un niño solo (1965) was voted as the greatest Argentine film of all time in a poll carried out by the Museo del Cine Pablo Ducros Hicken in 2000.
La Ciénaga (2001) was voted as the greatest Argentine film of all time in a 2022 poll organized by film magazines La vida útil, Taipei and La tierra quema— inspired by the previous lists by the Museo del Cine Pablo Ducrós Hicken—which was presented at the Mar del Plata International Film Festival.
Australia
Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975) was voted the best Australian film of all time by members of the Australian Film Institute, industry guilds and unions, film critics and reviewers, academics and media teachers, and Kookaburra Card members of the National Film and Sound Archive (NFSA), in a 1996 poll organized by the Victorian Centenary of Cinema Committee and the NFSA.
The Castle (1997) was selected by the public as Australia's favourite film in a 2008 online poll conducted by the Australian Film Institute, in collaboration with Australia Post. The Adelaide film festival ran a public vote, that again voted it as the greatest Australian film ever in 2018.
Bangladesh
Titash Ekti Nadir Naam (1973) topped the list of 10 best Bangladeshi films in the audience and critics' polls conducted by the British Film Institute in 2002.
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Do You Remember Dolly Bell? (1981) was voted the best Bosnian film of all time in a 2003 poll of 13 film professionals organized by The National Film Archive of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Brazil
Limite (1931) is ranked number 1 on the Brazilian Film Critics Association's list of the top 100 Brazilian films, voted by its 100 members in 2015.
Black God, White Devil (1964) was voted the best Brazilian film of all time in a 2001 poll of 108 critics and film professionals organized by Brazilian film magazine Contracampo.
The Red Light Bandit (1968) was voted the best Brazilian film of all time in a 2011 poll of 102 critics, researchers, and professionals organized by Brazilian film magazine Filme Cultura.
Bulgaria
Time of Violence (1988) – voted as the best Bulgarian movie of all times in an audience poll, organized by the Bulgarian National Television.
Canada
Mon oncle Antoine (1971) was named first in the Toronto International Film Festival's Top 10 Canadian Films of All Time in 1984, 1993 and 2004.
The Sweet Hereafter (1997) was voted the best Canadian film by readers of Playback in 2002 in an online poll. More than 500 industry respondents participated in the poll.
Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner (2001) was voted the best Canadian film of all time with 94 votes in a 2015 poll of 220 filmmakers, critics, programmers, and academics organized by the Toronto International Film Festival, dethroning Mon oncle Antoine which won the previous three polls.
Chile
Jackal of Nahueltoro (1969) was voted the best Chilean film of all time with 57 votes in a 2016 poll of 77 directors, actors, programmers, scholars, journalists, and critics organized by CineChile.
Julio comienza en julio (1979) was chosen in 1999 as the "Best Chilean Film of the Century" in a vote organized by the Municipality of Santiago.
China
Spring in a Small Town (小城之春; 1948) was ranked number 1 on the Hong Kong Film Awards Association's Best 100 Chinese Motion Pictures list in 2005. It was also voted the best Chinese film of all time with 25 votes in a 2010 poll of 37 critics organized by the Hong Kong Film Critics Society.
Farewell My Concubine (霸王别姬; 1993) was voted the best Mainland Chinese film of all time by 88 international film experts in a poll conducted by Time Out Shanghai and Time Out Beijing.
Colombia
The Strategy of the Snail (1993) was voted the best Colombian film of all time with 38 votes in a 2015 poll of 65 critics and journalists organized by Colombian magazine Semana.
Croatia
Tko pjeva zlo ne misli (One Who Sings Means No Harm, 1970) was voted the best Croatian film of all time by 44 Croatian film critics in 1999, in a poll organized by the Croatian magazine Hollywood. It was also voted the best Croatian film by Hollywoods readers.
H-8 (1958) was voted the best Croatian feature film of all time by 38 Croatian film critics and scholars in a 2020 poll.
Cuba
Memories of Underdevelopment (1968) was voted the best Latin American film of all time with 30 votes in a 1999 poll of 36 critics and film specialists from 11 countries organized by critics Carlos Galiano and Rufo Caballero. It was also voted the best Ibero-American film of all time in a 2009 poll of more than 500 film professionals, critics, journalists, festival organizers, and fans around the world organized by Spanish magazine Noticine.
Czech Republic
Christian (1939) was voted best Czech film of all time in a poll held by Media Desk and Týden magazine in 2010.
Marketa Lazarova (1967) was voted the best Czech film of all time by Czech journalists during the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in 1994. It also topped 1998 poll of Czech and Slovak film critics and publicists during the 1998 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.
The Firemen's Ball (1967) was voted the best Czech film in a 2018 poll of 20 Czech historians, theorists and critics.
The Cremator (1969) was voted the best Czech film by public in a 2018 poll, Kánon 100.
Cosy Dens (1999) was voted the best Czech film with 622 votes in a readers' poll by Reflex magazine in 2011.
See also Czechoslovakia, below.
Czechoslovakia
See also Czech Republic, and Slovakia below.
Marketa Lazarova (1967) was voted the best Czech-Slovak film of all time in a 1998 poll of 55 Czech and Slovak film critics and publicists, receiving 41 votes.
The Firemen's Ball (1967) was voted the best Czech-Slovak film of all time with 33 votes in a 2007 poll of 53 experts (mostly from the Czech Republic, but also from Slovakia and Poland) titled "Filmové dědictví česko-slovenské kinematografie".
The Elementary School (1991) was voted the best Czech-Slovak film with 192 votes in a 2007 public poll of "Filmové dědictví česko-slovenské kinematografie".
Egypt
The Night of Counting the Years (1969) was voted the best Arab film of all time (i.e. the best film made in an Arab country) in a 2013 poll of 475 film critics, writers, novelists, academics, and other arts professionals organized by the Dubai International Film Festival.
Estonia
Kevade (Spring, 1969) received first place in the Estonian feature films Top Ten Poll in 2002 held by Estonian film critics and journalists.
Autumn Ball (2007) was voted the best Estonian film of all time with 29 votes in a 2011 poll of 33 film writers and film scholars organized by the Estonian Association of Film Journalists.
Finland
The Unknown Soldier (1955) was voted the best Finnish movie by 1213 respondents in an Internet poll by Helsingin Sanomat in 2007.
Inspector Palmu's Mistake (1960) was chosen as the best Finnish fictional movie of all time in a poll of 48 critics by Yle in 2012.
France
The Rules of the Game (1939) was voted the best French film of all time with 15 votes in a 2012 poll of 85 film professionals conducted by Time Out Paris. It was voted the best European film of all time with 56 votes (tied with the German film Nosferatu) in a 1994 poll of 70 critics and film historians organized by Cinemateca Portuguesa.
Georgia
Eliso (1928) was voted the best Georgian film of all time in a critic poll organized by Tbilisi Intermedia.
Germany
Nosferatu (1922) was voted the best European film of all time with 56 votes (tied with the French film The Rules of the Game) in a 1994 poll of 70 critics and film historians organized by Cinemateca Portuguesa.
M (1931) was voted the best German film of all time with 306 votes in a 1994 poll of 324 film journalists, film critics, filmmakers, and cineastes organized by the .
Greece
O Drakos (1956) was voted the best Greek film of all time by members of the Greek Film Critics Association in 2006.
Evdokia (1971) was voted the best Greek film of all time by members of the Greek Film Critics Association in 1986.
Hong Kong
A Better Tomorrow (英雄本色; 1986), filmed and produced in Hong Kong, was voted the second-best Chinese film ever made by the Hong Kong Film Awards Association in 2005.
Days of Being Wild (阿飛正傳; 1990) was voted the best Hong Kong film of all time with 16 votes in a 2010 poll of 37 critics organized by the Hong Kong Film Critics Society.
In the Mood for Love (花樣年華; 2000) reached the highest position (number 5 in 2022) of any Hong Kong film on the 2022 Sight & Sound poll's lists of greatest films of all time.
Hungary
The Round-Up (1965) was chosen as the best Hungarian film in a 2000 Hungarian film critics' poll.
Iceland
Children of Nature (1991) was voted the best Icelandic film of all time in a Stockfish poll of 12 film experts.
India
Pather Panchali (1955) topped the British Film Institute's user poll of "Top 10 Indian Films" of all time in 2002.
Mayabazar (1957) was chosen as the greatest Indian film of all time with 16,960 votes in an online poll conducted by IBN Live in 2013. Voters select from a list of 100 films from different Indian languages, and 70,926 votes were cast.
Sholay (1975) topped the British Film Institute's critics' poll of "Top 10 Indian Films" of all time in 2002.
Bollywood
Mother India (1957) was voted the best Bollywood film of all time with 15 votes in a 2003 poll of 25 directors organized by Indian magazine Outlook.
Sholay (1975) was voted the best Bollywood film of all time with 17 votes in a 2015 poll of 27 Bollywood experts organized by Time Out London.
Iran
The Deer (1974) was voted the best Iranian film of all time with 33 votes in a 2009 poll of 92 critics organized by Iranian film magazine Film, and again in a follow-up poll of 140 critics in 2019.
Bashu, the Little Stranger (1986) was voted "Best Iranian Film of all time" in November 1999 by a Persian movie magazine Picture World poll of 150 Iranian critics and professionals.
Close-Up (1990) reached the highest position (number 17 in 2022) of Iranian film on the 2022 Sight & Sound poll's lists of greatest films of all time.
Ireland
The Commitments (1991) was voted the best Irish film of all time in a 2005 Jameson Whiskey online poll of over 10,000 Irish people.
Israel
Giv'at Halfon Eina Ona (1976) was voted "Favorite Israeli Film of All Time" in a 2004 poll by Ynet, the platform of the Israeli newspaper Yediot Ahronot. The film received votes from 25,000 web users.
Avanti Popolo (1986) was voted "Greatest Israeli Film of All Time" in a 2013 poll of 20 Israeli film experts by NRG Ma'ariv.
Italy
Bicycle Thieves (1948) topped the first Sight & Sound critics' poll in 1952.
8½ (1963) was voted the best foreign (i.e. non-Swedish) sound film with 21 votes in a 1964 poll of 50 Swedish film professionals organized by Swedish film magazine . It was also ranked number 1 when the asked 279 Polish film professionals (filmmakers, critics, and professors) to vote for the best films in 2015.
Japan
Rashomon (1950) was ranked joint tenth in the 1992 Sight & Sound directors' poll, and joint ninth in 2002.
Tokyo Story (東京物語; 1953) topped the Sight & Sound directors' poll with 48 votes and was number 3 in the critics' poll with 107 votes in 2012. It was also voted the best Japanese film of all time in a 2009 poll of 114 critics and film professionals organized by Japanese film magazine Kinema Junpo. It was voted the best Asian film of all time in a 2015 poll of 73 film critics, festival executives, programmers, and directors from around the world, organized by the Busan International Film Festival.
Seven Samurai (1954) was voted the best Japanese film of all time in a 1989 poll of 372 celebrities for a book published by Bungeishunjū. It was voted the best Japanese film of all time in a 1990 poll of about a million people organized by NHK. It was the greatest foreign-language film in BBC Culture's 2018 poll of 209 critics in 43 countries.
Mexico
Vámonos con Pancho Villa (1936) was ranked number 1 Mexican film of all time in a 1994 poll of 25 critics and journalists organized by Mexican magazine Somos.
Los Olvidados (1950) was voted the best Mexican film of all time in a 2020 poll of 27 critics and journalists organized by Sector Cine online magazine.
Netherlands
Turkish Delight (1973) was voted the best Dutch film of the 20th century in a 1999 poll organized by the Netherlands Film Festival.
Soldaat van Oranje (Soldier of Orange, 1977) was voted the best Dutch film of all time by nearly 9,000 people in a 2006 online poll organized by the now defunct Dutch website Filmwereld.net.
Zwartboek (Black Book, 2006) was voted the best Dutch film of all time at the 2008 Netherlands Film Festival by nearly 15,000 members of the public.
New Zealand
Once Were Warriors (1994) was voted the best New Zealand film of all time in a 2014 online poll organized by Fairfax Media. More than 500 people voted, including about 100 film professionals and 15 critics.
North Korea
Hong Kil-dong (1986) was voted the "best North Korean film ever" in a 2002 poll of ex-North Koreans living in South Korea, organized by newspaper The Chosun Ilbo.
Norway
Ni Liv (Nine Lives, 1957) was the critics' choice for "Best Norwegian Film of All Time" during the 2005 Bergen International Film Festival.
The Chasers (1959) was voted the best Norwegian film of all time with 23 votes in a 2011 poll of 32 critics and experts organized by Norwegian film magazine .
Flåklypa Grand Prix (Pinchcliffe Grand Prix, 1975) was the people's choice for "Best Norwegian Film of All Time" during the 2005 Bergen International Film Festival.
Pakistan
Baji (1963) topped the British Film Institute's critics' poll of "Top 10 Pakistani Films" of all time in 2002.
Aina (1977) topped the British Film Institute's user poll of "Top 10 Pakistani Films" of all time in 2002.
Philippines
Maynila sa mga Kuko ng Liwanag (Manila in the Claws of Light, 1975) was voted the best Filipino film of all time in a 2013 poll of 81 critics, filmmakers, archivists, and academics organized by Pinoy Rebyu. It was also voted the best Filipino film of all time with 16 votes (tied with Ganito Kami Noon, Paano Kayo Ngayon) in a 1989 poll of 28 filmmakers and critics, organized by Joel David and his UP film criticism class, and published in Philippine magazine National Midweek. The article also included a list of the most common number-one choices (topped by Manila in the Claws of Light), as well as an alternate version of the top 10 (topped by Manila by Night) which was ordered by average rank.
Himala (Miracle, 1982) won the 2008 CNN Asia Pacific Screen Awards Viewers Choice as "Best Asia-Pacific Film of All Time" (voted for by thousands of film fans around the world).
Poland
The Promised Land (1975) was voted the best Polish film of all time in a 2015 poll of 279 Polish film professionals organized by the .
Teddy Bear (1981) was voted by the public of 2013 Filmfest PL as the best movie of all time.
Portugal
Os Verdes Anos (1963) was voted the best Portuguese film of all time in a 2020 poll of 122 critics and film professionals organized by filmSPOT.
Romania
Reconstituirea (The Reenactment, 1968) was selected as the best Romanian film by 40 film critics in 2008.
Russia
My Friend Ivan Lapshin (1985) was voted the best Russian film of all time with 47 votes in a 2008 poll of 100 filmmakers and critics, organized by Russian film magazine .
See also Soviet Union, below.
Serbia
Who's Singin' Over There? (1980) was voted by Serbian critics the best Serbian film of all time.
Slovakia
Pictures of the Old World (1972) was voted the best Slovak film of all time by Slovak critics in 2000.
See also Czechoslovakia, above.
Slovenia
Dancing in the Rain (1961) was voted the best Slovenian film of all time in a poll by Slovenian critics.
South Korea
Obaltan (1961) was voted the best Korean film of all time with 48 votes in a 1999 poll of 140 filmmakers organized by Korean newspaper The Chosun Ilbo. It was also voted the best Korean film of all time (tied with The Housemaid and The March of Fools in a 2014 poll of 62 film scholars, critics, film professionals, researchers, and programmers organized by the Korean Film Archive.
Shiri (1999) was voted the favorite film of Koreans with 11,918 votes in a 2002 online poll of 54,013 people conducted by Korean movie channel Orion Cinema Network.
Memories of Murder (2003) was voted the best Korean film of all time with 806 votes in a 2014 audience poll of 1462 people organized by the Korean Film Archive.
Burning (2018) was voted the best Korean film of all time in a 2021 poll of 158 critics from 28 countries organized by Korean Screen.
Soviet Union
Battleship Potemkin (1925) was ranked number 1 with 32 votes when the Festival Mondial du Film et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique asked 63 film professionals around the world, mostly directors, to vote for the best films of the half-century in 1951. It was ranked number 1 when the Brussels World's Fair polled 117 experts from 26 countries in 1958.
Man with a Movie Camera (1929) was voted the eighth greatest film ever made in the British Film Institute's 2012 Sight & Sound poll.
Mirror (1975) ranked 9th in the 2012 Sight & Sound directors' poll.
See also Russia, above.
Spain
Viridiana (1961) was voted the best Spanish film of all time with 227 votes in a 2016 poll of 350 experts organized by Spanish film magazine Caimán Cuadernos de Cine.
El verdugo (1963) was voted the best Spanish film of all time with 77 votes in a 1995 poll of 100 critics and film professionals organized by Spanish film magazine .
Sri Lanka
Anantha Rathiriya (1995) topped the British Film Institute's user poll of "Top 10 Sri Lankan Films" of all time in 2002.
Pura Handa Kaluwara (1997) topped the British Film Institute's critics' poll of "Top 10 Sri Lankan Films" of all time in 2002.
Sweden
The Phantom Carriage (Körkarlen, 1921) was voted the best Swedish film of all time with 30 votes in a poll of 50 film critics and academics conducted by film magazine FLM in 2012.
Persona (1966) reached the highest position (number 5 in 1972) of any Swedish film on any of Sight & Sound's lists of greatest films of all time.
Switzerland
Alpine Fire (1985) was voted the best Swiss film of all time in 2001, 2006, 2011, and 2016, in polls organized by Swiss newspaper . 31 experts participated in 2011, and 36 experts in 2016.
Taiwan
A City of Sadness (; 1989) was voted the best Chinese-language film of all time with 73 votes in a 2010 poll of 122 film professionals organized by the Taipei Golden Horse Film Festival. It was also number 5, the highest ranked Taiwanese film, on the Hong Kong Film Awards' list of the Best 100 Chinese Motion Pictures, voted by 101 filmmakers, critics, and scholars.
Turkey
Dry Summer (1963) was voted the best Turkish film released between 1923 and 2013 in a 2014 poll launched by the Turkish Ministry of Tourism.
Umut (1970) was voted the best Turkish film of all time in a poll of 100 directors, actors, producers, and film writers organized by the Turkish newspaper Hürriyet.
Yol (1982) was voted the best Turkish film of all time in a 2016 poll of 383 experts organized by Turkish magazine Notos. It was also selected as the best Turkish film in a 2003 poll undertaken by Ankara Sinema Derneği (Ankara Association for Cinema Culture) of people interested in cinema professionally.
Ukraine
Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors (1965) was voted the best Ukrainian film of all time with 30 votes in a 2012 poll of about 100 journalists organized by the Cinema Journalism Bureau of Ukraine and the National Union of Cinematographers of Ukraine.
United Kingdom
The Third Man (1949) was voted the best British film ever by 1000 industry professionals, academics, and critics in a British Film Institute poll conducted in 1999.
Lawrence of Arabia (1962) was voted the "best British film of all time" in August 2004 by over 200 respondents in a Sunday Telegraph poll of Britain's leading filmmakers.
The Italian Job (1969) was voted the best British film in a poll of film fans conducted by Sky Movies HD in 2011 when it received 15% of votes. It also topped a 2017 survey by Vue Entertainment.
Get Carter (1971) was voted the best British film ever in a 2003 poll by Hotdog magazine. It also topped the 2004 poll of 25 film critics conducted by Total Film.
Don't Look Now (1973) was named the best British film in a poll of 150 film industry experts conducted by Time Out London in 2011.
Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975) was voted the best British picture of all time by 7,000 film fans in a 2004 poll by the UK arm of Amazon and Internet Movie Database.
United States
Gone with the Wind (1939) was voted the favorite film of Americans in a poll of 2,279 adults undertaken by Harris Interactive in 2008, and again in a follow-up poll of 2,276 adults in 2014. It was also voted the best American film of all time by 35,000 members of the American Film Institute in 1977. It was picked in 2011 as the best film for Best in Film: The Greatest Movies of Our Time, an online poll in which over 500,000 votes were cast. Voters chose from a list of 10 English-language films selected by film industry experts.
Citizen Kane (1941) was selected as the greatest American film in 2015 by sixty-two international film critics surveyed by the BBC. It was also ranked top in every Sight & Sound critics' poll between 1962 and 2002, and the directors' poll in 1992 and 2002. The American Film Institute polled 1,500 film community leaders for the lists 100 Years...100 Movies and the 10th Anniversary Edition in 1998 and 2007 respectively, asking voters to choose from a list of 400 nominations. Both polls identified Citizen Kane as the best American film ever. It was voted the best American film of all time with 156 votes in a 1977 poll of 203 experts from 22 countries (116 Americans and 87 non-Americans). The poll was organized by the Royal Belgian Film Archive and titled "The most important and misappreciated American films", and they were looking for subjective choices.
Casablanca (1942) was voted the greatest American film by readers of the Los Angeles Daily News in 1997.
Vertigo (1958) topped the Sight & Sound critics' poll in 2012 with 191 votes.
The Godfather (1972) was selected as the greatest film by 2,120 industry professionals in a Hollywood survey undertaken by The Hollywood Reporter in 2014.
Uruguay
Whisky (2004) was voted the best Uruguayan film of all time by 22 members of the Uruguayan Film Critics Association in 2015.
Venezuela
El Pez que Fuma (1977) was voted the best Venezuelan film of all time with 22 votes in a 1987 poll of 29 experts organized by Imagen magazine. It was also voted the best Venezuelan film of all time with 33 votes in a 2016 poll of 41 experts organized by the Fundación Cinemateca Nacional.
See also
List of best picture awards
List of film awards
List of highest-grossing films
List of film-related topics
List of films with a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes
List of films considered the worst
References
External links
"The 1,000 Greatest Films" at They Shoot Pictures, Don't They?
The American Film Institute's 100 Years, 100 Movies
Sight & Sound magazine: The 50 Greatest Films of All Time
Film and video fandom
Best
Film-related lists of superlatives
Best
|
Theekshana Ratnasekera (born July 1, 1982) is a Sri Lankan former swimmer, who specialized in sprint freestyle events. She represented Sri Lanka, as an 18-year-old teen, at the 2000 Summer Olympics, and also held numerous age group and meet records in a sprint freestyle (both 50 and 100 m). Ratnasekera lost the race in the pre-Olympic selection to Radiesha Daluwatte, the teenage daughter of former Sri Lankan army commander Rohan Daluwatte, and the General filed a petition in the Court of Appeals to challenge the sports officials' decision to send Ratnasekera to the Olympics.
Ratnasekera competed only in the women's 50 m freestyle at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. She received a ticket from FINA, under a Universality program, in an entry time of 29.90. Swimming in heat two, she held off a sprint battle against six other swimmers to overhaul a 30-second barrier and hit the wall first in a sterling time and a Sri Lankan record of 29.88. Ratnasekera's effortless triumph was not enough to put her through to the semifinals, as she placed sixty-fourth overall in the prelims.
References
External links
1982 births
Living people
Sri Lankan female swimmers
Olympic swimmers for Sri Lanka
Swimmers at the 2000 Summer Olympics
Sri Lankan female freestyle swimmers
Swimmers from Colombo
South Asian Games bronze medalists for Sri Lanka
South Asian Games medalists in swimming
|
FPDA may refer to:
Feminist post-structuralist discourse analysis, a method of discourse analysis
Five Power Defence Arrangements, a series of defence relationships established by a series of bilateral agreements between the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia and Singapore
Flexible Premium Deferred Annuity, a type of life annuity where multiple premiums may be made in the deferral period
|
Żarówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radomyśl Wielki, within Mielec County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately south-west of Radomyśl Wielki, south-west of Mielec, and west of the regional capital Rzeszów.
References
Villages in Mielec County
|
```javascript
'use strict';
// This test makes sure that when using --abort-on-uncaught-exception and
// when throwing an error from within a domain that has an error handler
// setup, the process _does not_ abort.
const common = require('../common');
const assert = require('assert');
const domain = require('domain');
const child_process = require('child_process');
const tests = [
function nextTick() {
const d = domain.create();
d.once('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
process.nextTick(function() {
throw new Error('exceptional!');
});
});
},
function timer() {
const d = domain.create();
d.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
setTimeout(function() {
throw new Error('exceptional!');
}, 33);
});
},
function immediate() {
const d = domain.create();
d.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
setImmediate(function() {
throw new Error('boom!');
});
});
},
function timerPlusNextTick() {
const d = domain.create();
d.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
setTimeout(function() {
process.nextTick(function() {
throw new Error('exceptional!');
});
}, 33);
});
},
function firstRun() {
const d = domain.create();
d.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
throw new Error('exceptional!');
});
},
function fsAsync() {
const d = domain.create();
d.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
const fs = require('fs');
fs.exists('/non/existing/file', function onExists(exists) {
throw new Error('boom!');
});
});
},
function netServer() {
const net = require('net');
const d = domain.create();
d.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
const server = net.createServer(function(conn) {
conn.pipe(conn);
});
server.listen(0, common.localhostIPv4, function() {
const conn = net.connect(this.address().port, common.localhostIPv4);
conn.once('data', function() {
throw new Error('ok');
});
conn.end('ok');
server.close();
});
});
},
function firstRunOnlyTopLevelErrorHandler() {
const d = domain.create();
const d2 = domain.create();
d.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
d2.run(function() {
throw new Error('boom!');
});
});
},
function firstRunNestedWithErrorHandler() {
const d = domain.create();
const d2 = domain.create();
d2.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
d2.run(function() {
throw new Error('boom!');
});
});
},
function timeoutNestedWithErrorHandler() {
const d = domain.create();
const d2 = domain.create();
d2.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
d2.run(function() {
setTimeout(function() {
console.log('foo');
throw new Error('boom!');
}, 33);
});
});
},
function setImmediateNestedWithErrorHandler() {
const d = domain.create();
const d2 = domain.create();
d2.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
d2.run(function() {
setImmediate(function() {
throw new Error('boom!');
});
});
});
},
function nextTickNestedWithErrorHandler() {
const d = domain.create();
const d2 = domain.create();
d2.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
d2.run(function() {
process.nextTick(function() {
throw new Error('boom!');
});
});
});
},
function fsAsyncNestedWithErrorHandler() {
const d = domain.create();
const d2 = domain.create();
d2.on('error', common.mustCall());
d.run(function() {
d2.run(function() {
const fs = require('fs');
fs.exists('/non/existing/file', function onExists(exists) {
throw new Error('boom!');
});
});
});
}
];
if (process.argv[2] === 'child') {
const testIndex = +process.argv[3];
tests[testIndex]();
} else {
tests.forEach(function(test, testIndex) {
let testCmd = '';
if (!common.isWindows) {
// Do not create core files, as it can take a lot of disk space on
// continuous testing and developers' machines
testCmd += 'ulimit -c 0 && ';
}
testCmd += `"${process.argv[0]}" --abort-on-uncaught-exception ` +
`"${process.argv[1]}" child ${testIndex}`;
try {
child_process.execSync(testCmd);
} catch (e) {
assert.fail(`Test index ${testIndex} failed: ${e}`);
}
});
}
```
|
```objective-c
/*
*
*/
#ifndef MOCKS_KERNEL_H_
#define MOCKS_KERNEL_H_
#include <zephyr/fff.h>
#include <zephyr/kernel.h>
void mock_kernel_init(void);
void mock_kernel_cleanup(void);
DECLARE_FAKE_VALUE_FUNC(k_ticks_t, z_timeout_remaining, const struct _timeout *);
DECLARE_FAKE_VALUE_FUNC(bool, k_work_cancel_delayable_sync, struct k_work_delayable *,
struct k_work_sync *);
DECLARE_FAKE_VALUE_FUNC(int, k_sem_take, struct k_sem *, k_timeout_t);
DECLARE_FAKE_VOID_FUNC(k_sem_give, struct k_sem *);
#endif /* MOCKS_KERNEL_H_ */
```
|
```javascript
var structcmsis__nn__per__channel__quant__params =
[
[ "multiplier", "structcmsis__nn__per__channel__quant__params.html#a33b4a56acc8ffaa077f7db31b001e5bd", null ],
[ "shift", "structcmsis__nn__per__channel__quant__params.html#a281dfde55f7a87b39a4a2c2c0362c813", null ]
];
```
|
```go
package parser
import (
"os"
"path/filepath"
"testing"
"github.com/gruntwork-io/go-commons/files"
"github.com/gruntwork-io/terratest/modules/random"
"github.com/stretchr/testify/assert"
)
func createLogWriter(t *testing.T) LogWriter {
logWriter := LogWriter{
lookup: make(map[string]*os.File),
outputDir: t.TempDir(),
}
return logWriter
}
func TestEnsureDirectoryExistsCreatesDirectory(t *testing.T) {
t.Parallel()
dir := t.TempDir()
logger := NewTestLogger(t)
tmpd := filepath.Join(dir, "tmpdir")
assert.False(t, files.IsDir(tmpd))
ensureDirectoryExists(logger, tmpd)
assert.True(t, files.IsDir(tmpd))
}
func TestEnsureDirectoryExistsHandlesExistingDirectory(t *testing.T) {
t.Parallel()
dir := t.TempDir()
logger := NewTestLogger(t)
assert.True(t, files.IsDir(dir))
ensureDirectoryExists(logger, dir)
assert.True(t, files.IsDir(dir))
}
func TestGetOrCreateFileCreatesNewFile(t *testing.T) {
t.Parallel()
logWriter := createLogWriter(t)
logger := NewTestLogger(t)
testFileName := filepath.Join(logWriter.outputDir, t.Name()+".log")
assert.False(t, files.FileExists(testFileName))
file, err := logWriter.getOrCreateFile(logger, t.Name())
defer file.Close()
assert.Nil(t, err)
assert.NotNil(t, file)
assert.True(t, files.FileExists(testFileName))
}
func TestGetOrCreateFileCreatesNewFileIfTestNameHasDir(t *testing.T) {
t.Parallel()
logWriter := createLogWriter(t)
logger := NewTestLogger(t)
dirName := filepath.Join(logWriter.outputDir, "TestMain")
testFileName := filepath.Join(dirName, t.Name()+".log")
assert.False(t, files.IsDir(dirName))
assert.False(t, files.FileExists(testFileName))
file, err := logWriter.getOrCreateFile(logger, filepath.Join("TestMain", t.Name()))
defer file.Close()
assert.Nil(t, err)
assert.NotNil(t, file)
assert.True(t, files.IsDir(dirName))
assert.True(t, files.FileExists(testFileName))
}
func TestGetOrCreateChannelReturnsExistingFileHandle(t *testing.T) {
t.Parallel()
logWriter := createLogWriter(t)
testName := t.Name()
logger := NewTestLogger(t)
testFileName := filepath.Join(logWriter.outputDir, t.Name())
file, err := os.Create(testFileName)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("error creating test file %s", testFileName)
}
defer file.Close()
logWriter.lookup[testName] = file
lookupFile, err := logWriter.getOrCreateFile(logger, testName)
assert.Nil(t, err)
assert.Equal(t, lookupFile, file)
}
func TestCloseFilesClosesAll(t *testing.T) {
t.Parallel()
logWriter := createLogWriter(t)
logger := NewTestLogger(t)
testName := t.Name()
testFileName := filepath.Join(logWriter.outputDir, testName)
testFile, err := os.Create(testFileName)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("error creating test file %s", testFileName)
}
alternativeTestName := t.Name() + "Alternative"
alternativeTestFileName := filepath.Join(logWriter.outputDir, alternativeTestName)
alternativeTestFile, err := os.Create(alternativeTestFileName)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("error creating test file %s", alternativeTestFileName)
}
logWriter.lookup[testName] = testFile
logWriter.lookup[alternativeTestName] = alternativeTestFile
logWriter.closeFiles(logger)
err = testFile.Close()
assert.Contains(t, err.Error(), os.ErrClosed.Error())
err = alternativeTestFile.Close()
assert.Contains(t, err.Error(), os.ErrClosed.Error())
}
func TestWriteLogWritesToCorrectLogFile(t *testing.T) {
t.Parallel()
logWriter := createLogWriter(t)
logger := NewTestLogger(t)
testName := t.Name()
testFileName := filepath.Join(logWriter.outputDir, testName)
testFile, err := os.Create(testFileName)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("error creating test file %s", testFileName)
}
defer testFile.Close()
alternativeTestName := t.Name() + "Alternative"
alternativeTestFileName := filepath.Join(logWriter.outputDir, alternativeTestName)
alternativeTestFile, err := os.Create(alternativeTestFileName)
if err != nil {
t.Fatalf("error creating test file %s", alternativeTestFileName)
}
defer alternativeTestFile.Close()
logWriter.lookup[testName] = testFile
logWriter.lookup[alternativeTestName] = alternativeTestFile
randomString := random.UniqueId()
err = logWriter.writeLog(logger, testName, randomString)
assert.Nil(t, err)
alternativeRandomString := random.UniqueId()
err = logWriter.writeLog(logger, alternativeTestName, alternativeRandomString)
assert.Nil(t, err)
buf, err := os.ReadFile(testFileName)
assert.Nil(t, err)
assert.Equal(t, string(buf), randomString+"\n")
buf, err = os.ReadFile(alternativeTestFileName)
assert.Nil(t, err)
assert.Equal(t, string(buf), alternativeRandomString+"\n")
}
func TestWriteLogCreatesLogFileIfNotExists(t *testing.T) {
t.Parallel()
logWriter := createLogWriter(t)
logger := NewTestLogger(t)
testName := t.Name()
testFileName := filepath.Join(logWriter.outputDir, testName+".log")
randomString := random.UniqueId()
err := logWriter.writeLog(logger, testName, randomString)
assert.Nil(t, err)
assert.True(t, files.FileExists(testFileName))
buf, err := os.ReadFile(testFileName)
assert.Nil(t, err)
assert.Equal(t, string(buf), randomString+"\n")
}
```
|
Brita may refer to:
People
Brita Appelgren (1912–1999), Swedish film actress
Brita Baldus (born 1965), German diver, who competed for East Germany until the unification in 1991
Brita Biörn
Brita Borg (1926–2010), Swedish singer, actress, and variety show artist
Brita Borge (1931–2013), Norwegian politician for the Conservative Party
Brita Bratland (1910–1975), Norwegian folk singer
Brita Catharina Lidbeck (1788–1864), Swedish Dilettante concert singer
Brita Collett Paus (1917–1998), Norwegian humanitarian leader
Brita Drewsen (1887–1983), Swedish artist and businesswoman
Brita Filter, American drag queen
Brita Granström (born 1969), Swedish artist who graduated from Konstfack Stockholm in 1994 and now lives and works between Great Britain and her homeland
Brita Hagberg (1756–1825), Swedish soldier
Brita Hazelius (1909–1975), Swedish breaststroke swimmer who competed in the 1928 Summer Olympics
Brita Horn (1745–1791), Swedish countess and courtier
Brita Johansson (born 1941), Finnish athlete
Brita Klemetintytär (1621–1700), Finnish postmaster
Brita Koivunen (1931–2014), Finnish schlager singer
Brita Lindholm (born 1963), Swedish curler
Brita Nordlander (1921–2009), Swedish teacher and politician
Brita Olofsdotter (died 1569), Finnish soldier of the Swedish cavalry
Brita Olsdotter
Brita Persdotter Karth
Brita Pipare
Brita Rosladin (1626–1675), Swedish noblewoman
Brita Ryy (1725–1783), Swedish educator
Brita Sailer
Brita Scheel (1638–1699), Danish noblewoman
Brita Sigourney (born 1990), American freestyle skier
Brita Snellman (1901–1978), Swedish architect
Brita Sofia Hesselius (1801–1866), Swedish daguerreotype photographer
Brita Sophia De la Gardie (1713–1797), Swedish noble and amateur actress
Brita Tott
Brita Zippel (died 1676), Swedish witch
Brita von Cöln
Brita von Horn (1886–1983), Swedish novelist, dramatist, director
Brita Öberg (1900–1969), Swedish actress
Places
Brita-Arena, Wiesbaden, Germany
Other
1071 Brita, asteroid
Brita (company)
SS Brita (1908), cargo ship
|
```yaml
commonfields:
id: IPExtract
version: -1
name: IPExtract
script: >-
import re
import socket
def is_valid_ipv4_address(address):
try:
socket.inet_pton(socket.AF_INET, address)
except AttributeError: # no inet_pton here, sorry
try:
socket.inet_aton(address)
except socket.error:
return False
return address.count('.') == 3
except socket.error: # not a valid address
return False
return True
res = []
ips = []
data = demisto.args()['text']
for m in re.finditer(r'\b(?:[0-9]{1,3}\.){3}[0-9]{1,3}\b', data, re.I):
ip = m.group(0)
if ip in ips:
continue
if not is_valid_ipv4_address(ip):
continue
ips.append(ip)
res.append('IPs found:\n' + '\n'.join(ips))
appendContext('ips', ips)
demisto.results(res)
type: python
subtype: python2
tags:
- ip
- infra
comment: Deprecated. Extract IPs from the given text and place them both as output and in the context of a playbook
system: true
deprecated: true
args:
- name: text
required: true
default: true
description: The text to extract ip from
scripttarget: 0
dependson: {}
timeout: 0s
fromversion: 5.0.0
dockerimage: demisto/python:2.7.18.20958
```
|
```javascript
/**
* @license Apache-2.0
*
*
*
* path_to_url
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
*/
'use strict';
// MODULES //
var tape = require( 'tape' );
var hasOwnProp = require( '@stdlib/assert/has-own-property' );
var minmaxabs = require( './../lib' );
// TESTS //
tape( 'main export is a function', function test( t ) {
t.ok( true, __filename );
t.strictEqual( typeof minmaxabs, 'function', 'main export is a function' );
t.end();
});
tape( 'attached to the main export is an `assign` method', function test( t ) {
t.strictEqual( hasOwnProp( minmaxabs, 'assign' ), true, 'has property' );
t.strictEqual( typeof minmaxabs.assign, 'function', 'has method' );
t.end();
});
```
|
```java
package expo.modules.notifications.notifications.categories.serializers;
import android.os.Bundle;
import expo.modules.core.interfaces.InternalModule;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.List;
import androidx.annotation.NonNull;
import androidx.annotation.Nullable;
import expo.modules.notifications.notifications.model.NotificationAction;
import expo.modules.notifications.notifications.model.NotificationCategory;
import expo.modules.notifications.notifications.model.TextInputNotificationAction;
public class ExpoNotificationsCategoriesSerializer implements NotificationsCategoriesSerializer, InternalModule {
@Override
public List<? extends Class> getExportedInterfaces() {
return Collections.singletonList(NotificationsCategoriesSerializer.class);
}
@Nullable
@Override
public Bundle toBundle(@Nullable NotificationCategory category) {
if (category == null) {
return null;
}
Bundle serializedCategory = new Bundle();
serializedCategory.putString("identifier", getIdentifier(category));
serializedCategory.putParcelableArrayList("actions", toBundleList(category.getActions()));
// Android doesn't support any category options
serializedCategory.putBundle("options", new Bundle());
return serializedCategory;
}
protected String getIdentifier(@NonNull NotificationCategory category) {
return category.getIdentifier();
}
private ArrayList<Bundle> toBundleList(List<NotificationAction> actions) {
ArrayList<Bundle> result = new ArrayList<>();
for (NotificationAction action : actions) {
result.add(toBundle(action));
}
return result;
}
private Bundle toBundle(NotificationAction action) {
// First we bundle up the options
Bundle serializedActionOptions = new Bundle();
serializedActionOptions.putBoolean("opensAppToForeground", action.opensAppToForeground());
Bundle serializedAction = new Bundle();
serializedAction.putString("identifier", action.getIdentifier());
serializedAction.putString("buttonTitle", action.getTitle());
serializedAction.putBundle("options", serializedActionOptions);
if (action instanceof TextInputNotificationAction) {
Bundle serializedTextInputOptions = new Bundle();
serializedTextInputOptions.putString("placeholder", ((TextInputNotificationAction) action).getPlaceholder());
serializedAction.putBundle("textInput", serializedTextInputOptions);
}
return serializedAction;
}
}
```
|
Dallas Reynolds (born April 23, 1984) is a former American football center. After playing college football for BYU, he signed with the Philadelphia Eagles as an undrafted free agent in 2009. He played for the Eagles from 2009–2013 and the New York Giants from 2013–2015.
Early years
Reynolds was born in Salt Lake City, Utah and attended Timpview High School in Provo, Utah. He earned all-region honors during his junior and senior seasons. He was named team captain as a senior. He was a two-time Deseret News first-team All-State selection.
College career
Reynolds played college football at BYU. He earned first-team All-Mountain West honors during his junior and senior years, playing left offensive tackle during his junior year and center during his senior year. He started in 50 games for the Cougars and never missed a game. The offensive line that he was part of at BYU allowed only 1.54 sacks per game. In his sophomore season, he started all 13 games at both offensive tackle spots. The offensive line during his sophomore year helped gain 465.5 yards of total offense per game, which was fourth in the nation. During his freshman season, he earned Freshman All-American honors after he started all 12 games and helped his offense average 33.0 points per game and 462.4 total yards per game.
Professional career
Philadelphia Eagles
Reynolds was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Philadelphia Eagles on April 27, 2009. He was waived on September 5, 2009, but was re-signed to the Eagles' practice squad on October 21 after Mike Gibson was signed off the practice squad by the Seattle Seahawks. Reynolds was promoted to the active roster on December 29 after Jamaal Jackson was placed on injured reserve with a torn anterior cruciate ligament (ACL).
Reynolds was waived on September 4, 2010 during final cuts, and re-signed to the team's practice squad the next day. He spent the entire season on the practice squad, and was re-signed to a future contract on January 10, 2011.
Reynolds was waived again during final cuts on September 2, 2011. Reynolds was re-signed to the teams practice squad on September 4. At the conclusion of the 2011 season, his practice squad contract expired and he became a free agent. He was re-signed to the active roster on January 5, 2012.
Reynolds replaced injured starting center Jason Kelce in a week 2 game against the Baltimore Ravens on September 16, 2012. Kelce suffered torn ligaments in his knee, causing him to miss the remainder of the season, and Reynolds started the remaining 14 games of the season.
Reynolds was released during final roster cuts one last time by the Eagles on August 31, 2013.
New York Giants
Reynolds signed with the New York Giants on October 1, 2013. He was released on October 5, 2013, but later re-signed on October 24, and appeared in three games during the season.
Reynolds became an exclusive rights free agent after the season, and re-signed with the team on April 21, 2014. He played in 15 games as a reserve lineman in 2014.
Prior to becoming a free agent, Reynolds re-signed with the Giants on February 19, 2015. He played in all 16 games in 2015, and started in two games. He became a free agent after the season and did not sign with another team.
BYU Cougars
Reynolds worked as a graduate assistant coach at BYU under head coach Kalani Sitake in 2017 and 2018.
Personal life
Reynolds is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Reynolds' wife, Suzanne, gave birth to their first child in September 2009. Reynolds served a church mission in Seattle, Washington. Reynolds' father, Lance Sr., has been at BYU as the associate head coach and running backs coach for over 28 years, and spent the 1978 NFL season with the Eagles. His older brother, Lance Jr., played college football for BYU, as a center, and played for the Seattle Seahawks for a season. His younger brothers are Matt, an offensive lineman for the Philadelphia Eagles & Kansas City Chiefs, and Houston, an offensive lineman for BYU whose career was cut short because of injury.
References
External links
Philadelphia Eagles bio
Brigham Young Cougars football bio
1984 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Salt Lake City
Players of American football from Salt Lake City
American football offensive linemen
BYU Cougars football players
Philadelphia Eagles players
New York Giants players
BYU Cougars football coaches
|
The Ibadan malimbe (Malimbus ibadanensis) is a rare species of bird in the family Ploceidae.
It is endemic to Nigeria, where it is known only from the southwestern part of the country, including the city of Ibadan (in Oyo) which it is named after. It was first discovered in 1951 and was common at one point. Forest clearing made it rare.
The bird is about 20 centimeters long. The male is black with a red head and breast. The female has smaller red areas.
The bird forages in pairs or small groups, sometimes alongside the red-headed malimbe (Malimbus rubricollis). It lives in forest and woodland habitat, including degraded areas.
References
Ibadan malimbe
Endemic birds of Nigeria
Ibadan
Ibadan malimbe
Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
|
Fabián Sánchez may refer to:
Fabian Sanchez (dancer) (born 1988), Colombian dancer
Fabián Sánchez (footballer, born 1988), Paraguayan football striker
Fabián Sánchez (footballer, born 2001), Argentine football left-back
See also
Fabien Sanchez (born 1983), French track cyclist
|
KOKI-TV (channel 23) is a television station in Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States, affiliated with the Fox network. It is owned by Imagicomm Communications alongside MyNetworkTV affiliate KMYT-TV (channel 41). The two stations share studios on East 27th Street and South Memorial Drive (near W. G. Skelly Park) in the Audubon neighborhood of southeast Tulsa; KOKI-TV's transmitter is located on South 273rd East Avenue (between 91st Street South and 101st Street South, next to the Muskogee Turnpike) in the western city limits of Coweta.
History
As an independent station
The UHF channel 23 allocation—which had been dormant since a short-lived attempt to revive its original occupant, KCEB, by original licensee Elfred Beck foundered in September 1967—was contested between two groups that vied to hold the construction permit to build a new television station on the frequency. The first prospective permittee was Wilson Communications, owned by Detroit businessman and Buffalo Bills owner Ralph Wilson, which filed an application with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on July 7, 1978. The second applicant, Tulsa 23, Ltd. (originally Channel 23 Tulsa, Ltd.), filed on September 5; that group—led by managing partner Benjamin F. Boddie, Corporate Vice President, Williams Companies. James Lavenstein would go on to serve as KOKI-TV's original general manager—primarily consisted of prominent local corporate executives and community leaders that included Helmerich & Payne CEO Walter H. Helmerich II, and present and former Williams Companies CEOs John H. Williams and Charles P. Williams, respectively (the latter two of whom initiated the redevelopment of over nine square blocks and of new office and retail construction in downtown Tulsa, including the establishment of the Williams Center, the Bank of Oklahoma Tower and the Tulsa Performing Arts Center). The FCC granted the license to the Tulsa 23 venture on December 12, 1979.
KOKI-TV signed on the air on October 26, 1980, a date chosen by Lavenstein at the suggestion of marketing and promotions manager Richard Enderwood, as it coincided with Enderwood's birthday. It was the first commercial television station to sign on in the Tulsa market since NBC affiliate KVOO-TV (channel 2, now KJRH-TV) signed on 26 years earlier on December 5, 1954, and the first independent station to begin operation in a market that, on paper, had a large enough population to provide suitable viewership for an independent station since the early 1970s. The station—which was then branded as "Tulsa 23," accompanied by a futuristic logo in which the numerical "23" was construed as the "LS" in "Tulsa"—originally operated from studio facilities located on East 46th Place (between Memorial Drive and Sheridan Road) in southeast Tulsa, which was fitted with used transmission equipment acquired second-hand from various other American television stations. The station operated on a lean budget, maintaining a general entertainment programming format that featured a mix of classic sitcoms, westerns and drama series, cartoons, and a limited number of sports events and religious programs. The Tulsa 23 partnership purchased programming at low cost and tailored its schedule to appeal to older and rural demographics, leaving much of the higher-rated and more recent syndicated content to be acquired by its network-affiliated competitors, KJRH, CBS affiliate KOTV (channel 6) and ABC affiliate KTUL (channel 8). KOKI was opportunistic with its programming acquisitions on occasion, and picked up broadcast rights to college and major league sporting events.
KOKI heavily emphasized feature films as part of its schedule during this period, typically offering a single film in the afternoon and one to two films during prime time each weekday, and three or four films per day on Saturdays and Sundays. One of the station's regular film presentations was Creature Feature, hosted by Sherman Oaks (the stage name of local comedian Jim Millaway), alongside Gailard Sartain and Jeanne Tripplehorn (then known as Jeanne Summers, who left after the program's first season), both of whom worked as radio hosts for KMOD-FM (97.5) at the time. Showcasing horror and science fiction B movies each Saturday night from October 1982 until October 1985, it featured wraparound segments before and after commercial breaks in which the hosts conducted various skits, often making ridiculous non-sequitur remarks. KOKI would gain a competitor on March 18, 1981, when a joint venture between Green Country Associates and Satellite Syndicated Systems signed on fellow independent KGCT-TV (channel 41, now MyNetworkTV affiliate KMYT-TV) with a mix of syndicated entertainment programs, locally produced news and talk programming in the afternoon, and movies, sports and specials from the In-Home Theatre (IT) subscription service at night. (Within three months of its debut, KGCT transitioned to a hybrid format consisting of daytime general entertainment programming on weekdays and weekend mornings, and IT subscription programming at night throughout the week and on weekend afternoons.) Despite its low-cost approach, KOKI became a major force in the market; this was evidenced in a 1983 study by New York City-based advertising and marketing firm Ogilvy & Mather examining Tulsa's commercial television stations, which showed that KOKI was the only station to increase viewership shares over the two-year period from May 1981 to May 1983, rising from a 6 to a 19 share in early evenings, from a 5 to a 9 in prime time and from a 4 to a 10 share against late newscasts on the three network affiliates, whereas KJRH, KOTV, and KTUL saw steady declines in those same dayparts, which were linked to KOKI's overall growth.
The slogan used to promote its film offerings from the station's sign-on until 1984—"Oklahoma's Movie Star," based on the title of the station's Movie Star film presentations—would be the center of a federal trademark infringement lawsuit that Tulsa 23 Ltd. filed against Home Box Office Inc. in October 1982 over the use of the "We Are Your Movie Star" image campaign implemented by HBO's sister premium service, Cinemax, earlier that year. Judge James Ellison, who presided over the case filed with the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma, granted an injunction against Home Box Office in November 1983, on grounds that the Cinemax campaign had infringed upon KOKI's trademark. HBO appealed the ruling in the Denver-based Tenth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, which upheld Ellison's injunction order in a ruling handed down on December 9, forcing Cinemax to discontinue the campaign and begin developing a replacement marketing initiative ("We're Taking You to the Stars," which Cinemax used as its image campaign slogan until 1986).
As a Fox affiliate
Partly because of its status as the strongest of the market's two independent stations, in early August 1986, in advance of the network's launch, News Corporation announced that it had reached an agreement with Tulsa 23 Ltd., in which KOKI-TV was named the Tulsa charter affiliate of the Fox Broadcasting Company.
KOKI-TV affiliated with Fox when the fledgling network began programming on October 9, 1986, with the premiere of late-night talk show The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers. Though it was technically a network affiliate, Channel 23 continued to be programmed as a de facto independent station as Fox offered a limited schedule of programming during the network's early years of operation. Even after the network's programming expanded with the launch of a three-hour Sunday night lineup in April 1987, Fox offered prime time programs exclusively on weekend evenings until September 1989, when it began a five-year expansion towards a nightly prime time schedule. (It would take seven years for Fox to offer prime time programs on all seven nights of the week, completing the expansion with the rollout of its Monday night lineup in January 1993.) Until the network's expansion was completed, KOKI continued to air a movie at 7:00 p.m. on nights when the network did not offer any programming. In 1988, the station moved its operations into a low-rise office building on East 54th Street and South Yale Avenue (near LaFortune Park) in southeast Tulsa, which was named Fox Plaza.
Clear Channel ownership
After trying for several years to offload KOKI-TV, the Tulsa 23 partnership secured a willing buyer on March 6, 1989, when it reached an agreement to sell the station to San Antonio, Texas-based Clear Channel Television for $6.075 million. Citing that KOKI had not generated a profit for some time as a result of an economic downturn spurred by an oil exploration slump in the region during the 1980s, division parent Clear Channel Communications (now iHeartMedia)—which had owned KMOD-FM and KAKC (1300 AM) since the company, as San Antonio Broadcasting Corp., acquired the two radio stations from Unicorn Inc. in 1973—applied for a "failing station" waiver of FCC ownership rules that then prohibited common ownership of television and radio stations in the same market on the basis that the combined ownership would provide KOKI with needed financial support to remain operational and expand its public affairs programming. The sale and cross-ownership waiver received FCC approval on November 17, 1989; the transaction was finalized in late February 1990. (KOKI would gain additional radio sisters when Clear Channel purchased KQLL-AM-FM [1430, now KTBZ, and 106.1, now KTGX] and KOAS [92.1 FM, now KTBT] from Federated Media for $15.4 million in April 1996; as the Telecommunications Act eliminated the radio-television cross-ownership restrictions, the company acquired the two stations without amending the earlier waiver.)
Under Clear Channel's stewardship, the station – which, in compliance with Fox's stricter branding requirements, phased out the "Tulsa 23" branding in favor of identifying as "KOKI Fox 23" in September 1990 – significantly upgraded its programming, acquiring the rights to more recent sitcoms, higher-quality feature film titles and some first-run talk shows for its schedule. It would also begin to rely on Fox Kids for much of its children's programming inventory after Fox launched the children's program block in September 1990; as such, many of the syndicated children's programs that KOKI had aired to occupy portions of the weekday daytime and Saturday morning time periods were gradually relegated to early morning time slots as well as around the network-supplied daytime and Saturday blocks. With these changes, coupled with the growth of the Fox network into a major competitor to the Big Three networks during the early part of that decade, KOKI was generating respectable profits by the middle of the decade.
On November 3, 1993, Clear Channel Television entered into a local marketing agreement with RDS Broadcasting – which had relaunched channel 41 (as independent station KTFO) in May 1991, after completing its purchase of the dormant license—to provide programming, advertising and other administrative services for KTFO, which would subsequently move that station's operations from its existing studio facilities on Garnett Avenue in southeast Tulsa into the Fox Plaza facility. Both KOKI and KTFO pooled programming inventories, with the latter acquiring additional talk and reality shows as well as more recent first-run and off-network sitcoms and drama series to complement channel 23's offerings (although many higher-rated syndicated shows continued to air on KOKI). As was the trend for many Fox affiliates, channel 23 gradually shifted the focus of its syndication inventory away from classic sitcoms and syndicated children's programs during the latter half of the 1990s, becoming increasingly reliant on talk, reality and court shows to fill portions of its daytime schedule; more recent sitcoms were added to occupy early-evening and late night timeslots. The station continued to run Fox Kids programming on weekdays until its afternoon block was discontinued in December 2001, at which time, it replaced the children's programs on weekday mid-afternoons with additional talk shows and game shows; it retained the remaining Saturday morning children's lineup (which was relaunched FoxBox in September 2002, and was later branded as 4Kids TV from September 2005 until December 2008, when Fox stopped providing children's programming after declining to renew its agreement with time-lease partner 4Kids Entertainment).
On December 15, 1999, four months after the FCC began permitting any commercial broadcasting firm the ability to legally own two commercial television stations within the same media market, Clear Channel announced it would acquire the KTFO license outright as part of a four-station deal with the San Antonio-based Mercury Broadcasting Company worth $11.663 million. The sale was approved by the FCC on March 9, 2000; following consummation of the transaction that May, KOKI and KTFO became the first legal broadcast television duopoly in the Tulsa market. In January 2002, Clear Channel relocated the operations of KOKI and KTFO from Fox Plaza into a studio complex located at 2625 South Memorial Drive. The building—which was originally constructed in 1962 for an expansion of the Oertle's Family Discount Store and later rented out to house a Burlington Coat Factory location—was purchased to allow the operations of the two television stations and Clear Channel's five Tulsa radio properties (which had previously operated from the Mid-Oklahoma Building on 41st Street and Skelly Drive in southwest Tulsa) to be housed under a single facility as well as to allow KOKI/KTFO to commence digital television transmissions and news operations. (An additional of building space was reserved for the Clear Channel Event Center exhibition complex.)
Newport Television ownership
On April 20, 2007, following the completion of the company's $18.7-billion purchase by private equity firms Thomas H. Lee Partners and Bain Capital, Clear Channel entered into an agreement to sell its television stations to Providence Equity Partners for $1.2 billion. The sale was approved by the FCC on December 1, 2007; after settling a lawsuit by Clear Channel ownership to force the equity firm to complete the sale, the Providence acquisition was finalized on March 14, 2008, at which time it formed Newport Television as a holding company to own and manage 27 of Clear Channel's 35 television stations (including KOKI and KMYT), and began transferring the remaining nine stations (all in markets where conflicts with FCC ownership rules precluded a legal duopoly from continuing under Newport) to High Plains Broadcasting, a licensee corporation formed to allow those stations to remain operationally tied to their associated Newport-owned outlets through local marketing agreements.
On August 11, 2011, William Sturdivant II—a then-25-year-old with a history of mental health issues, including once reportedly being apprehended on such an event after walking from Tulsa to Dallas, and an arrest record that included charges for burglary and drug possession – was found wandering in an area outside the KOKI/KMYT/Clear Channel Radio facility on Memorial Drive that was not authorized for public access, where he was chased onto the building's roof by security guards and climbed up to the mark of an adjacent transmission tower owned by Clear Channel for use by its radio stations and as an auxiliary tower for KOKI. Sturdivant (who was nicknamed "Tower Guy" by Tulsa-area and Oklahoma news outlets) moved at elevations between from his original point on the tower at various points during the standoff. After more than 150 hours (the longest standoff in the Tulsa Police Department's history, breaking the record set by a 1993 standoff involving a murder suspect that lasted for 32 hours), the standoff ended at around 6:40 p.m. on August 16, after retired Tulsa Police negotiator Tyrone Lynn was sent up the tower by crane to take Sturdivant—who, after being lowered to the ground by a Tulsa Fire Department cherry picker, was transported to the Hillcrest Medical Center to be treated for severe dehydration, heat exhaustion and burns sustained to his uncovered feet from navigating the tower beams in temperatures exceeding —down from the tower.
Cox Media Group ownership
As part of a series of piecemeal sales announced on July 19, 2012 that also involved the larger Nexstar Broadcasting Group and Sinclair Broadcast Group, Newport Television announced that it would sell KOKI-TV and KMYT as well as fellow Fox affiliate WAWS (now WFOX-TV) and the intellectual assets of CBS affiliate WTEV-TV (now WJAX-TV) in Jacksonville, Florida, to the Cox Media Group subsidiary of Atlanta-based Cox Enterprises for $253 million. The purchase placed the KOKI-KMYT duopoly under common ownership with Cox Radio's Tulsa cluster of KRMG (740 AM and 102.3 FM), KRAV-FM (96.5), KWEN (95.5 FM) and KJSR (103.3 FM), and, in the first instance since the 2003 repeal of an FCC cross-ownership ban in which the owner of a local cable provider acquired a television station in the same market, also made the two stations sister properties to Cox Communications, which has been the dominant cable operator in northeastern Oklahoma since it acquired Tele-Communications Inc. (TCI)'s Tulsa-area franchise in April 2000. The FCC approved the transaction on October 23, 2012; the sale was finalized on December 3. Although the sale separated KOKI/KMYT from its former radio sisters under Clear Channel ownership, iHeartMedia's Tulsa cluster continued to operate out of the Memorial Drive facility until the summer of 2017, when Cox moved its Tulsa-area radio stations into the building and iHeart moved its local stations into a new facility on Yale Avenue and 71st Street (northeast of Oral Roberts University) in southeast Tulsa's Richmond Hills section.
On February 15, 2019, private equity firm Apollo Global Management announced that it would acquire the respective television properties of Cox Media Group and Northwest Broadcasting and Cox's other print and broadcast properties in Atlanta and Dayton, Ohio (including the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the Dayton Daily News, and the company's respective radio clusters in those two markets) in a deal valued at $3.1 billion that would result in Cox Enterprises maintaining a minority interest in the acquired properties. Although the group originally planned to operate under the name Terrier Media, it was later announced on June 26 that Apollo would retain the Cox Media Group name post-acquisition, along with acquiring Cox's advertising business and the remainder of its Cox Radio unit (including its five Tulsa-area radio stations). The sale was completed on December 17, 2019.
Sale to Imagicomm
On March 29, 2022, Cox Media Group announced it would sell KOKI-TV, KMYT-TV and 16 other stations to Imagicomm Communications, an affiliate of the parent company of the INSP cable channel, for $488 million; the sale was completed on August 1.
Programming
KOKI-TV currently broadcasts the majority of the Fox network schedule, with the sole exception being the infomercial block Weekend Marketplace, electing to air either a mix of educational and lower-profile syndicated programs as well as infomercials slotted by KOKI/KMYT's programming department or Fox Sports programming in its Saturday morning timeslot. Channel 23 may preempt some Fox programs to provide long-form breaking news or severe weather coverage when necessary. The preempted programs may either be diverted to KMYT-TV on a live-to-air basis (resulting in the lower-priority MyNetworkTV schedule being run on tape delay during the late-access or overnight hours) or rebroadcast over KOKI in place of regularly scheduled late-night programs, although station personnel also gives viewers the option of watching them on Fox's proprietary streaming platforms (including its website, mobile app or the FoxNow streaming service), Hulu, or its cable/satellite video-on-demand service the day after their initial airing.
In addition to airing programming supplied by the network directly, channel 23 carries Xploration Station, a live-action educational program block that is distributed primarily to Fox stations by Steve Rotfeld Productions. While the block usually follows the Saturday edition of Fox 23 News This Morning, Fox Sports programming—especially during the college football and basketball seasons—will often subject some Xploration Station programs to be deferred to other daytime slots (either a weekday slot normally filled by the secondary run of a syndicated program or an open weekend afternoon slot that would be occupied by feature films or paid programming in lieu of a scheduled Fox Sports telecast) to allow KOKI to fulfill federal educational programming obligations.
Channel 23 formerly served as the Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA)'s "Love Network" station for the Tulsa market, carrying the charity's annual telethon on Labor Day and the preceding Sunday night each September from 2000 to 2010. For most of its run on the station, KOKI – which became among a handful of stations not affiliated with NBC, CBS or ABC to have ever carried the telethon upon assuming the local broadcast rights from KOTV – usually aired the telethon on a two-hour tape delay (airing after its 9:00 p.m. newscast from the 2002 edition onward) on the Sunday preceding Labor Day because of Fox entertainment and sports programming commitments. For this reason, in order to accommodate the six-hour prime time format (substantially downscaled from its longtime -hour broadcast format) implemented with its September 2011 edition, KOKI/KMYT management elected to shift the MDA Telethon rights to sister station KMYT-TV for what would be its final two years as a syndicated telecast. (The event—by then reduced to a two-hour special—moved to ABC, airing thereafter by association on KTUL until the final telecast of the retitled MDA Show of Strength in August 2014.))
Sports programming
From 1980 until 1987, KOKI-TV held the local syndication rights to broadcast Major League Baseball games from the Kansas City Royals produced by their flagship broadcaster at the time, Kansas City NBC affiliate WDAF-TV (now a Fox affiliate). (The local broadcast rights to the Royals transferred to KGCT for the 1988 season.) Its relationship with the league expanded in 1985, when carried games involving the St. Louis Cardinals (which were distributed by Anheuser-Busch's sports syndication subsidiary, Bud Sports); after a two-year stint on KGCT, Cardinals telecasts returned to channel 23 for the 1988 season. (All Cardinals telecasts moved to Tulsa Cable Television channel 3 [now Cox-operated YurView Oklahoma], or on channel 20 in the event of conflicts with sporting events carried on the primary public access channel, for the 1990 season.) Both the Cardinals and the Royals have had select games carried on KOKI each season since 1996, through Fox's broadcasting contract with Major League Baseball.
From 1989 to 1991, KOKI held the local broadcast rights to NFL preseason games involving the Dallas Cowboys; the station, which assumed the local preseason telecast rights to the teams from KGCT as a result of that station's two-year operational cessation, carried six to eight prime time Cowboys game telecasts annually. In addition, for the 1990 season (the first year that the NFL allowed a live preseason game to air on a team's out-of-market station), the station carried preseason games involving the Kansas City Chiefs, running four prime time game telecasts during that season. The rights to both the Cowboys and Chiefs telecasts transferred to KGCT beginning with the 1991 NFL preseason. Since September 1994, most Cowboys telecasts carried on KOKI consist of those carried regionally or nationally by Fox, which through the network's contract with the NFL, holds primary broadcast rights to the National Football Conference (NFC). In addition to carrying Fox-televised games involving in-conference opponents, since 2014, Cowboys games carried on the station also include certain cross-flexed games against opponents in the American Football Conference (AFC) that were originally scheduled to air on CBS. (Most Cowboys preseason games not televised by Fox or by other broadcast or cable networks are carried over-the-air locally on CW affiliate KQCW [channel 19] through that station's agreement with the team's syndication service.)
From 1989 to 1992, KOKI carried regular season and postseason college basketball games involving teams from the Big Eight Conference (distributed by Raycom Sports) and the Missouri Valley Conference (distributed by Creative Sports Marketing), which gave the station rights to select regular season games featuring the Oklahoma Sooners, the Oklahoma State Cowboys and the Tulsa Golden Hurricane. Most college basketball telecasts aired on the station on Saturday afternoons, although it also occasionally carried prime time games on weeknights, specifically during the Big Eight and Missouri Valley men's tournaments. Under the Raycom agreement, KOKI also carried tape delayed broadcasts of Oklahoma Sooners football games in late night on the Sunday after the date the game was held. From 2005 to 2010, channel 23 also served as the official local broadcaster of OSU-produced analysis and magazine programs, including the weekly shows of the respective head coaches of the Cowboys' basketball, baseball and football teams. (All of the broadcasts were hosted by then-sports director Steve Layman, and were also syndicated on fellow Fox affiliate KOKH-TV in Oklahoma City.)
News operation
, KOKI-TV broadcasts hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with nine hours each weekday, hours on Saturdays and five hours on Sundays); in regards to the number of hours devoted to locally produced newscasts, it is the highest local newscast output of any television station overall in both the Tulsa market and the state of Oklahoma. In addition, the station produces the ten-minute sports highlight program Fox 23 Sports This Weekend, which airs Saturdays and Sundays at 9:50 p.m. year-round, and High School Football Tonight, a half-hour high school football highlight show that airs Fridays at 11:00 p.m. from August to November. KOKI may shift regularly scheduled newscasts that it must preempt to accommodate Fox Sports event telecasts – such as the weekend editions of the 5:00 p.m. newscast – to sister station KMYT (which had also carried a full simulcast of the weekday edition of Fox 23 News This Morning from September 2014 until December 2017).
News department history
Channel 23 has carried local news programming in various formats since its launch in October 1980. Starting at its sign-on, news programming on KOKI originally consisted mainly of 90-second newsbriefs (originally titled Newscheck 23, renamed in September 1990 as Fox 23 Newsbreak) – consisting of Associated Press wire reports and a short weather forecast read by the anchor on-call – that aired during select commercial breaks within daytime and evening programs. As Fox was urging many of its stations to begin producing their own newscasts around this time, in a May 1994 Tulsa World interview, then-general manager Hal Capron responded when asked whether KOKI might develop a news department that while the enormous cost of starting such an operation was an issue, it would format the newscast as a cutting-edge broadcast to differentiate itself from competitors KJRH, KOTV and KTUL if it went forward with such plans. In December 1995, Capron announced plans to establish a news department for KOKI. (Such plans would likely have necessitated the expansion of its existing studio facilities or the relocation to more sufficiently large building space, as its occupied space at the Fox Plaza building was not quite large enough to house a full news department.) Original estimates by Capron suggested that a half-hour prime time newscast at 9:00 p.m. would premiere on channel 23 by August 1997; however, in January 1997, Capron disclosed that the newscast's launch would be delayed to an undetermined later date. In lieu of a full-scale newscast, on January 26, 1997—immediately following Fox's telecast of Super Bowl XXXI—KOKI instead premiered First Weather on Fox 23, a nightly weather forecast program (consisting of a five-minute-long lead segment at 10:00 that aired seven nights a week, and two 60-second updates at 10:35 and 11:05 p.m. exclusively seen on weeknights) that served as lead-ins to the station's late access syndicated and network program offerings. The news updates and First Weather were discontinued in December 2001.
In the fall of 2001, KOKI finally commenced development of a full-scale news department, and hired Sean McLaughlin—who oversaw the launch of the [now-defunct] news department at then-sister station WFTC in Minneapolis two years prior, and would later join KTUL to head its news operation in 2005—to serve as news director for the expanded operation. Clear Channel invested between $5 million and $10 million into the operation, which included the purchase and renovation of the Memorial Drive building (which was selected primarily because it was of sufficient size to house a news operation) and the acquisition of top-of-the-line production equipment (including nonlinear editing and content storage hardware from Leitch Technology Corporation). 54 full- and part-time employees were also hired to staff the new operation.
Long-form newscasts began on February 3, 2002, with the launch of Fox 23 News at 9:00, the first local prime time news program ever attempted in the Tulsa market and the first attempt at a newscast produced independently from KJRH, KOTV and KTUL since channel 41 (as KGCT) shut down its news operation 20½ years earlier in June 1981. The 9:00 p.m. newscast – which has aired as an hour-long program since its premiere broadcast, which itself was delayed due to an hour-long episode of Malcolm in the Middle that followed Fox's telecast of Super Bowl XXXVI – was originally anchored by Chera Kimiko (who, prior to joining channel 23, served as weekend morning anchor at KVBC [now KSNV] in Las Vegas from 1999 to 2001) and Darren Dedo (who served as weekday morning anchor at WJTV in Jackson, Mississippi from 2000 to 2001), chief meteorologist Jon Slater (who had worked at KSHB-TV in Kansas City from 1999 to 2001, and had previous stints in Tulsa at KJRH and KTUL earlier in the 1990s) and sports director Vic Faust (who had served in that same position at KMIZ-TV in Columbia, Missouri from 1998 to 2001). (Kimiko would remain at KOKI until January 2013, and was replaced as co-anchor by Shae Rozzi, who was previously a reporter for Atlanta sister station WSB-TV; Dedo was replaced as primary co-anchor of KOKI's evening newscasts in December 2004 by former CBS Newspath Washington, D.C. reporter Clay Loney, who remains with the station , after Dedo's contract expired without renewal; Slater remained at KOKI until 2008, and was subsequently replaced by current chief James Aydelott.) The Friday and Saturday editions were initially anchored by Markova Reed (who joined the station from WLBT in Jackson, Mississippi), meteorologist George Flickinger (who was previously chief meteorologist at KTXS-TV in Abilene, Texas) and sports anchor Dave Briggs (previously with fellow Fox affiliate KEVN-TV in Rapid City, South Dakota). (Flickinger was fired without pay by KOKI management in January 2006, for cutting into Fox's November 27, 2005, broadcast of a Seattle Seahawks–New York Giants NFL game to relay an evacuation request from the Mayes County Emergency Management Agency for a major wildfire approaching residences near Chouteau.)
From the outset, the station maintained a commitment to consumer investigative reporting, with a focus on helping northeastern Oklahoma residents that have been scammed by local businesses as well as government issues. (The investigative unit—originally named the "Fox 23 Problem Solvers"—was rebranded as the "Solving Problems" unit – partly a reference to the "Breaking News, Breaking Weather, Solving Problems" slogan used by KOKI at the time – to avoid confusion with KJRH's "2NEWS Problem Solvers" unit in 2007, and later became known as "Fox 23 Investigates" in 2012.) Although legitimate competition for the newscast sprang up when KQCW became a CW charter affiliate on September 18, 2006, when it debuted the KOTV-produced News on 6 at 9:00 (which Kimiko would co-anchor for two years after joining KOTV/KQCW in June 2013, following her departure from KOKI six months earlier), prime time news viewers largely remained loyal to KOKI, which had gradually become the ratings leader in the 9:00 p.m. timeslot.
News programming on KOKI expanded quickly over the next few years. Channel 23 offered news programming outside of the established 9:00 slot for the first time on June 17, 2002, when it premiered a 5:30 p.m. Monday-through-Friday-only newscast. Acting as a local alternative to national network newscasts aired on KJRH, KOTV and KTUL in that timeslot, it featured a mix of general and financial news in a faster-paced format targeted at viewers arriving home from their afternoon commute, along with full weather and abbreviated sports segments (with the sports segment initially consisting of a live cut-in featuring Faust sitting in with KTBZ afternoon drive radio hosts Rick Couri and Don King). The August 11, 2003 premiere of a more conventional half-hour broadcast at 5:00 p.m. – which would be extended to weekends on January 9, 2016 – expanded the early evening newscast to a full hour, albeit treated as two separate half-hour programs.
The station's morning newscast, Fox 23 News This Morning (alternately titled Fox 23 News Daybreak for the first two hours until 2014), debuted on April 24, 2006 as a four-hour broadcast from 5:00 to 9:00 a.m., displacing religious programs, infomercials and syndicated children's programs that had previously aired in that time period, the latter of which were relegated to Sunday mornings. (The program would expand to 4½ hours on October 6, 2014, then to five hours, starting at 4:00 a.m., on June 20, 2016.) Formatted as a mix of local and national news, weather and traffic updates and lifestyle features, it was initially co-anchored by Ron Terrell (who originally joined KOKI in June 2004, after a four-year tenure at KOCO-TV in Oklahoma City, to succeed Faust as part of overhaul of the sports department that also saw the departures of Briggs and sports reporter/videographer Justin Holgate; Terrell remains anchor of the newscast ) and Ann Sterling (who served as one of the original anchors of the weekday morning newscast at KNXV-TV in Phoenix, and had previously worked as an evening anchor at fellow Fox affiliate and now-former sister station WXXA-TV in Albany). It was the second local newscast in the market to run after 7:00 a.m., debuting twelve years after KOTV's Six in the Morning (the 8:00 a.m. hour of which moved to KQCW in January 2008) had expanded into the slot. The station debuted an hour-long midday newscast at noon (which was originally scheduled to launch on the same date as the morning newscast) two months later on June 5, 2006; the program was moved up one hour to 11:00 a.m. on June 15, 2020.
On January 18, 2010, KOKI debuted a half-hour 10:00 p.m. newscast, which was formatted to feature a wrap-up of the day's headlines and a full weather segment during the first ten minutes, with national and world news, sports and feature reports filling the remainder of the broadcast. (The program, which originally aired only on Monday through Friday evenings, would add a Sunday edition on January 9, 2016.) On January 16, 2011, starting with the 9:00 p.m. newscast, KOKI became the second television station in the Tulsa market (behind KJRH-TV) to begin broadcasting its local newscasts in high definition, with studio segments and field video footage recorded and broadcast in true HD; with the change, the station adopted the logo, music (OSI Music's "Fox Affiliate News Theme") and graphic scheme (a modified version of the Hothaus Creative Design package originally commissioned for fellow Fox affiliate KSWB-TV in San Diego) that was based on the standardized branding of Fox's owned-and-operated stations. (This package was replaced in January 2014, with a modified version of the graphics package developed in 2009 for fellow Fox and former sister station KTVU in San Francisco [which Cox Media Group sold to Fox in 2014] as well as replacing its O&O-styled logo with a red and white variant of the secondary standard Fox affiliate logo design.)
The early evening news block would expand on September 23, 2013, when KOKI debuted a half-hour weeknight newscast at 6:00 p.m. KOKI subsequently debuted weekend morning newscasts on January 4, 2014, originally running for three hours from 7:00 to 10:00 a.m. on Saturdays and 6:00 to 9:00 a.m. on Sundays, becoming the second station in the Tulsa market (after KJRH-TV) to carry a morning news program on weekends (both broadcasts were expanded to three hours with the Sunday edition being shifted one hour earlier on April 5, 2014; the Saturday edition followed suit with the addition of a fourth hour on January 9, 2016). On August 29, 2015, KOKI entered into a content partnership with the Tulsa World to collaborate on investigative reports, coverage of local high school football games and some special projects as well as to provide local forecasts from the "Fox 23 Severe Weather Team" for the newspaper. In March 2016, KOKI unveiled the "Fox 23 SkyView Drone", an unmanned quadcopter that is used to provide aerial newsgathering of news and weather events.
Since the news department's launch and its subsequent expansion, ratings for KOKI's newscasts have statistically ranked at a strong third to, at times, second place among the Tulsa market's television news outlets; the station has seen some slow growth in viewership for its newscasts since the late 2000s, amid continuing stagnant ratings for historical last place finisher KJRH and ratings declines for once-dominant KTUL in recent years. The 2000 comedy-drama film Where the Heart Is, which was set in northeastern Oklahoma, featured a fictional depiction of KOKI incorporating live trucks and microphones with flags bearing the station's logo in a scene in which lead character Novalee Nation (Natalie Portman) is interviewed by a channel 23 reporter after giving birth inside a Sequoyah-area Wal-Mart where she was abandoned by her baby's father, Willy Jack Pickens (Dylan Bruno). However, at the time of the film's release, the station's only news programming consisted of hourly update segments (as its current news department would not be formed until a year-and-a-half after Where the Heart Is had its theatrical release).
Notable former on-air staff
Dave Briggs – weekend evening sports anchor/sports reporter (2002–2004; now at CNN as co-anchor of Early Start)
Sheinelle Jones – weekend evening anchor/reporter (2002–2006; now at NBC News)
Jeanne Tripplehorn (aka Jeanne Summers) – co-host of Creature Feature (1982–1983; now a film and television actress)
Technical information
Subchannels
The station's digital signal is multiplexed:
Analog-to-digital conversion
KOKI-TV began transmitting a digital television signal on UHF channel 22 on October 1, 2002. The station shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 23, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 22. Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display the station's virtual channel as its former UHF analog channel 23. Newport Television's decision to delay KOKI's switch to digital-only transmissions by five months, while electing to turn off the KMYT analog signal on the original transition date of February 17, 2009, was done in order to enable viewers who were not prepared for the transition to continue receiving news and emergency weather information through the spring 2009 severe weather season.
References
Tulsa TV Memories: KOKI-TV
External links
www.fox23.com - KOKI-TV official website
www.fox23.com/s/station/my41tulsa - KMYT-TV official website
OKI-TV
Fox network affiliates
MeTV affiliates
Dabl affiliates
Television channels and stations established in 1980
1980 establishments in Oklahoma
Missouri Valley Conference broadcasters
Imagicomm Communications
|
La Chèvrerie () is a commune in the Charente department in southwestern France.
Population
See also
Communes of the Charente department
References
Communes of Charente
|
Gian Luca Waldschmidt (born 19 May 1996) is a German professional footballer who plays as a forward for Bundesliga club 1. FC Köln on loan from VfL Wolfsburg and the Germany national team. He developed through the academy of Eintracht Frankfurt and has represented Germany at various levels.
Club career
Eintracht Frankfurt
A forward, Waldschmidt began his youth career in 2001 with SSV Oranien Frohnhausen and had youth spells at SSC Juno Burg and TSG Wieseck before joining the Eintracht Frankfurt academy in 2010.
On 25 April 2014, Waldschmidt signed his first professional contract, a three-year deal. This saw him promoted to the first team, although he would still appear for the under-19 team. Exactly one year later, on 25 April 2015, Waldschmidt made his Bundesliga debut, as a 73rd-minute substitute for Sonny Kittel in a 0–2 home loss to Borussia Dortmund. He scored his first goal for Eintracht Frankfurt on 8 August in a 3–0 win over Bremer SV in the first round of the German cup.
Hamburger SV
On 30 June 2016, Waldschmidt signed for Hamburger SV on a four-year contract. He made his first appearance for the Hamburg club in the Bundesliga in a 0–4 home loss to RB Leipzig on 17 September, coming on as a substitute in the 83rd minute, replacing Bobby Wood. He scored his first goal for the club a few seconds after coming on, in a 4–0 win over Hallescher FC on 24 October, in a second-round cup fixture. On 20 May 2017, the last round of the 2016–17 Bundesliga season, Waldschmidt scored his first Bundesliga-goal, the decisive goal in a 2–1 win over relegation rivals VfL Wolfsburg, in the 88th minute – two minutes after being substituted in. The goal meant that Hamburger SV avoided Bundesliga relegation play-offs for the first time in four years. In the following season, Waldschmidt made 21 league appearances in which he scored one goal. At the end of the season, Hamburger SV were relegated to the 2. Bundesliga for the first time in the Bundesliga's 55-year history.
SC Freiburg
In May 2018, SC Freiburg announced they had signed Waldschmidt for the 2018–19 season from Hamburger SV, newly relegated to the 2. Bundesliga. The club reportedly triggered a €5 million release clause. He finished his first campaign for the club with 30 appearances and nine goals.
Benfica
On 14 August 2020, Benfica announced the signing of Waldschmidt on a five-year deal for 15 million euros. Waldschmidt scored twice on his Benfica debut, a 5–1 Primeira Liga win over Famalicão on 18 September 2020.
VfL Wolfsburg
On 22 August 2021, Waldschmidt returned to Germany, signing a four-year contract with VfL Wolfsburg.
1. FC Köln
In July 2023, Waldschmidt joined 1. FC Köln on a one-year loan.
International career
Waldschmidt has represented the Germany national youth football team at U16, U17, U18, U19 and U21 level. He finished as the top scorer of the 2019 UEFA European Under-21 Championship, where he scored seven goals, breaking the previous record of his compatriot, Pierre Littbarski, who scored six goals in the 1982 UEFA European Under-21 Championship.
A few months later, on 29 August, he was called up to Joachim Löw's senior squad for UEFA Euro 2020 qualifiers against Netherlands and Czech Republic. He made his Germany national football team debut on 9 October 2019 in a friendly against Argentina. He started the game and played the whole match. He scored his first goal on 7 October 2020, against Turkey in a friendly game.
Personal life
Luca Waldschmidt is the son of Wolfgang Waldschmidt, who made 14 appearances for SV Darmstadt 98 in the 1983–84 2. Bundesliga season.
Career statistics
Club
International
As of match played 11 November 2020. Scores and results list Germany's goal tally first.
Honours
Germany U21
UEFA European Under-21 Championship runner-up: 2019
Individual
UEFA European Under-21 Championship Golden Boot: 2019
UEFA European Under-21 Championship Team of the Tournament: 2019
References
External links
Profile at the VfL Wolfsburg website
1996 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Siegen
Footballers from Arnsberg (region)
German men's footballers
Germany men's youth international footballers
Men's association football forwards
Eintracht Frankfurt players
Eintracht Frankfurt II players
Hamburger SV players
SC Freiburg players
S.L. Benfica footballers
VfL Wolfsburg players
Bundesliga players
Regionalliga players
Primeira Liga players
Germany men's under-21 international footballers
Germany men's international footballers
German expatriate men's footballers
German expatriate sportspeople in Portugal
Expatriate men's footballers in Portugal
1. FC Köln players
|
```c++
#include <climits>
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
// Function to find the Minimum number of coins required to get Sum S
int findMinCoins(int arr[], int n, int N) {
// dp[i] = no of coins required to get a total of i
int dp[N + 1];
// 0 coins are needed for 0 sum
dp[0] = 0;
for (int i = 1; i <= N; i++) {
// initialize minimum number of coins needed to infinity
dp[i] = INT_MAX;
int res = INT_MAX;
// do for each coin
for (int c = 0; c < n; c++) {
if (i - arr[c] >=
0) // check if coins doesn't become negative by including it
res = dp[i - arr[c]];
// if total can be reached by including current coin c,
// update minimum number of coins needed dp[i]
if (res != INT_MAX)
dp[i] = min(dp[i], res + 1);
}
}
// The Minimum No of Coins Required for N = dp[N]
return dp[N];
}
int main() {
// No of Coins We Have
int arr[] = {1, 2, 3, 4};
int n = sizeof(arr) / sizeof(arr[0]);
// Total Change Required
int N = 15;
cout << "Minimum Number of Coins Required " << findMinCoins(arr, n, N)
<< "\n";
return 0;
}
```
|
Naif Gahani () is a Saudi poet and writer, born in Qurayyat in 1968. He is the head of the Tabuk Literary Club in 2012, and he created a corner called (Abaq Al-Khuzama) in Al-Riyadh newspaper. He published many books, which vary between poetry, novel and intellectual writings. One of his notable works is a book called (Karma in Islam: A Technique of Healing by Ethics and Spiritual Energy).
Education
He obtained a doctorate degree in technical learning and its impact on achievement in the Arabic language from the Arab University of Amman in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.
Career
He works as a member of the faculty at the University of Tabuk.
He was assigned to be the president of the Tabuk Literary Club since 2012.
He worked as the director of the Culture and Arts Association in Tabuk.
Works
Diwan (quickly as someone who does not pass)(original text: sryean kaman laa yamuru)eloquent poetry. It was released in 1997.
Diwan (The North of the Soul) (original text: shmal alruwh) written in colloquial Arabic. Released in 2000.
Diwan (Qaisum's windows) (original text: nuafidh alqisum) eloquent poetry. Released in 2000.
The novel (The Limits) (original text: alhudud). Published in 2003. It is a novel that draws details from Bedouin life in the Saudi desert in northern Saudi Arabia.
(Karma in Islam: A Technique of Healing by Ethics and Spiritual Energy) (original text: alkarma fi al'iislam: taqniat aleilaj bial'akhlaq walttaqat alruwhia) published by the Arab Science House.
Diwan (Hoda) eloquent poetry. Issued by the Arab Science House in 2010.
(Beyond consciousness: a contemplation of my faith in human abilities in the prospects of "parapsychology") (original text: maa wara' alwaey: tamal 'iimani fi alqudrat eind albashar afaq "albarasykuluji") published by the Arab Science House in 2012.
The novel (Tabawa) published by the Arab Science House in 2012.
Diwan (Hanin Barri) issued by the Arab Science House in 2013.
(Sophology of self-consciousness of the moment) (original text: sufiulujia waey allah'dat bidhatiha) issued by Defaf publications in 2014.
(Cosmology: Reflections on Poetic Existence) (original text: kuniat: tamulat fi alwujud alshaerii), published by Defaf Publications in 2014.
Diwan (Faraway as a prediction ...!) (original text: beida katanbuw) Issued by the Arab Expansion Foundation in 2016.
(Intention karma: from the earth of cause to the sky of results) (original text: karama alnya: min 'ar'd alsabab 'iilaa sama' alnatija).
Honors and awards
He received the Tabuk Award for Academic Excellence in 1996.
He was honored by the Tabuk Literary Club in 2011.
The Culture and Arts Association in Jeddah honored him in cooperation with the Jeddah Literary Club in 2019 in an evening entitled (Naif Gahani, The Biography and the journey), in appreciation of his efforts in the field of culture, arts and poetry.
References
20th-century Saudi Arabian poets
21st-century Saudi Arabian poets
1968 births
Living people
|
Infa-Kurjer () was a newspaper published in Belarus (partially in Russian, partially in Belarusian).
On April 8, 2023, Infa-Kurjer announced the suspension of its activities. The day before, all the content of the project (newspaper, website and social networks) was recognized as "extremist materials" in Belarus.
References
Defunct newspapers published in Belarus
Russian-language newspapers published in Belarus
2001 establishments in Belarus
Newspapers established in 2001
2023 disestablishments in Belarus
Publications disestablished in 2023
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.