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Constance Power (born 1995), known professionally as Connie Constance, is an English singer and songwriter. She released her debut album, English Rose, on 21 March 2019. The album is produced by Jim Abbiss, who has also produced material for artists including Adele and the Arctic Monkeys.
Constance grew up listening to bands like The Smiths, The Stone Roses, Arctic Monkeys and Blur. She trained as a dancer and was accepted to the Urdang Academy. After leaving the school in 2014, she worked with producer Kwesi Darko, with whom she released her debut EP, 'In The Grass' in 2015.
Constance's debut album English Rose was released on 22 March 2019. Reviewing, Pitchfork noted that "Constance’s voice takes on scratchy, sonorous depth that brings to mind the subterranean soul of fellow London artists Nilüfer Yanya and King Krule." Clash noted that her songs have been described as 'indie-soul'. The BBC described her as a "rising UK pop star".
In May 2019, she performed at The Great Escape Festival in Brighton.
She released the single ‘Monty Python’ in 2020 on Jump The Fence records, departing from the RnB and Soul influences of 2019’s English Rose and embracing her indie-rock influences instead.
Following this, Constance released ‘The Butterfly Club – EP’ later in 2020, releasing ‘James’ and ‘Costa Del Margate’ as singles. ‘Prim & Propa – EP’ followed in 2021, with ‘Electric Girl’ being the lead single.
In August 2022, Connie Constance featured on Clara Amfo’s BBC Radio 1 show ‘Future Sounds’. The show broadcast a recording of a live session from Maida Vale Studios, where she was joined by her live band. Constance performed ‘Miss Power’ and ‘’Til The World’s Awake’, as well as a cover of Helicopter by Bloc Party.
In November 2022, she released her sophomore album, ‘Miss Power’, on Play It Again Sam records. The album was produced by Karma Kid and sees Constance embrace a more indie, guitar based sound. Constance has described the album as ‘uptempo indie bangers’, as well as having more vulnerable moments, described by her as ‘folky indie soul’. ‘Miss Power’ was the lead single from the album. ‘’Til The World’s Awake’ and ‘Mood Hoover’ were the following 2 tracks released from the album. The last song to be released prior to the album, ‘Hurt You’, was written about Constance’s experience about being signed to a major label, and realising the people she was working with didn’t have her best interests at heart. Constance has spoken about being encouraged to make RnB music rather than the guitar-driven, indie music she gravitated towards. She has also said that it is her aim to ‘make it the norm for Black and mixed-race people to make alternative music – it shouldn’t even be a thing’.
The album was positively reviewed by the NME, Gal Dem, Far Out, Line of Best Fit, Clash, and DIY.
Constance also featured on the Swedish House Mafia song ‘Heaven Takes You Home’, from their 2022 album ‘Paradise Again’, and performed with them at their show at the O2 Arena in London in October 2022. In March 2023, she released a version of the track 'Kamikaze' featuring Sleaford Mods frontman Jason Williamson.. In October 2023 she sang on the track 'Mercury' on the long-awaited, sensational debut album, 'Famous Last Words' by UK artist, CASISDEAD.
Discography
Studio albums
2019 – English Rose
2022 – Miss Power
Extended Plays
2020 – ‘’The Butterfly Club’’
2021 – ‘’Prim & Propa’’
Singles
2015 – ‘’In The Grass’’
2015 – ‘’Answer’’
2016 – ‘’Lose My Mind’’
2016 – ‘’Clouds’’
2017 – ‘’Boring Connie’’
2018 – ‘’Yesterday’’
2018 – ‘’Fast Cars’’
2020 – ‘’Monty Python’’
2020 – ‘’James’’
2020 – ‘’Costa del Margate’’
2021 – ‘’Electric Girl
2022 – ‘’Miss Power’’
References
1995 births
Living people
Musicians from Watford
English women singer-songwriters
English singer-songwriters
21st-century English women singers
|
Politics of Nagasaki, as in all prefectures of Japan, takes place in the framework of local autonomy that is guaranteed by the Constitution and laid out in the Local Autonomy Law. The administration is headed by a governor directly elected by the people every four years in first-past-the-post elections. Legislation, the budget and the approval of personnel appointments, including the vice governor, are handled by the prefectural assembly that is directly elected by the people every four years by single-non transferable vote.
With a population of less than 1.5 million in four counties and a total of 21 municipalities, Nagasaki is one of the smaller prefectures. Its fiscal strength index (zaiseiryoku shisū) was 0.30 in fiscal 2009 (rank 42 nationwide), it can cover less than a third of its calculated expenses with its own prefectural taxes.
National representation
Nagasaki's delegation to the national Diet currently consists of four directly elected Representatives and two Councillors, electing one every three years. For the House of Representatives, the prefecture forms part of the Kyūshū proportional representation block.
As of August 2013, Nagasaki's directly elected members of the Diet are (not including Diet members who are from Nagasaki but were elected by proportional representation)
in the House of Representatives
1st district: Tsutomu Tomioka, Liberal Democrat
2nd district: Kanji Katō, Liberal Democrat
3rd district: Yaichi Tanigawa, Liberal Democrat
4th district: Seigo Kitamura, Liberal Democrat
in the House of Councillors (Nagasaki At-large district)
class of 2010: Genjirō Kaneko, Liberal Democrat
class of 2013: Yūichirō Koga, Liberal Democrat
Governor
Nagasaki's current governor is former vice governor Hōdō Nakamura who was elected in the election of 2010 with support from his predecessor Genjirō Kaneko against Democratic supported Tsuyoshi Hashimoto and five other candidates. Nakamura was re-elected for a second term in 2014 against only one Communist challenger; turnout hit an all-time low.
However, Shingo Ōishi elected head-to-head resulting vote against current governor on Nagasaki governor election on February 20, 2022.
Kuroiwa is the 8th elected governor since 1947. Past elected governors of Nagasaki:
Sōjirō Sugiyama, independent (JSP), 1 term, 1947–1951
Takejirō Nishioka, independent (conservative), 2 terms, 1951–1958, died in office, Nishioka's son was Representative, Councillor and gubernatorial candidate Takeo Nishioka,
Katsuya Satō, 3 terms, 1958–1970, Satō's son-in-law is former four-term governor of Kyōto ,
Kan'ichi Kubo, independent (elected as one of several LDP supported candidates), 3 terms, 1970–1982, Kubo's daughter is Ikuko Nakao, former mayor of Gotō, Nagasaki,
Isamu Takada, 4 terms, 1982–1998,
Genjirō Kaneko, independent (LDP), 3 terms, 1998–2010, Kaneko's father was Iwazō Kaneko, Representative from Nagasaki and minister in two cabinets.
Hōdō Nakamura, 3 terms from March 2, 2010, to March 1, 2022.
Shingo Ōishi, elected new governor from March 2, 2022.
Assembly
The Nagasaki Prefectural Assembly has currently 46 members. The number under the provisions of the Local Autonomy Law would be 52, but was reduced by prefectural regulations in 2003. Members are elected every four years in unified regional elections by single non-transferable vote (in single-member districts identical to first-past-the-post) in currently 16 electoral districts most of which correspond to the cities and counties of Nagasaki: Nagasaki city (14 members), Sasebo city and North Matsuura county (9), Shimabara city (2), Isahaya city (4), Ōmura city (3), Hirado city (1), Matsuura city (1), Tsushima city (1), Iki city (1), Gotō city (1), Saikai city (1), Unzen city (2), South Shimabara city (2), West Sonogi county (2), East Sonogi county (1) and South Matsuura county (1).
The most recent general election for the prefectural assembly took place in the unified elections of April 2011. The Liberal Democratic Party remained strongest party with 20 seats, the Democratic Party won 11. Three seats went to the Justice Party, two to the Social Democratic Party, one to the Japanese Communist Party and ten members were nominally independents.
As of April 1, 2014 the assembly was composed as follows:
Since 2012, the president of the assembly is Toshikatsu Watanabe (Kaikaku21/shinsei, Nagasaki City electoral district, 3rd term), the vice-president is Kō Nakayama (Kaikaku21/shinsei, Nagasaki City, 4th term).
External links
Nagasaki Prefectural Government
Nagasaki Prefectural Assembly
References
Politics of Nagasaki Prefecture
|
The Central District of Sareyn County () is in Ardabil province, Iran. Its capital is the city of Sareyn.
At the 2006 census, its population was 12,322 in 2,853 households. The following census in 2011 counted 13,062 people in 3,710 households. At the latest census in 2016, the district had 13,305 inhabitants living in 3,879 households.
References
Sareyn County
Districts of Ardabil Province
Populated places in Sareyn County
|
Mark Hamilton (born April 21, 1956) is an American politician who served in the Georgia House of Representatives from 2007 to 2015.
References
1956 births
Living people
Republican Party members of the Georgia House of Representatives
|
is a Latin phrase which literally means "Head of the world" whereas Roma Caput Mundi means "Rome capital of the world" and is one of the many nicknames given to the city of Rome throughout its history.
The phrase is related to the enduring power of the city first as the capital of the Republic and the Empire, and later as the centre of the Catholic Church.
Although it is not known for sure when it was first used, Rome was already named in this way by the poet Ovid in 1st century BC.
Along with "Eternal City" and the "City of Seven Hills", Caput Mundi remains as one of the most commonly used names to refer to the city of Rome.
Meaning
Roma Caput Mundi is a Latin phrase taken to mean "Rome capital of the world" and "Roma capitale del mondo" in Italian (literally: "head of the world". It originates out of a classical European understanding of the known world: Europe, North Africa, and Southwest Asia. The influence of Rome in the ancient world began to grow around the 2nd century BC as the Republic expanded across Southern Europe and North Africa. For the next five centuries, Rome governed much of the known world (of traditional Greco-Roman geography) and served as the world's largest city during that period. The cultural influence of the local language of Rome (Latin) as well as Roman art, architecture, law, religion, and philosophy was significant. The Imperial city of Rome adopted as its nickname Caput Mundi, attributing this to its perception of an enduring power of Ancient Rome and the Roman Catholic Church.
See also
Rome
Catholic Church
Legacy of the Roman Empire
Foremost power
References
History of Rome
Latin political words and phrases
World government
|
The Record-Courier may refer to one of these newspapers:
The Record-Courier (Nevada), Gardnerville, Nevada
The Record-Courier (Ohio), Portage County, Ohio
The Record-Courier (Baker City), Baker City, Oregon
|
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!--
/*
**
**
**
** 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.
*/
-->
<resources>
<!-- key_height + key_bottom_gap = popup_key_height -->
<dimen name="key_height">0.290in</dimen>
<dimen name="key_bottom_gap">0.000in</dimen>
<dimen name="key_horizontal_pad">0.000in</dimen>
<dimen name="key_vertical_pad">0.025in</dimen>
<dimen name="key_vertical_pad_compact">0.000in</dimen>
<dimen name="popup_key_height">0.325in</dimen>
<dimen name="keyboard_bottom_padding">0.06in</dimen>
<dimen name="bubble_pointer_offset">22dip</dimen>
<dimen name="candidate_strip_height">42dip</dimen>
<dimen name="candidate_strip_fading_edge_length">63dip</dimen>
<dimen name="spacebar_vertical_correction">4dip</dimen>
<!-- If the screen height in landscape is larger than the below value, then the keyboard
will not go into extract (fullscreen) mode. -->
<dimen name="max_height_for_fullscreen">2.5in</dimen>
<!-- Key size for 5-row mode. Scaled up by 1.25 for 4-row mode. -->
<dimen name="key_text_size">0.11in</dimen>
<dimen name="key_label_text_size">0.083in</dimen>
<dimen name="key_preview_text_size_large">40sp</dimen>
<dimen name="key_preview_offset">0.000in</dimen>
<!-- key_preview_text_size_large x 2 -->
<dimen name="key_preview_height">80sp</dimen>
<!-- Amount of allowance for selecting keys in a mini popup keyboard by sliding finger. -->
<!-- popup_key_height x 1.7 -->
<dimen name="mini_keyboard_slide_allowance">0.553in</dimen>
<!-- popup_key_height x 1.0 -->
<dimen name="mini_keyboard_vertical_correction">-0.325in</dimen>
<dimen name="key_hysteresis_distance">0.05in</dimen>
<!-- We use "inch", not "dip" because this value tries dealing with physical distance related
to user's finger. -->
<dimen name="keyboard_vertical_correction">-0.05in</dimen>
<dimen name="candidate_min_touchable_width">0.3in</dimen>
</resources>
```
|
The 2017 Puerto Rico FC season was the club's second season and first full season of existence. The club played in the North American Soccer League, the second tier of the American soccer pyramid.
Season review
On January 23, the team announced the return of five regulars from the 2016 starting XI as well as a young prospect. Returning players were Trevor Spangenberg, Rudy Dawson, Cristiano Dias, Ramón Soria, Kyle Culbertson, and young goalkeeper Austin Pack.
On January 24, the team again announced the resigning of Michael Kafari, Tyler Rudy, Brian Bement, and Sidney Rivera for another run. The team also stated Bljedi Bardic will not return to the team as he has decided to stay in New York and take advantage of other career opportunities.
On January 26, CONCACAF announced PRFC will host group D in the 2017 CFU Club Championship at Juan Ramón Loubriel Stadium starting March 14. The club also announced the resigning of the three Puerto Rican footballers on the team for another season; Hector Ramos, Jorge Rivera, Joseph Marrero.
On January 30, the team announced two new signings for the 2017 season: Conor Doyle who last played for Colorado Rapids before being loaned to Colorado Springs Switchbacks in 2016, and Yuma who last played for Rayo OKC in 2016.
On February 10, the club announced the preparation for the 2017 NASL Season, as well as the Caribbean Club Championship, Puerto Rico FC will take part in the 7th Annual Bayamón City Cup which begins February 10 at the Bayamón Soccer Complex.
On March 2, the team announced 2 new additions to the team in defender Jake Stovall and goalkeeper Billy Thompson prior to the start of the CFU games.
On April 28, 4 weeks into the NASL spring season. Puerto Rico FC announced the signing of defender Phanuel Kavita, who spent the 2016 season with Real Salt Lake of Major League Soccer.
On July 15, Puerto Rico ended the Spring season in eighth place with nine points. Finishing out with a 1-6-9 record.
On July 25, the team announced a new signing of Spanish veteran attacking midfielder Mario, prior to the start of the Fall season.
On October 1, PRFC took to the field for the first time since the devastation on Hurricane Maria against the Cosmos in MCU Park.
Roster
Transfers
In
Out
On loan
Preseason
2017 Bayamón Cup
Friendlies
Competitions
CFU Club Championship
Group stage
NASL Spring season
Standings
Results summary
Results by round
Matches
NASL Fall season
Standings
Results summary
Results by round
Matches
Squad statistics
Appearances and goals
|-
|colspan="14"|Players who left Puerto Rico during the season:
|-
|}
Top scorers
Disciplinary record
Needs to be updated.
References
Puerto Rico FC
American soccer clubs 2017 season
2017 North American Soccer League season
2017 in Puerto Rican football
|
The 1931–32 Montreal Canadiens season was the team's 23rd season. After winning two consecutive Stanley Cup championships, the Canadiens were favoured to repeat, winning the Canadian division, but lost to the New York Rangers in the semi-finals.
Regular season
Howie Morenz won the Hart Trophy for his outstanding play during the regular season..
Final standings
Record vs. opponents
Schedule and results
Playoffs
The Canadiens, by placing first, received a bye to the semi-finals where they met the New York Rangers, who had won the American Division. The Canadiens, missing some regulars due to injury, lost the best-of-five series three games to one.
New York Rangers vs. Montreal Canadiens
Player statistics
Regular season
Scoring
Goaltending
Playoffs
Scoring
Goaltending
Awards and records
O'Brien Cup – winners of Canadian Division
Hart Trophy – Howie Morenz, most valuable player
Transactions
See also
1931–32 NHL season
References
Montreal Canadiens seasons
Montreal Canadiens
Montreal Canadiens
|
```html
<div [formGroup]="group" class="input-group">
<input bsDatepicker class="form-control" #bsDatepicker="bsDatepicker"
[autofocus]="model.autoFocus"
[bsConfig]="model.getAdditional('bsConfig', {containerClass: model.getAdditional('containerClass', 'theme-green'), showWeekNumbers: model.getAdditional('showWeekNumbers', true)})"
[formControlName]="model.id"
[id]="id"
[maxDate]="model.max"
[minDate]="model.min"
[name]="model.name"
[ngClass]="getClass('element', 'control')"
[outsideClick]="model.getAdditional('outsideClick', true)"
[placeholder]="model.placeholder"
[placement]="model.getAdditional('placement', 'bottom')"
[readonly]="model.readOnly"
[required]="model.required"
(bsValueChange)="onChange($event)"
(onHidden)="onCustomEvent($event, 'onHidden')"
(onShown)="onCustomEvent($event, 'onShown')">
<div *ngIf="model.toggleLabel" class="input-group-btn">
<button *ngIf="model.toggleIcon" class="btn" (click)="bsDatepicker.toggle()"><img [src]="model.toggleIcon"/></button>
<button *ngIf="model.toggleLabel" class="btn" (click)="bsDatepicker.toggle()">{{ model.toggleLabel }}</button>
</div>
</div>
```
|
```java
/*
* Contributions to FindBugs
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
*
* This library 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 GNU
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
*/
package de.tobject.findbugs.actions.test;
import static org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.assertEquals;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.List;
import org.eclipse.core.runtime.CoreException;
import org.eclipse.jface.action.Action;
import org.eclipse.jface.action.IAction;
import org.eclipse.ui.PartInitException;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.AfterAll;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.BeforeAll;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
import de.tobject.findbugs.actions.GroupByAction;
import de.tobject.findbugs.test.AbstractFindBugsTest;
import de.tobject.findbugs.test.TestScenario;
import de.tobject.findbugs.view.explorer.GroupType;
/**
* This class tests the GroupByAction.
*
* @author Toms Pollak
*/
class GroupByActionTest extends AbstractFindBugsTest {
@BeforeAll
static void setUpClass() throws Exception {
setUpTestProject(TestScenario.DEFAULT);
}
@AfterAll
static void tearDownClass() throws CoreException {
tearDownTestProject();
}
private static final String your_sha256_hashKER_ID =
"findBugsEclipsePlugin.toggleGrouping.Confidence.Category.Project.Package.Class.PatternType.Pattern.Marker";
private static final String PRIORITY_CATEGORY_PROJECT_PATTERN_TYPE_PATTERN_MARKER_ID =
"findBugsEclipsePlugin.toggleGrouping.Confidence.Category.Project.PatternType.Pattern.Marker";
private static final String PRIORITY_PROJECT_PATTERN_MARKER_ID = "findBugsEclipsePlugin.toggleGrouping.Confidence.Project.Pattern.Marker";
private static final String PROJECT_PRIORITY_CATEGORY_PATTERN_TYPE_PATTERN_MARKER_ID =
"findBugsEclipsePlugin.toggleGrouping.Project.Confidence.Category.PatternType.Pattern.Marker";
private static final String PROJECT_PRIORITY_PATTERN_MARKER_ID = "findBugsEclipsePlugin.toggleGrouping.Project.Confidence.Pattern.Marker";
private static final String PROJECT_PATTERN_MARKER_ID = "findBugsEclipsePlugin.toggleGrouping.Project.Pattern.Marker";
private GroupByAction action;
@Override
public void setUp() throws Exception {
super.setUp();
action = new GroupByAction();
action.init(showBugExplorerView());
}
@Override
public void tearDown() throws CoreException {
action = null;
super.tearDown();
}
@Test
void your_sha256_hashattern_Marker() throws PartInitException {
runAction(your_sha256_hashKER_ID);
assertExpectedGroupTypes(GroupType.Confidence, GroupType.Category, GroupType.Project, GroupType.Package, GroupType.Class,
GroupType.PatternType, GroupType.Pattern, GroupType.Marker);
}
@Test
void testAction_Priority_Category_Project_PatternType_Pattern_Marker() throws PartInitException {
runAction(PRIORITY_CATEGORY_PROJECT_PATTERN_TYPE_PATTERN_MARKER_ID);
assertExpectedGroupTypes(GroupType.Confidence, GroupType.Category, GroupType.Project, GroupType.PatternType,
GroupType.Pattern, GroupType.Marker);
}
@Test
void testAction_Priority_Project_Pattern_Marker() throws PartInitException {
runAction(PRIORITY_PROJECT_PATTERN_MARKER_ID);
assertExpectedGroupTypes(GroupType.Confidence, GroupType.Project, GroupType.Pattern, GroupType.Marker);
}
@Test
void testAction_Project_Pattern_Marker() throws PartInitException {
runAction(PROJECT_PATTERN_MARKER_ID);
assertExpectedGroupTypes(GroupType.Project, GroupType.Pattern, GroupType.Marker);
}
@Test
void testAction_Project_Priority_Category_PatternType_Pattern_Marker() throws PartInitException {
runAction(PROJECT_PRIORITY_CATEGORY_PATTERN_TYPE_PATTERN_MARKER_ID);
assertExpectedGroupTypes(GroupType.Project, GroupType.Confidence, GroupType.Category, GroupType.PatternType,
GroupType.Pattern, GroupType.Marker);
}
@Test
void testAction_Project_Priority_Pattern_Marker() throws PartInitException {
runAction(PROJECT_PRIORITY_PATTERN_MARKER_ID);
assertExpectedGroupTypes(GroupType.Project, GroupType.Confidence, GroupType.Pattern, GroupType.Marker);
}
private void assertExpectedGroupTypes(GroupType... expectedTypes) throws PartInitException {
List<GroupType> expectedGroupTypes = Arrays.asList(expectedTypes);
List<GroupType> actualGroupTypes = getBugContentProvider().getGrouping().asList();
assertEquals(expectedGroupTypes, actualGroupTypes);
}
private void runAction(String actionId) {
IAction proxyAction = new ProxyAction(actionId);
action.run(proxyAction);
}
private static class ProxyAction extends Action {
public ProxyAction(String id) {
setId(id);
}
}
}
```
|
Porco Bísaro is a domestic pig breed that is native to Portugal, typically from the Trás-os-Montes, Alto-Douro, Minho, and Beira regions.
The Porco Bísaro was nearly extinct in the early 1990s. To revert this decline, the National Association of Breeders of Bísaro Swine (ANCSUB - Associação Nacional de Criadores de Suínos de Raça Bísara) was created in 1994. Since then, ANCSUB is also responsible for the management of the respective zoo technical registry.
Porco Bísaro is known as Bísaro and sometimes Celta (similarly to Galicia's porco celta), as proposed and used by Sanson to express the antiquity of the breed. It was the only pig breed in Northern Portugal, Galicia, France and the British islands before the introduction of the Asian and Romanesque breeds.
In 1878, Macedo Pinto described the Porco Bísaro as an animal belonging to the Typo Bizaro or Celta with the morphological characteristics mentioned above. He distinguished between two varieties within the breed, according to the corpulence, color and greater or lesser amount of bristles.
Pinto said they weighed from 200 to 250 kg of carcass and others between 120 and 150 kg; as for color, he says they are mostly black, also some spotted and those with white fur were called Galegos, as they come from Galicia. Molarinhos were spotted animals that had few bristles and smooth, smooth skin. The same author also mentions that they are animals of slow and late growth, difficult to fatten (only completing their growth at the age of two), producing more lean meat than fat and accumulating more in the fat than in thick blankets of bacon.
In 1946, Cunha Ortigosa classifies the Porco Bísaro as one of the three national breeds. When describing the varieties within the breed, in addition to Galega and Beirôa which includes Molarinho and Cerdões types.
Porco Bísaro has been awarded several Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) and Protected Geographical Indication (PGI) statuses due to its exceptional meat qualities.
References
External links
Carne de Bísaro Transmontano DOP
Presunto de Vinhais IGP
Alheira de Vinhais IGP
Pig breeds originating in Portugal
|
A banana cake is a cake prepared using banana as a primary ingredient and typical cake ingredients. It can be prepared in various manners, including as a layer cake, as muffins and as cupcakes. Steamed banana cake is found in Chinese, Malaysian, Indonesian and Vietnamese cuisine. In the Philippines, the term "banana cake" refers to banana bread introduced during the American colonial period of the Philippines.
Preparation
Banana cake is prepared using banana as a primary ingredient and typical cake ingredients such as flour, sugar, eggs, butter, margarine or oil and baking soda. The bananas can be mashed or puréed using a food processor or electric mixer and mixed into the cake batter, and the cake can also be topped or garnished with sliced bananas. Banana cake may be prepared as a use for browned or overly-ripe bananas. Chocolate may be used as an ingredient, which along with the banana is an enjoyable flavor combination for some people. Nuts such as walnuts and macadamias may be used in the batter and to top and garnish the cake.
An icing or glaze may be used in the cake's preparation, which can include alcoholic beverages such as bourbon in it. Banana cake can be baked, and also prepared as a steamed cake, for which a food steamer may be used. Banana cake may have a moist texture. It can be prepared as a layer cake, and the cake batter can be used to prepare banana muffins and cupcakes. It can be prepared as a vegetarian dish and as a low-fat dish.
Types
In Chinese cuisine
In Chinese cuisine, banana cake is a type of gao, which refers to steamed, flour-based cakes. Chinese gao is typically served along with meals or between meals with tea, and is typically not served as a dessert.
In Burmese (Myanmar) cuisine
In Burmese cuisine, banana cake is a popular dessert. It is frequently served at weddings, birthday parties, and feasts. It is also eaten during the Ramadan festival of Eid.
Bánh chuối
Bánh chuối is a Vietnamese banana cake or bread pudding. The cake is typically steamed, and the bread pudding may be baked.
Kue nagasari
Kue nagasari is a popular Indonesian steamed banana cake that can be prepared using banana, mung bean flour or rice flour, coconut milk and sugar.
See also
List of cakes
List of banana dishes
References
Further reading
External links
Cakes
Banana dishes
Indonesian cuisine
Vietnamese pastries
|
Burnley Football Club is an English professional association football club based in the town of Burnley, Lancashire. Founded on 18 May 1882, the club was one of the first to become professional (in 1883), putting pressure on the Football Association (FA) to permit payments to players. In 1885, the FA legalised professionalism, so the team entered the FA Cup for the first time in 1885–86, and were one of the twelve founding members of the Football League in 1888–89. Burnley have played in all four professional divisions of English football from 1888 to the present day. The team have been champions of England twice, in 1920–21 and 1959–60, have won the FA Cup once, in 1913–14, and have won the FA Charity Shield twice, in 1960 and 1973. Burnley are one of only five teams to have won all four professional divisions of English football, along with Wolverhampton Wanderers, Preston North End, Sheffield United and Portsmouth. They were the second to achieve this by winning the Fourth Division in the 1991–92 season.
Jerry Dawson holds the record for the greatest number of appearances for Burnley. Between 1907 and 1929, the goalkeeper played 569 times for the club. George Beel scored 188 goals during his Burnley career and is the club's record goalscorer. Seven players who have made at least 100 appearances for Burnley went on to manage the team: Jimmy Adamson, Frank Casper (also as caretaker manager), Steve Davis (as caretaker manager), Adrian Heath (as player-manager), Brian Laws, Brian Miller, and Harry Potts. Potts became the club's longest serving manager with 728 competitive matches. During his playing career, Adamson won the Footballer of the Year award in 1962—the only time a Burnley player has won this award. Northern Irishman Willie Irvine is the only player in the club's history to be crowned top goal scorer of the first tier (in 1965–66). When Bob Kelly moved from Burnley to Sunderland for £6,500 in 1925 (equivalent to £ in ), he broke the world transfer record.
All players who have played 100 or more first-team matches for the club, either as a member of the starting eleven or as a substitute, are listed below. Each player's details include the duration of his career with Burnley, his typical playing position while with the club, and the number of matches played and goals scored in all senior competitive matches.
Key
Statistics are correct as of the match played on 8 May 2023.
Players are initially arranged by alphabetical order of surname.
Appearances as a substitute are included. This feature of the game was introduced in the Football League at the start of the 1965–66 season.
Total appearances and goals comprise those in the Football League, including test matches and play-offs, Premier League, FA Cup, Football League Cup, Charity Shield, European Cup, Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, UEFA Europa League, Texaco Cup, Watney Cup, Anglo-Scottish Cup, Football League Group Cup, and Associate Members' Cup / Football League Trophy. Wartime fixtures and expunged matches are not included.
List of players
See also
List of Burnley F.C. internationals
Footnotes
References
Specific
General
Burnley
Association football player non-biographical articles
|
```java
package com.brianway.learning.java.multithread.synchronize.example9;
/**
* Created by Brian on 2016/4/12.
*/
public class MyObject1 extends MyObject {
synchronized public void speedPrintString() {
System.out.println("speedPrintString ____getLock time=" + System.currentTimeMillis() + " run ThreadName=" + Thread.currentThread().getName());
System.out.println("*******************");
System.out.println("speedPrintString releaseLock time=" + System.currentTimeMillis() + " run ThreadName=" + Thread.currentThread().getName());
}
}
```
|
Ri Myung-hun (Korean: 리명훈; born 14 September 1967), also known as Michael Ri after his favorite basketball player Michael Jordan, is a North Korean former basketball player. At a height of and a weight of , he is believed to be the tallest person in North Korea.
Basketball career
Ri played the center position for the national basketball team of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Once proclaimed to be the tallest living human being in the world, he stands tall and once planned to play in the National Basketball Association (NBA) in the 1990s. According to the Associated Press, he was "the world's tallest basketball player."
In anticipation of joining the NBA, Ri worked out in Canada, where he was scouted by numerous teams. But he was unable to play in the league because of a U.S. ban on trade set forth in a piece of legislation called the Trading with the Enemy Act of 1917. The U.S. Department of State permitted Ri to compete in the country in 2000, on the main condition that none of Ri's salary could be repatriated to North Korea. North Korean officials responded by refusing to let Ri leave. Kim Jong-il told NBA scout Tony Ronzone he would allow Ri to leave North Korea and play professional basketball if the team paid Kim's government in wheat. Ri was permitted to conduct an interview with CNN's Mike Chinoy in which he was quoted as saying, "I'm a big man. I want to test my ability. I am not interested in money or politics. As a sportsman, I just want to try." Eventually, Ri said he was content to remain playing basketball in the "bosom" of North Korean supreme leader Kim Jong-il. In a game between mixed teams of players from North Korea and South Korea, Ri scored 26 points in 21 minutes, though his "dankyol" (solidarity) side lost 141–138.
Personal life
On 28 December 2011, North Korean television showed footage from the funeral of Kim Jong-il in which an unusually tall person was seen in the crowd. The person was speculated to have been Ri Myung-hun.
References
1967 births
Living people
North Korean men's basketball players
Basketball players at the 1990 Asian Games
Basketball players at the 2002 Asian Games
Asian Games competitors for North Korea
Centers (basketball)
|
Anzaur Ardanov (born 4 July 1991) is a Russian judoka.
He is the silver medallist of the 2017 Judo Grand Slam Paris in the -66 kg category.
References
External links
1991 births
Living people
Russian male judoka
Universiade medalists in judo
Universiade bronze medalists for Russia
Medalists at the 2015 Summer Universiade
21st-century Russian people
|
```smalltalk
Class {
#name : 'EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest',
#superclass : 'EFTest',
#category : 'EnlumineurFormatter-Tests',
#package : 'EnlumineurFormatter-Tests'
}
{ #category : 'configurations' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> basicConfiguration [
^ self contextClass basicNew
formatCommentCloseToStatements:false;
numberOfSpacesInsideArray: 0;
indentStyle: #tabulation;
indentExtraSpaces: 0;
maxLineLength: 70
]
{ #category : 'configurations' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> oneSpaceConfiguration [
^ self contextClass basicNew
formatCommentCloseToStatements:false;
numberOfSpacesInsideArray: 1;
indentStyle: #tabulation;
indentExtraSpaces: 0;
maxLineLength: 70
]
{ #category : 'tests' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> testBigArray [
| source |
configurationSelector := #oneSpaceConfiguration.
source := self formatExpression:
'#( #( #expr0 #expr1 #expr2 #expr3 #expr4 #expr5 #expr6 #expr7 #expr8 #expr9 #expr10 #expr11 #expr12 #expr13 #expr14 #expr15 #expr16 #expr17 #expr18 #expr19 #expr20 #expr21 #expr22 #expr23 #expr24 ) #( #expr25 #expr26 #expr27 #expr28 #expr29 #expr30 #expr31 #expr32 #expr33 #expr34 #expr35 #expr36 #expr37 #expr38 #expr39 #expr40 #expr41 #expr42 #expr43 #expr44 #expr45 #expr46 #expr47 #expr48 #expr49 ) )'.
self assert: source equals:
'#( #( #expr0 #expr1 #expr2 #expr3 #expr4 #expr5 #expr6 #expr7 #expr8
#expr9 #expr10 #expr11 #expr12 #expr13 #expr14 #expr15 #expr16
#expr17 #expr18 #expr19 #expr20 #expr21 #expr22 #expr23 #expr24 )
#( #expr25 #expr26 #expr27 #expr28 #expr29 #expr30 #expr31 #expr32
#expr33 #expr34 #expr35 #expr36 #expr37 #expr38 #expr39 #expr40
#expr41 #expr42 #expr43 #expr44 #expr45 #expr46 #expr47 #expr48
#expr49 ) )'
]
{ #category : 'tests' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> testBigArrayWithExtraSpaces [
| source |
configurationSelector := #oneSpaceConfiguration.
source := self formatExpression:
'#( #( #expr0 #expr1 #expr2 #expr3 #expr4 #expr5 #expr6 #expr7 #expr8 #expr9 #expr10 #expr11 #expr12 #expr13 #expr14 #expr15 #expr16 #expr17 #expr18 #expr19 #expr20 #expr21 #expr22 #expr23 #expr24 ) #( #expr25 #expr26 #expr27 #expr28 #expr29 #expr30 #expr31 #expr32 #expr33 #expr34 #expr35 #expr36 #expr37 #expr38 #expr39 #expr40 #expr41 #expr42 #expr43 #expr44 #expr45 #expr46 #expr47 #expr48 #expr49 ) )'.
self assert: source equals:
'#( #( #expr0 #expr1 #expr2 #expr3 #expr4 #expr5 #expr6 #expr7 #expr8
#expr9 #expr10 #expr11 #expr12 #expr13 #expr14 #expr15 #expr16
#expr17 #expr18 #expr19 #expr20 #expr21 #expr22 #expr23 #expr24 )
#( #expr25 #expr26 #expr27 #expr28 #expr29 #expr30 #expr31 #expr32
#expr33 #expr34 #expr35 #expr36 #expr37 #expr38 #expr39 #expr40
#expr41 #expr42 #expr43 #expr44 #expr45 #expr46 #expr47 #expr48
#expr49 ) )'
]
{ #category : 'tests' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> testByteArrayParenthesis [
| source |
configurationSelector := #basicConfiguration.
source := self formatExpression: '#[1 2 3]'.
self assert: source equals: '#[1 2 3]'
]
{ #category : 'tests' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> testNoExtraSpaceArroundParenthesis [
| source |
configurationSelector := #basicConfiguration.
source := self formatExpression: '#( 1 2 3 ) '.
self assert: source equals: '#(1 2 3)'
]
{ #category : 'tests' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> testNoExtraSpaceArroundParenthesis2 [
| source |
configurationSelector := #basicConfiguration.
source := self formatExpression: '#[ 1 2 3 ] '.
self assert: source equals: '#[1 2 3]'
]
{ #category : 'tests' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> testNoExtraSpaceBetweenValue [
| source |
configurationSelector := #basicConfiguration.
source := self formatExpression: '#(1 2 3)'.
self assert: source equals: '#(1 2 3)'
]
{ #category : 'tests' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> testNoExtraSpaceBetweenValue2 [
| source |
configurationSelector := #basicConfiguration.
source := self formatExpression: '#[1 2 3]'.
self assert: source equals: '#[1 2 3]'
]
{ #category : 'tests' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> testOneSpaceInsideArray [
| source |
configurationSelector := #oneSpaceConfiguration.
source := self formatExpression: '#(1 2 3)'.
self assert: source equals: '#( 1 2 3 )'
]
{ #category : 'tests' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> testTwoSpacesInsideArray [
| source |
configurationSelector := #twoSpacesConfiguration.
source := self formatExpression: '#(1 2 3)'.
self assert: source equals: '#( 1 2 3 )'
]
{ #category : 'configurations' }
EFLiteralArrayExpressionTest >> twoSpacesConfiguration [
^ self contextClass basicNew
formatCommentCloseToStatements:false;
numberOfSpacesInsideArray: 2;
indentStyle: #tabulation;
indentExtraSpaces: 0;
maxLineLength: 70
]
```
|
Several special routes of U.S. Route 64 exist. In order from west to east they are as follows.
Alternate routes
Spring Hope alternate route
U.S. Route 64 Alternate (US 64 Alt) was established in 1979, replacing the old mainline US 64 through the town of Spring Hope.
Rocky Mount–Tarboro alternate route
U.S. Route 64 Alternate (US 64 Alt) was established in 1987, replacing the old mainline US 64 between the cities Rocky Mount and Tarboro.
Princeville–Williamston alternate route
U.S. Route 64 Alternate (US 64 Alt) was established in 1996, replacing the old mainline US 64 between the cities Princeville and Williamston. At some locations it is signed as US 64A.
Business loops and spurs
Farmington business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus.) goes through downtown Farmington, via Main Street and Broadway Avenue. Mainline US 64 is signed as both Bypass and Truck route, going south around Farmington, via Murray Drive.
Muskogee business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US-64 Bus.) was established in 1960, replacing the old mainline US-64 through downtown Muskogee, via Okmulgee Avenue and South Main Street. It also has an overlap with U.S. Route 62 Business along Okmulgee Avenue.
Alma business route
U.S. Route 64 Business (Hwy. 64B or US 64B) is an east–west highway in Alma. The route connects US 64 to Highway 162 along a former alignment of US 64 in the city. The route was designated by the Arkansas State Highway Commission on July 28, 1965.
Major intersections
Vilonia business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64B) was established October 11, 2011, following the former alignment of US 64. It traverses through downtown Vilonia, via Main Street.
Augusta business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64B) was established on May 9, 1956, following the former alignment of US 64. It traverses through downtown Augusta, via 5th Street, Magnolia Street, 3rd Street, and Main Street.
Patterson–McCrory business route
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64B) was established in 1968, it goes through Patterson and McCrory.
Wynne business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64B) starts from US 64 and goes west into downtown Wynne, ending at Falls Boulevard (AR 1). It does not reconnect to US 64, making it a business spur; not to be confused with US 64 Spur, located northwest of Wynne.
Parkin business route
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64B) was established in 1972, it starts from US 64 and goes west into downtown Parkin, ending at Church Street. It does not reconnect to US 64, making it a business spur.
Earle business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64B) was established in 1972, it goes through downtown Earle, via 2nd Street.
Crawfordsville business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64B) was established in 1972, it goes through downtown Crawfordsville, via Main Street.
Whiteville business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus.) was established in 1963, it goes through downtown Whiteville, via Main Street.
Selmer business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus.) is a former section of US 64 that runs along West Cherry Avenue, Court Avenue and Mulberry Avenue in downtown Selmer, between the two ends of an overlap of US 45 and 64.
Lawrenceburg business route
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus.) was established during the mid-2010s as a replacement for mainline US 64's realignment onto the Lawrenceburg Highway. It goes through downtown Lawrenceburg, via West Gaines Street, East Gaines Street and Pulaski Highway.
Winchester business route
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus.) in Winchester serves as a replacement for the former alignment of US 64 through the southwest side of the town. It terminates at U.S. Route 41A at the Winchester town square. The highway is signed as US 64 Bus. on the route and is concurrent with SR 50 for its entire length, along with the unsigned concurrencies of SR 15 and SR 16.
Hayesville business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established in 1971 when mainline US 64 was placed on new bypass south of Hayesville. The business routes follows the old alignment through the downtown area, via Hwy 64 Business, Hiwassee Street and Main Street.
Brevard business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus.) was established in 1960 as a renumbering of US 64A in downtown Brevard, via Caldwell Street. The business loop appears only in NCDOT and AASHTO logs and maps; its actually utilized as westbound US 64 and southbound US 276 (between Main Street and Broad Street). In 2006, NCDOT submitted a request to officially make US 64E and US 64W through downtown Brevard, but was denied in the AASHTO Fall Meeting.
Morganton business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established in 1960, which followed the old mainline US 64 routing through downtown Morganton before 1956, via Burkemont Avenue, Union Street and Meeting Street. Between 1969 and 1972, US 64 Bus was split into one-way alignments, eastbound continued on Meeting Street while westbound moved onto Union Street. In 1992, a few years after US 64 was rerouted through Lenoir, US 64 Bus was removed east of Green Street along Meeting and Union Streets to Fleming Drive. Eastbound went north on Green Street to Avery Avenue and westbound went south from Sterling Street to Union Street. Continuing along Avery Avenue and Lenoir Road, it reconnects with mainline US 64, via Sanford Drive. This new alignment adds a short overlap with NC 181 and a long overlap with NC 18; its older section west of Green Street continued to share a short overlap with US 70 Bus.
Asheboro business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established in 2020 when mainline US 64 was placed on a new freeway bypass south of Asheboro. The business route continues along the former mainline alignment through the city limits.
Pittsboro business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established in 2005 when mainline US 64 was placed on new freeway bypass north of Pittsboro. The business route continues along the former mainline alignment through the downtown area, via East and West Streets. At center is the county courthouse, surrounded by a roundabout.
Raleigh–Zebulon business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established in 1960 when mainline US 64 was placed on new bypass route north of Wendell, through Lizard Lick; the business route travels through downtown Wendell along Wendell boulevard, connecting with NC 231 (Selma Road). In 1975, mainline US 64 was placed on new freeway bypass north of Wendell and Zebulon, extending the business route an additional , from near Eagle Rock to north of Zebulon (via Gannon and Arendell Avenues); the former bypass through Lizard Lick became NC 97. In 2006, US 64/US 264 was placed on new freeway bypass south of Knightdale; its old alignment becoming another extension of US 64 business, via New Bern Avenue / Knightdale Boulevard and a hidden concurrency along the Cliff Benson Beltline.
Nashville business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established in 1963 when mainline US 64 was placed on new freeway bypass route north of Nashville. The business route follows the old alignment through the downtown area via Western Avenue, Barnes Street, Washington Street, and Eastern Avenue.
Rocky Mount business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus.) was established in 1982, it replaced the old mainline US 64 through downtown Rocky Mount, via Sunset Avenue, Thomas Avenue, and Raleigh Street.
Jamesville business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus.) was established in 1992, it replaced the old mainline US 64 through downtown Jamesville, via Main Street.
Columbia business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus.) was established in 1960, the business loop goes through downtown Columbia, via Broad Street and Main Street.
Bypass routes
Fayetteville bypass
U.S. Route 64 Bypass (US 64 Byp.) runs along the southern side of Fayetteville, Tennessee. The first section is named Wilson Parkway and runs south, then curves to the southeast. After the intersection with Hedgecomb Avenue and River Drive, the road makes a sharp curve to the northeast where it runs along the west bank of the Elk River. At the intersection with US 431, an overlap with US 231 ends as it joins US 64 Bypass onto a new road named Thornton Taylor Parkway. After passing the Lincoln Medical Center, the road curves from the northeast to northwest as US 64 Bypass ends at US 64, while US 231 continues northward along Thornton Taylor Parkway towards Shelbyville Highway.
Cleveland bypass
U.S. Route 64 Bypass (US 64 Byp.) was constructed as the southeastern part of the Cleveland beltway, known as APD-40. The route is part of Corridor K of the Appalachian Development Highway System.
Manns Harbor–Manteo bypass
U.S. Route 64 Bypass (US 64 Byp.) was established in 1999 as a new primary routing bypassing Manns Harbor and Manteo, while also providing direct access between Nags Head and the mainland. Its main feature is the Virginia Dare Memorial Bridge, which is a divided four-lane bridge crossing over the Croatan Sound. From 1999 to 2003, it also shared a complete concurrency with US 264 Bypass.
Spur routes
Wynne spur route
U.S. Route 64 Spur (US 64S) is a north–south spur route in Wynne. The highway serves as an alternate north–south highway to Highway 1 between a residential section of Wynne and US 64. The highway was created for access to an industrial park at the request of City of Wynne officials in 1985.
Route description
The highway begins at an intersection with US 64 and Highway 1 in northern Wynne in the Arkansas Delta. It runs due south as a section line road through an industrial and agricultural area to John Brown Road, where state maintenance ends. The roadway continues south under city maintenance as Martin Luther King Street.
Major intersections
Truck routes
Franklin–Hendersonville truck route
U.S. Route 64 Truck (US 64 Truck) follows US 23 from Franklin to Dillsboro, then east following US 74 to Hendersonville, for a total of . Signage is not primary, US 64 Truck signs are typically located on the side of major junction changes indicating direction of route. Tractor-trailer trucks are prohibited to use mainline US 64 between Franklin and Brevard.
Savannah truck route
U.S. Route 64 Truck (US 64 Truck), also known as, Savannah Truck Route follows Water Street around downtown Savannah, Tennessee.
Former alternate routes
Brevard alternate route
U.S. Route 64 Alternate (US 64A) was established in 1943, as a new primary routing in downtown Brevard, via Caldwell Street. In 1960 it was renumbered to US 64 Business.
Bat Cave–Morganton alternate route
U.S. Route 64 Alternate (US 64A) was established in 1934 as an alternate route from Bat Cave, in concurrency with US 74, to Ruth, then north to Morganton, replacing NC 181. In 1948 the route became mainline US 64.
Statesville alternate route
U.S. Route 64 Alternate (US 64A) was established in 1954, it replaced the old mainline US 64 through downtown Statesville. In 1960 it was renumbered to US 64 Business.
Franklinville–Ramseur alternate route
U.S. Route 64 Alternate (US 64A) was established in 1941, it replaced the old mainline US 64 through Franklinville and Ramseur. Around 1957, US 64A was downgraded to Andrew Hunter Road and part of NC 22.
Siler City alternate route
U.S. Route 64 Alternate (US 64A) was established in 1952, it replaced the old mainline US 64 through downtown Siler City, via 3rd Street. By 1957 it was decommissioned.
Rocky Mount alternate route
U.S. Route 64 Alternate (US 64A) was established in 1934 as an alternate route in downtown Rocky Mount, via Thomas Avenue; while mainline US 64 used Sunset Avenue, Raleigh Street, and Tarboro Street. It was absorbed by mainline US 64 by 1949.
Williamston alternate route
U.S. Route 64 Alternate (US 64A) was established in 1954, it replaced the old mainline US 64 through downtown Williamston, via Main Street, Haughton Street and Sycamore Street (now Jamesville Road). In 1960 it was renumbered to US 64 Business.
Columbia alternate route
U.S. Route 64 Alternate (US 64A) was established in 1954, it replaced the old mainline US 64 through downtown Columbia, via Main Street. In 1960 it was renumbered to US 64 Business.
Former business loops and spurs
Enid business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established in 1967, replacing the old mainline US 64 through downtown Enid, via Rock Island Boulevard, Grand Avenue and Owen K. Garriott Road. The business loop was decommissioned in 2009.
Rosman business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established in 1979 when mainline US 64 was placed on new bypass north of Rosman. However, this business loop designation lasted six months before being decommissioned in 1980; reason was because request to AASHTO was denied. The routing followed US 178 into Rosman, then along Old Rosman Highway (SR 1388) to US 64, towards Brevard.
Statesville business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established in 1960, as a renumbering of US 64A through downtown Statesville. In 1963, mainline US 64 reverted to its original route through Statesville.
Raleigh business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established around 1965 when mainline US 64 was placed on new freeway bypassing north of Raleigh. The business route began at the Western Boulevard interchange with US 64/US 1 and proceeded east into the downtown area, where it became Boylan Avenue. At Boylan/South intersection, US 64 turns right onto South Street, while NC 31 continues on along Boylan Avenue to Central Prison. Between Saunders Street and East Street, US 64 splits with westbound on South Street and eastbound on Lenoir Street. Continuing along East Street, it turns right onto New Bern Avenue then meeting back with US 64 at the beltline. In 1971, US 64 was split between East Street and Idlewild Avenue, with westbound on New Bern Avenue and eastbound on Edenton Street. In 1973, the split was extended further west from Idlewild Avenue to the Edenton Street / New Bern Avenue split. In 1978, the business loop was decommissioned with its entire routing becoming secondary roads.
Tarboro–Princeville business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established around 1968 when mainline US 64 was placed on new bypass east of Tarboro and south of Princeville; the business route followed the old alignment through both downtown areas via Main Street. In 1994, US 64 was placed on new freeway south of Tarboro, making the business loop impracticable. Majority of the business route was replaced by NC 33, with only the stretch between Western Boulevard and Northern Boulevard downgraded to secondary road.
Williamston business loop
U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus) was established in 1960 as a renumbering of US 64A through downtown Williamston, via Main Street, Haughton Street and Jamesville Road. In 1977, it was decommissioned with Main Street and Jamesville Road downgraded to secondary road, while Haughton Street remained part of US 17 Bus.
References
External links
NCRoads.com: U.S. 64-A
NCRoads.com: U.S. 64 Business
64
64
U.S. Route 64
64
64
64
|
Charles Radford (19 March 1900 – 14 July 1924) was an English footballer who played as a full-back, having been converted from centre-forward early in his career. Born in Walsall, he played for Walsall and Manchester United. He died in a motorcycle accident in 1924.
Career
Radford began his career as a schoolboy playing as a centre-forward, and was twice capped for the England Schoolboys team in 1914. He began his senior career with Walsall in the Birmingham & District League before signing for Manchester United in May 1920. However, he was unable to break into either the first team or the reserves as a forward, so he was tried out at right-back for much of the 1920–21 Central League season. With the reserves having won the Central League title that year, Radford was given his first-team debut in the final game of the 1920–21 Football League season – a 3–0 win at home to Derby County on 7 May 1921.
Radford became Manchester United's regular right-back for the 1921–22 season, playing in 26 of their 42 league matches; however, he was unable to prevent them from finishing bottom of the First Division with the worst defensive record in the division. The following season, he missed just eight league matches, and scored his first goal for Manchester United in a 2–1 home win over Blackpool on 7 April 1923. He missed a further 12 matches in 1923–24, including the last eight games of the season, which he missed due to suspension, having been sent off in a match against Nelson in March 1924. He never played for Manchester United again as he was killed in a motorcycle accident in Wolverhampton in July 1924. His last game for the club came in a 1–1 draw away to Hull City on 22 March 1924.
References
General
Specific
External links
Profile at StretfordEnd.co.uk
1900 births
Footballers from Walsall
1924 deaths
Motorcycle road incident deaths
English men's footballers
Walsall F.C. players
Manchester United F.C. players
Road incident deaths in England
Men's association football defenders
|
The Heinz Nixdorf MuseumsForum (HNF) in Paderborn, Germany, is a computer museums named after the Paderborn computer pioneer and entrepreneur Heinz Nixdorf.
History
In 1977, Heinz Nixdorf received numerous gifts in the form of historic office machines at the celebrations for the company anniversary of 25 years of Nixdorf Computer AG, which gave him the idea of expanding them into a collection for a computer museum. The museum idea became more concrete in 1983/1984 through purchases with the support of the Cologne office machine expert Uwe Breker. In 1985, the entrepreneur had his first exhibition concept drawn up by Prof. Ludwig Thürmer and his partners, but it was still undecided on the location. In 1986, Heinz Nixdorf died unexpectedly. The Nixdorf employee Willi Lenz, also a member of the "Computermuseum" working group, had the idea of a museum in discussion with the city of Paderborn and in 1990 obtained a positive city council resolution to establish it.
Between 1992 and 1996, the HNF was designed and built on the premises of the former headquarters of Nixdorf Computer AG by the Berlin architects Ludwig Thürmer and Gerhard Diel, and a scientific team led by the mathematician Norbert Ryska. In the presence of the then Federal Chancellor Helmut Kohl, the museum was opened on 24 October 1996. has an average of over 110,000 visitors annually. The institution is supported by the Westphalia Foundation and the Heinz Nixdorf Foundation, formed from the estate of Heinz Nixdorf.
Exhibits
In its permanent exhibition space, the museum presents 5,000 years of information and communications technology (ICT). In a historical journey through time, the story is presented from the origin of writing in Mesopotamia around 3,000 BC to current topics such as the Internet, artificial intelligence, and robotics. In the 6,000 square meters available, more than 5,000 exhibits can be seen, organized on two floors. The museum stores around 25,000 objects in total. Some museum objects are available for access via an online database.
Further reading
References
External links
1996 establishments in Germany
Nixdofr, Heinz, MuseumsForum
Buildings and structures in Paderborn (district)
Computer museums
Museums established in 1996
Paderborn
Technology museums in Germany
|
Chester Snow (June 1, 1881 – January 13, 1970) was an American applied mathematician and physicist, known for his work on formulas for computing capacitance and inductance.
Snow was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. After attending Ogden High School and Utah Agricultural College, Snow matriculated at Harvard University in 1903 and graduated there with an A.B. in 1906. At Brigham Young University he was a professor of physics from 1906 to 1911 and a professor of mathematics from 1911 to 1912. From 1912 to 1914 he was a fellow in physics at the University of Wisconsin, where he received his Ph.D. in 1914. At the University of Idaho mathematics department he was an associate professor from 1914. In 1920 he resigned from the University of Idaho to accept a position as a physicist at the Bureau of Standards in Washington, D.C. In 1924 he was an Invited Speaker of the ICM in Toronto.
Selected publications
"The Magneto-Optical Parameters of Iron and Nickel." Physical Review 2, no. 1 (1913): 29.
"Spectroradiometric analysis of radio signals." National Bureau of Standards (1923).
"Alternating current distribution in cylindrical conductors." US Government Printing Office, 1925.
with M. Katherine Frehafer: "Tables and graphs for facilitating the computation of spectral energy distribution by Planck's formula." Miscellaneous Publications Dealing with Standards Vol. 56 (1925): np.
'Formula for the inductance of a helix made with wire of any section." US Government Printing Office, 1926.
"Effect of eddy currents in a core consisting of circular wires." National Bureau of Standards (1927).
"Mutual inductance and force between two coaxial helical wires." Journal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards (1939): 239–269.
"Potential problems and capacitance for a conductor bounded by two intersecting spheres." Journal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards 43, no. 4 (1949): 377.
"Hypergeometric and Legendre functions with applications to integral equations of potential theory." NBS Applied Math. Vol. 19. Washington (DC): US Government Printing Office, 1952.
"Magnetic fields of cylindrical coils and annular coils." NBS Applied Math. Vol. 38. Washington (DC): National Bureau of Standards, US Govt. Printing Office (1953).
"Formulas for computing capacitance and inductance." Vol. 544. US Govt. Printing Office (1954).
References
1881 births
1970 deaths
People from Salt Lake City
20th-century American physicists
20th-century American mathematicians
Harvard University alumni
University of Wisconsin–Madison alumni
Utah State University alumni
Brigham Young University faculty
University of Idaho faculty
Fellows of the American Physical Society
|
```html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="path_to_url"
integrity="sha256-wLz3iY/cO4e6vKZ4zRmo4+9XDpMcgKOvv/zEU3OMlRo=" crossorigin="anonymous">
<title>Safety Check Report</title>
</head>
<body>
<div class="container">
{% if announcements|length > 0 %}
<div class="row justify-content-center">
<div class="col-12">
<div class="card my-3">
<div class="card-body">
<h3 class="card-title">Announcements</h3>
<ul class="list-group list-group-flush">
{% for announcement in announcements %}
{% set color = "#DC3545" if announcement.type == "error" else "#8B4000" if
announcement.type == "warning" else "#6C757D" %}
<li class="list-group-item p-0" style="color: {{ color }}">{{ announcement.message }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
{% endif %}
<h1 class="text-center mb-3 mt-5">Safety Scan Report</h1>
<div class="row justify-content-center">
<div class="col-12">
<div class="card my-2">
<div class="card-body">
<h4 class="card-title mb-3">Scan Summary</h4>
<div class="row text-center">
<div class="col-md-4">
<div class="card bg-secondary bg-opacity-25 text-black">
<div class="card-body">
<p class="card-text">Packages Found (<a href="#scanned-packages">details ↓</a>)</p>
<h5 class="card-title fs-3">{{ summary.scanned_packages }}</h5>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="col-md-4">
<div class="card {{ 'bg-danger' if summary.vulnerabilities > 0 else 'bg-success' }} bg-opacity-25 text-black">
<div class="card-body">
<p class="card-text">Vulnerabilities Reported (<a href="#vulnerabilities-found">details ↓</a>)</p>
<h5 class="card-title fs-3">{{ summary.vulnerabilities }}</h5>
{% if summary.ignored_vulnerabilities > 0 %}
<p>Found vulnerabilities that were ignored: {{ summary.ignored_vulnerabilities }}</p>
{% endif %}
</div>
</div>
</div>
{% if summary.remediations_recommended > 0 %}
<div class="col-md-4">
<div class="card bg-success bg-opacity-25 text-black">
<div class="card-body">
<p class="card-text">Remediations Suggested (<a href="#remediations-suggested">details ↓</a>)</p>
<h5 class="card-title fs-3">{{ summary.remediations_recommended }}</h5>
</div>
</div>
</div>
{% endif %}
</div>
<div class="mt-3 card bg-secondary bg-opacity-10">
<div class="card-body fs-sm">
<h5 class="mb-2">Meta-data</h5>
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-6">
<p class="my-1"><span class="fw-bold">Time</span>: {{report.metadata.timestamp}}</p>
<p class="my-1"><span class="fw-bold">Safety version</span>: {{report.metadata.telemetry.safety_version}}</p>
<p class="my-1">
{% if report.metadata.authenticated %}
<span class="fw-bold">{{report.metadata.authentication_type|title}} authentication using the Safety's proprietary vulnerability database</span>
{% else %}
<span class="fw-bold">No authenticated using the Safety's free vulnerability database</span>
{% endif %}
</p>
<p class="my-1">
<span class="fw-bold">Configuration file: </span>
{% if project and project.policy %}
{{ project.policy.id }} (source: {{project.policy.source.value|title}})
{% else %}
None
{% endif%}
</p>
{% if settings.audit_and_monitor %}
<p class="my-1"><span class="fw-bold">Audit and monitor: </span>Enabled. Logging scan results to <a href="{{ settings.platform_url }}">Safety Platform →</a></p>
{% endif %}
</div>
<div class="col-md-6">
<p class="my-1"><span class="fw-bold">Scan ecosystems</span>:</p>
<ul>
{% for ecosystem, file_types in settings.ecosystems %}
<li><span class="fw-bold">{{ ecosystem }}</span>: {{file_types | join (', ')}}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
<p class="my-1"><span class="fw-bold">Scan paths</span>: <br/></p>
<ul>
{% for location in report.metadata.scan_locations %}
<li>{{location}}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% if project and project.git %}
<p class="my-1"><span class="fw-bold">Scan git context</span></p>
<p class="my-1"><span class="fw-bold"> origin: </span> {{ project.git.origin }}</p>
<p class="my-1"><span class="fw-bold"> branch: </span> {{ project.git.branch }}</p>
{% endif %}
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
{% for file in project.files %}
<div class="card mt-5">
<h2 class="mt-5 mb-3 px-4">{{ file.file_type.human_name() }}: <small class="text-muted">{{ file.location }}</small></h2>
<div class="card-body">
<div class="row">
<div class="col-12" id="scanned-packages">
<h4 class="mt-2 mb-3 px-2">Scanned Packages [ <a href="#scanned-packages">#</a> ]</h4>
<div class="table-responsive">
<table class="table">
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Package name</th>
<th>Found requirements</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
{% for dependency in file.results.dependencies %}
<tr>
<td>{{dependency.name}}</td>
<td>
<ul>
{% for spec in dependency.specifications %}
<li>{{ spec }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
</td>
</tr>
{% endfor %}
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="row">
<div class="col-12" id="vulnerabilities-found">
<h4 class="mt-2 mb-3 px-2">Vulnerabilities Reported [ <a href="#vulnerabilities-found">#</a> ]</h4>
{% if vulns_per_file[file.location] > 0 %}
<div class="table-responsive">
<table class="table">
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Vulnerability ID</th>
<th>Package name</th>
<th>Analyzed requirement</th>
<th>Vulnerable spec</th>
<th>All vulnerable specs</th>
<th>Advisory</th>
<th>Published date</th>
<th>CVE</th>
<th>severity</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
{% for dependency in file.results.dependencies %}
{% for spec in dependency.specifications %}
{% for vulnerability in spec.vulnerabilities %}
<tr>
<td><a href="{{ vulnerability.more_info_url }}" target="_blank">{{ vulnerability.vulnerability_id }}</a></td>
<td>{{vulnerability.package_name}}</td>
<td>{{vulnerability.analyzed_requirement}}</td>
<td>{{vulnerability.vulnerable_spec}}</td>
<td>{{vulnerability.all_vulnerable_specs}}</td>
<td>{{vulnerability.advisory}}</td>
<td>{{vulnerability.published_date}}</td>
<td>{% if vulnerability.CVE %}{{vulnerability.CVE.name}}{% else %}No CVE{% endif %}</td>
<td>
{% if not report.metadata.authenticated and not vulnerability.severity %}
Use a Safety account (<a href="#use-api-key">?</a>)
{% else %}
{{vulnerability.severity}}
{% endif %}
</td>
</tr>
{% endfor %}
{% endfor %}
{% endfor %}
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
{% else %}
<p class="mx-2">
No known security vulnerabilities were found.
{% if not report.metadata.authenticated %}
Vulnerabilities may be missing. For comprehensive vulnerability scanning, <a href="#use-api-key">use a Safety account</a>
{% endif %}
</p>
{% endif %}
</div>
</div>
{% if file.results.ignored_vulns_data|length > 0 %}
<div class="row">
<div class="col-12" id="vulnerabilities-ignored">
<h4 class="mt-4 mb-3 px-2">Vulnerabilities ignored [ <a href="#vulnerabilities-ignored">#</a> ]</h4>
<div class="table-responsive">
<table class="table">
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Vulnerability ID</th>
<th>Package name</th>
<th>Version/Spec</th>
<th>Notes</th>
<th>Expires</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
{% for vuln_id, data in file.results.ignored_vulns_data.items() %}
<tr>
<td><a href="{{ data.more_info_url }}" target="_blank">{{ data.vulnerability_id }}</a></td>
<td>{{ data.package_name }}</td>
<td>
{% if data.analyzed_version %}
{{ data.analyzed_version }}
{% else %}
{{ data.analyzed_requirement }}
{% endif %}
</td>
<td>{{data.ignored_reason|default("-", true)}}</td>
<td>{{data.ignored_expires|default("-", true)}}</td>
</tr>
{% endfor %}
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
</div>
</div>
{% endif %}
{% if vulns_per_file[file.location] > 0 %}
<div class="row">
<div class="col-12" id="affectied-packages">
<h4 class="mt-2 mb-2 px-2">Affected Packages [ <a href="#affectied-packages">#</a> ]</h4>
<div class="table-responsive">
<table class="table">
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Package name</th>
<th>Version/Requirements</th>
<th>Location</th>
<th>Insecure versions</th>
<th>Latest version without known vulnerabilities</th>
<th>More info</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
{% for affected_dep in file.results.get_affected_dependencies() %}
<tr>
<td>{{affected_dep.name}}</td>
<td>
{% if affected_dep.version %}
{{ affected_dep.version }}
{% else %}
<ul>
{% for spec in affected_dep.specifications %}
<li>{{ spec }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% endif %}
</td>
<td style="max-width: 150px;">
<ul class="ps-3">
{% for spec in affected_dep.specifications %}
<li style="word-wrap: break-word;">{{ spec.found }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
</td>
<td>{{affected_dep.insecure_versions}}</td>
<td>{{affected_dep.latest_version_without_known_vulnerabilities}}</td>
<td>
<a class="btn btn-primary" href="{{affected_dep.more_info_url}}" target="_blank">More Info</a>
</td>
</tr>
{% endfor %}
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
</div>
</div>
{% endif %}
{% if vulns_per_file[file.location] > 0 %}
<div class="row">
<div class="col-12" id="remediations-suggested">
<h4 class="mt-2 mb-3 px-2">Remediations suggested [ <a href="#remediations-suggested">#</a> ]</h4>
{% if remed_per_file[file.location] > 0 %}
<div class="table-responsive">
<table class="table">
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Package name</th>
<th>Version/Requirement</th>
<th>Vulnerabilities reported</th>
<th>Recommended versions</th>
<th>Other recommended versions</th>
<th>More info</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
{% for affected_spec in file.results.get_affected_specifications() %}
{% with remediation = affected_spec.remediation %}
<tr>
<td>
{{ affected_spec.name }}
</td>
<td>
{{ affected_spec.specifier }}
</td>
<td>
{{ remediation.vulnerabilities_found }}
</td>
<td>
{% if not report.metadata.authenticated and not remediation.recommended %}
Use an account or API key (<a href="#use-api-key">?</a>)
{% else %}
{{ remediation.recommended }}
{% endif %}
</td>
<td>
{% if not report.metadata.authenticated and remediation.other_recommended|length==0 %}
Use an account or API key (<a href="#use-api-key">?</a>)
{% else %}
{{ remediation.other_recommended }}
{% endif %}
</td>
<td>
{% if remediation.more_info_url %}
<a href="{{ remediation.more_info_url }}" target="_blank">{{ remediation.more_info_url }}</a>
{% else %}
Use an account or API key (<a href="#use-api-key">?</a>)
{% endif %}
</td>
</tr>
{% endwith %}
{% endfor %}
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
{% else %}
<p>Use an account or API key to get remediation recommendations (<a href="#use-api-key">?</a>)</p>
{% endif %}
</div>
</div>
{% endif %}
</div>
</div>
{% endfor %}
{% if not report.metadata.authenticated %}
<div class="card my-5">
<div class="card-body">
<div class="my-2" id="use-api-key">
<p class="mx-3"><span class="fw-bold">Use an account or API Key</span>: Running Safety using an account or API Key uses a more comprehensive commercial vulnerability database and adds other features such as remediation suggestions and enhanced vulnerability and package information. <a href="path_to_url">Learn more and get a free account or API Key</a></p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
{% endif %}
<div class="my-5 text-center text-secondary fst-italic">
<p>Safety Scanner and vulnerability data proudly maintained by <a href="path_to_url" target="_blank">Safety Cybersecurity</a></p>
</div>
<div style="height:400px;">
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
```
|
Demir-Kapu (, ) is the second highest mountain in Crimea. Its height stands 1540 meters above sea level.
References
Географічна енциклопедія України: в 3-х томах / Редколегія: О. М. Маринич (відпов. ред.) та ін. — К.: «Українська радянська енциклопедія» імені М. П. Бажана, 1989.
Crimean Mountains
One-thousanders of Ukraine
|
Penta of the Chopped-off Hands or The Girl With the Maimed Hands is an Italian literary fairy tale written by Giambattista Basile in his 1634 work, the Pentamerone.
It is Aarne-Thompson type 706B, "The Girl without Hands." The Brothers Grimm cited it as an analog to The Girl Without Hands. Other variants of this tale include The One-Handed Girl, The Armless Maiden, and Biancabella and the Snake.
Synopsis
A king lost his wife and fell in love with his sister, Penta. He implored her to marry him. When she refused and he continued to implore her, she asked what attracted him, and he praised her beauty, but most highly, her hands. She tricked a slave into cutting off her hands, and the king had her put in a chest and thrown into the sea. A fisherman caught the chest in his nets and brought her home, but his wife, Nuccia, was jealous of Penta's beauty and threw her back into the sea. The king of Terraverde saw the chest and rescued her, making her his queen's lady-in-waiting. Shortly thereafter, the queen fell ill and asked him to marry Penta. He agreed, she died, and he married Penta. He had to go on a journey, and while he was gone, Penta gave birth to a baby. The king's servants sent a message, but the ship was thrown by a storm on the shore where the fisherman had rescued Penta, and Nuccia got the captain drunk and substituted a letter that said she had given birth to a puppy. The king received this message and sent back a letter that the queen should not be distressed, such events were determined by heaven, but Nuccia substituted a letter ordering that the queen and her son were to be burned. His councilors concluded that he had gone mad and sent Penta and her son away. She traveled to a kingdom ruled by a magician, who gave her shelter and promised a reward to whoever could tell him the most miserable tale.
The king returned home, heard all the stories, and concluded that Nuccia had caused the problems. He went to her home and had her burned. He heard of the magician's offer from Penta's brother and was certain that he could win the prize. They both went, and Penta's brother recounted his wickedness and how he had thrown his own sister into the sea. Penta's husband recounted his tale. The magician showed them Penta and her son, and declared that her husband had suffered the most miserably, so that Penta and her husband would be his heirs.
Commentary
The motif of the father (or brother) chopping off the hands of a daughter (or sister) who refused an incestuous marriage is a common fairy-tale motif, but is usually presented without explanation of why the hands are targeted. The brother's particular fascination with her hands appears to be a development of Basile's own, to account for it.
The mother falsely accused of giving birth to strange children is in common between tales of this type and that of Aarne-Thompson 707, where the woman has married the king because she has said she would give birth to marvelous children, as in The Dancing Water, the Singing Apple, and the Speaking Bird, Princess Belle-Etoile, Ancilotto, King of Provino, The Wicked Sisters, and The Three Little Birds. A related theme appears in Aarne-Thompson type 710, where the heroine's children are stolen from her at birth, leading to the slander that she killed them, as in Mary's Child or The Lassie and Her Godmother.
References
Italian fairy tales
Female characters in fairy tales
Fictional amputees
Incest in fiction
ATU 700-749
|
ProgDVB is a freeware/shareware software used to watch digital TV channels and listen to radio on computers. It supports DVB-S (satellite), DVB-S2, DVB-C (cable), DVB-T (terrestrial) and IPTV sources.
Internet polls show that ProgDVB is the most popular program used to watch DVB TV.
Editions
There is a freeware and a shareware edition of ProgDVB; the shareware edition adds:
Picture-in-picture support
Recorder and Scheduler
Digital Satellite Equipment Control
Starting with version 5.x ProgDVB began using the .NET Framework for its GUI.
References
External links
Official Website
Digital Video Broadcasting software
|
Best of Dogbowl – Volume II is a compilation album by Dogbowl, independently released in 2001 by 62TV Records. Despite the title's suggestion, there was no other greatest hits album released by Dogbowl.
Track listing
Personnel
Adapted from Best of Dogbowl – Volume II liner notes.
Dogbowl – vocals, instruments, production, engineering, cover art
Release history
References
External links
Best of Dogbowl – Volume II at Discogs (list of releases)
2001 compilation albums
Dogbowl albums
|
```go
package kv
import (
"testing"
"github.com/stretchr/testify/assert"
"gopkg.in/yaml.v2"
)
func boolPtr(b bool) *bool {
return &b
}
func TestMultiRuntimeConfigWithVariousEnabledValues(t *testing.T) {
testcases := map[string]struct {
yaml string
expected *bool
}{
"nil": {"primary: test", nil},
"true": {"primary: test\nmirror_enabled: true", boolPtr(true)},
"false": {"mirror_enabled: false", boolPtr(false)},
}
for name, tc := range testcases {
t.Run(name, func(t *testing.T) {
c := MultiRuntimeConfig{}
err := yaml.Unmarshal([]byte(tc.yaml), &c)
assert.NoError(t, err, tc.yaml)
assert.Equal(t, tc.expected, c.Mirroring, tc.yaml)
})
}
}
```
|
```java
/*
* 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
*/
package org.apache.pulsar.client.impl.metrics;
import static org.apache.pulsar.client.impl.metrics.MetricsUtil.getDefaultAggregationLabels;
import static org.apache.pulsar.client.impl.metrics.MetricsUtil.getTopicAttributes;
import io.opentelemetry.api.common.Attributes;
import io.opentelemetry.api.incubator.metrics.ExtendedLongUpDownCounterBuilder;
import io.opentelemetry.api.metrics.LongUpDownCounter;
import io.opentelemetry.api.metrics.LongUpDownCounterBuilder;
import io.opentelemetry.api.metrics.Meter;
public class UpDownCounter {
private final LongUpDownCounter counter;
private final Attributes attributes;
UpDownCounter(Meter meter, String name, Unit unit, String description, String topic, Attributes attributes) {
LongUpDownCounterBuilder builder = meter.upDownCounterBuilder(name)
.setDescription(description)
.setUnit(unit.toString());
if (topic != null) {
if (builder instanceof ExtendedLongUpDownCounterBuilder) {
ExtendedLongUpDownCounterBuilder eb = (ExtendedLongUpDownCounterBuilder) builder;
eb.setAttributesAdvice(getDefaultAggregationLabels(attributes));
}
attributes = getTopicAttributes(topic, attributes);
}
this.counter = builder.build();
this.attributes = attributes;
}
public void increment() {
add(1);
}
public void decrement() {
add(-1);
}
public void add(long delta) {
counter.add(delta, attributes);
}
public void subtract(long diff) {
add(-diff);
}
}
```
|
```java
package com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.proxy.ssl;
import io.netty.channel.Channel;
import io.netty.channel.ChannelHandlerContext;
import io.netty.channel.SimpleChannelInboundHandler;
import io.netty.channel.group.ChannelGroup;
import io.netty.channel.group.DefaultChannelGroup;
import io.netty.handler.ssl.SslHandler;
import io.netty.util.concurrent.Future;
import io.netty.util.concurrent.GenericFutureListener;
import io.netty.util.concurrent.GlobalEventExecutor;
import java.net.InetAddress;
/**
* @author chen.zhu
* <p>
* May 08, 2018
*/
public class SecureChatServerHandler extends SimpleChannelInboundHandler<String> {
static final ChannelGroup channels = new DefaultChannelGroup(GlobalEventExecutor.INSTANCE);
@Override
public void channelActive(final ChannelHandlerContext ctx) {
// Once session is secured, send a greeting and register the channel to the global channel
// list so the channel received the messages from others.
ctx.pipeline().get(SslHandler.class).handshakeFuture().addListener(
new GenericFutureListener<Future<Channel>>() {
@Override
public void operationComplete(Future<Channel> future) throws Exception {
ctx.writeAndFlush(
"Welcome to " + InetAddress.getLocalHost().getHostName() + " secure chat service!\n");
ctx.writeAndFlush(
"Your session is protected by " +
ctx.pipeline().get(SslHandler.class).engine().getSession().getCipherSuite() +
" cipher suite.\n");
channels.add(ctx.channel());
}
});
}
@Override
public void channelRead0(ChannelHandlerContext ctx, String msg) throws Exception {
// Send the received message to all channels but the current one.
// for (Channel c: channels) {
// if (c != ctx.channel()) {
// c.writeAndFlush("[" + ctx.channel().remoteAddress() + "] " + msg + '\n');
// } else {
// c.writeAndFlush("[you] " + msg + '\n');
// }
// }
//
// // Close the connection if the client has sent 'bye'.
// if ("bye".equals(msg.toLowerCase())) {
// ctx.close();
// }
System.out.println(msg);
}
@Override
public void exceptionCaught(ChannelHandlerContext ctx, Throwable cause) {
cause.printStackTrace();
ctx.close();
}
}
```
|
The Kennel Creek Formation is a geologic formation in Alaska. It preserves fossils dating back to the Silurian period.
See also
List of fossiliferous stratigraphic units in Alaska
Paleontology in Alaska
References
Silurian Alaska
Silurian southern paleotropical deposits
|
Pickard is a surname, an Anglicised version of Picard, originally meaning a person from Picardy, a historical region and cultural area of France.
Notable people with the surname include:
Al Pickard (1895–1975), Canadian ice hockey administrator and president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association
Bob Pickard (born 1952), American football player
Calvin Pickard (born 1992), Canadian ice hockey player
Charles Pickard (1915–1944), Royal Air Force officer
Chet Pickard (born 1989), American hockey player
Cyril Stanley Pickard (1917–1992), British diplomat
Greenleaf Whittier Pickard (1877–1956), American radio pioneer
Hannah Maynard Pickard (1812–1844), American school teacher, preceptress, author
James Pickard, English inventor
Jan Pickard (1927–1998), South African rugby player
Jerry Pickard (1940–2021), Canadian politician
John Pickard (American actor) (1913–1993), American actor
John Pickard (composer) (born 1963), British composer
John Pickard (British actor) (born 1977), British actor
John Pickard (politician) (1824–1883), Canadian politician
Judy Pickard (1921–2016), New Zealand abstract painter, librarian and advocate for women's rights
Louise Pickard (1865–1928), British artist
Lord Ronin Pickard (Born 2001), Scottish Lord
Neil Pickard (1929–2007), Australian politician
Group Captain Percy Charles Pickard (1915–1944), Royal Air Force officer
Flight Lieutenant Stanley Gilbert Pickard (active 1940s), Royal Air Force officer
Thomas J. Pickard (born 1950), director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
Tom Pickard (born 1946), British poet
Tony Pickard (born 1934), English tennis coach
William Leonard Pickard (born 1945), American convicted for manufacturing LSD
See also
Pickard, Indiana, a small town in the United States
Pickard-Cambridge, a surname
Thornton-Pickard, a former British manufacturer of photographic cameras
Pickard China, American china company
Picard (disambiguation)
Piccard
Piccardo
References
English-language surnames
Ethnonymic surnames
|
Kläden is a village and a former municipality in the district of Stendal, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1 January 2010, it is part of the town Bismark, of which it is an Ortschaft. Before that, it was part of the Verwaltungsgemeinschaft Bismark/Kläden.
References
Former municipalities in Saxony-Anhalt
Bismark, Germany
|
```smalltalk
Package { #name : 'ReflectionMirrors-Primitives' }
```
|
The 2012 Bet-at-home Cup Kitzbühel Doubles was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Kitzbühel, Austria.
Daniele Bracciali and Santiago González were the defending champions but decided not to participate.
Seeds
Draw
Draw
References
Main Draw
Bet-at-home Cup Kitzbuhel - Doubles
2012 Doubles
|
Gomel Governorate was an administrative division (a guberniya) of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic from 1919 to 1926. Its capital was Gomel. It was formed from nine uyezds of the abolished Mogilev Governorate, one uyezd of Minsk Governorate and four uyezds of Chernigov Governorate.
At its establishment, Gomel Governorate was made up of fourteen uyezds:
Bykhovsky Uyezd
Gomelsky Uyezd
Goretsky Uyezd
Klimovichsky Uyezd
Mglinsky Uyezd with Pochepsky District
Mogilyovsky Uyezd
Novozybkovsky Uyezd
Orshansky Uyezd
Rechitsky Uyezd
Rogachyovsky Uyezd
Starodubsky Uyezd
Surazhsky Uyezd
Chaussky Uyezd
Cherikovsky Uyezd
In 1920, Orshansky Uyezd was transferred to Vitebsk Governorate. In 1921, Surazhsky Uyezd was renamed Klintsovsky. In 1922, Goretsky Uyezd became a part of Smolensk Governorate. On May 4, Mglinsky and Cherikovsky Uyezds were abolished and new Pochepsky District was established. On May 5, 1923, by the order of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee it was transferred to Bryansk Governorate.
In 1923, Bykhovsky, Klimovichsky, and Cherikovsky Uyezds were abolished and Kalininsky Uyezd was founded.
In March 1924, Kalininsky, Mogilyovsky, and Rogachyovsky Uyezds were transferred to the territory of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic.
In December 1926, Gomel Governorate was abolished. Gomelsky and Rechitsky Uyezds were transferred to the BSSR, and Klintsovsky, Novozybkovsky, and Starodubsky Uyezds were transferred to Bryansk Governorate of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic.
References
Governorates of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic
|
Bandidos is a 1967 Spaghetti Western film. It marked the directorial debut of then-cinematographer Massimo Dallamano.
Synopsis
Renowned gunman Richard Martin is travelling on a train which is held up by Billy Kane, a former student of Martin's. Kane spares Martin, but only after shooting his hands. Years later, Martin meets an escaped convict, wrongly convicted for the train robbery. Martin trains his new student and both men seek out Billy Kane.
Cast
Production
Bandidos was Massimo Dallamano's first film as a director. The film was produced by Solly V. Bianco, who had previously worked with Dallamano on Buffalo Bill, Hero of the Far West. The film was an Italian and Spanish co-production, between E.P.I.C. Film (Edizioni Produzioni Internazionali Cinematografic) in Rome and Hesperia Films in Madrid. The film was shot in both Italy and Spain, including near Madrid. In Lazio in Italy, Dallamano shot at the gorge in Tolfa and along the River Treja. Although Emilio Foriscot was the film's credited cinematographer, camera operator Sergio D'Offizi recalled that Dallamano lit and shot Bandidos entirely by himself.
Release
Bandidos was first released in October 1967 by Euro International. The film was released as Bandidos in most territories. It occasionally referred to as Crepa tu... che vivo io... but all promotional material for the film refers to it as Bandidos. The film was released in the United Kingdom by Butcher's Film Service. It was released on home video in the UK in the early 1980s by Fletcher Video. Arrow Video released the film alongside Massacre Time, My Name Is Pecos and And God Said to Cain as part of their Blu-ray box set Vengeance Trails: Four Classic Westerns on July 27, 2021.
Reception
From contemporary reviews, the Monthly Film Bulletin gave the film a brief review stating that Bandidos was "marked by some largely gratuitous violence and a strident soundtrack" and that "only the device of a playing card tied to a metronome to provide a moving target for marksmanship practise strikes a spark of originality."
See also
List of Italian films of 1967
References
Sources
External links
1967 films
Spaghetti Western films
Films directed by Massimo Dallamano
1967 Western (genre) films
1967 directorial debut films
Films shot in Madrid
Films shot in Lazio
Revisionist Western (genre) films
1960s Italian films
|
```javascript
import { catchAll as catchAll1 } from "fixtures/catch-all1";
import { catchAll as catchAll2 } from "fixtures/catch-all2";
console.log(catchAll1, catchAll2);
```
|
```php
<?php
/**
* Tests for block rendering functions.
*
* @package WordPress
* @subpackage Blocks
* @since 5.0.0
*
* @group blocks
*/
class Tests_Blocks_Render extends WP_UnitTestCase {
/**
* The location of the fixtures to test with.
*
* @since 5.0.0
* @var string
*/
protected static $fixtures_dir;
/**
* Test block instance number.
*
* @since 5.0.0
*
* @var int
*/
protected $test_block_instance_number = 0;
/**
* Tear down after each test.
*
* @since 5.0.0
*/
public function tear_down() {
$this->test_block_instance_number = 0;
$registry = WP_Block_Type_Registry::get_instance();
if ( $registry->is_registered( 'core/test' ) ) {
$registry->unregister( 'core/test' );
}
if ( $registry->is_registered( 'core/dynamic' ) ) {
$registry->unregister( 'core/dynamic' );
}
if ( $registry->is_registered( 'tests/notice' ) ) {
$registry->unregister( 'tests/notice' );
}
parent::tear_down();
}
/**
* @ticket 45109
*/
public function test_do_blocks_removes_comments() {
$original_html = file_get_contents( DIR_TESTDATA . '/blocks/do-blocks-original.html' );
$expected_html = file_get_contents( DIR_TESTDATA . '/blocks/do-blocks-expected.html' );
$actual_html = do_blocks( $original_html );
$this->assertSameIgnoreEOL( $expected_html, $actual_html );
}
/**
* @ticket 45109
*/
public function test_the_content() {
add_shortcode( 'someshortcode', array( $this, 'handle_shortcode' ) );
$classic_content = "Foo\n\n[someshortcode]\n\nBar\n\n[/someshortcode]\n\nBaz";
$block_content = "<!-- wp:core/paragraph -->\n<p>Foo</p>\n<!-- /wp:core/paragraph -->\n\n<!-- wp:core/shortcode -->[someshortcode]\n\nBar\n\n[/someshortcode]<!-- /wp:core/shortcode -->\n\n<!-- wp:core/paragraph -->\n<p>Baz</p>\n<!-- /wp:core/paragraph -->";
$classic_filtered_content = apply_filters( 'the_content', $classic_content );
$block_filtered_content = apply_filters( 'the_content', $block_content );
// Block rendering add some extra blank lines, but we're not worried about them.
$block_filtered_content = preg_replace( "/\n{2,}/", "\n", $block_filtered_content );
remove_shortcode( 'someshortcode' );
$this->assertSame( trim( $classic_filtered_content ), trim( $block_filtered_content ) );
}
public function handle_shortcode( $atts, $content ) {
return $content;
}
/**
* @ticket 45495
*/
public function test_nested_calls_to_the_content() {
register_block_type(
'core/test',
array(
'render_callback' => array(
$this,
'dynamic_the_content_call',
),
)
);
$content = "foo\n\nbar";
$the_content = apply_filters( 'the_content', '<!-- wp:core/test -->' . $content . '<!-- /wp:core/test -->' );
$this->assertSame( $content, $the_content );
}
public function dynamic_the_content_call( $attrs, $content ) {
apply_filters( 'the_content', '' );
return $content;
}
public function test_can_nest_at_least_so_deep() {
$minimum_depth = 99;
$content = 'deep inside';
for ( $i = 0; $i < $minimum_depth; $i++ ) {
$content = '<!-- wp:core/test -->' . $content . '<!-- /wp:core/test -->';
}
$this->assertSame( 'deep inside', do_blocks( $content ) );
}
public function test_can_nest_at_least_so_deep_with_dynamic_blocks() {
$minimum_depth = 99;
$content = '0';
for ( $i = 0; $i < $minimum_depth; $i++ ) {
$content = '<!-- wp:core/test -->' . $content . '<!-- /wp:core/test -->';
}
register_block_type(
'core/test',
array(
'render_callback' => array(
$this,
'render_dynamic_incrementer',
),
)
);
$this->assertSame( $minimum_depth, (int) do_blocks( $content ) );
}
public function render_dynamic_incrementer( $attrs, $content ) {
return (string) ( 1 + (int) $content );
}
/**
* @ticket 45290
*/
public function test_blocks_arent_autopeed() {
$expected_content = 'test';
$test_content = "<!-- wp:fake/block -->\n$expected_content\n<!-- /wp:fake/block -->";
$current_priority = has_action( 'the_content', 'wpautop' );
$filtered_content = trim( apply_filters( 'the_content', $test_content ) );
$this->assertSame( $expected_content, $filtered_content );
// Check that wpautop() is still defined in the same place.
$this->assertSame( $current_priority, has_action( 'the_content', 'wpautop' ) );
// ... and that the restore function has removed itself.
$this->assertFalse( has_action( 'the_content', '_restore_wpautop_hook' ) );
$test_content = 'test';
$expected_content = "<p>$test_content</p>";
$current_priority = has_action( 'the_content', 'wpautop' );
$filtered_content = trim( apply_filters( 'the_content', $test_content ) );
$this->assertSame( $expected_content, $filtered_content );
$this->assertSame( $current_priority, has_action( 'the_content', 'wpautop' ) );
$this->assertFalse( has_action( 'the_content', '_restore_wpautop_hook' ) );
}
/**
* @ticket 45109
*/
public function data_do_block_test_filenames() {
self::$fixtures_dir = DIR_TESTDATA . '/blocks/fixtures';
$fixture_filenames = array_merge(
glob( self::$fixtures_dir . '/*.json' ),
glob( self::$fixtures_dir . '/*.html' )
);
$fixture_filenames = array_values(
array_unique(
array_map(
array( $this, 'clean_fixture_filename' ),
$fixture_filenames
)
)
);
return array_map(
array( $this, 'pass_parser_fixture_filenames' ),
$fixture_filenames
); }
/**
* @dataProvider data_do_block_test_filenames
* @ticket 45109
*/
public function test_do_block_output( $html_filename, $server_html_filename ) {
$html_path = self::$fixtures_dir . '/' . $html_filename;
$server_html_path = self::$fixtures_dir . '/' . $server_html_filename;
foreach ( array( $html_path, $server_html_path ) as $filename ) {
if ( ! file_exists( $filename ) ) {
throw new Exception( "Missing fixture file: '$filename'" );
}
}
$html = do_blocks( self::strip_r( file_get_contents( $html_path ) ) );
// If blocks opt into Gutenberg's layout implementation
// the container will receive an additional, unique classname based on "wp-container-[blockname]-layout"
// so we need to normalize the random id.
$normalized_html = preg_replace( '/wp-container-[a-z-]+\d+/', 'wp-container-1', $html );
// The gallery block uses a unique class name of `wp_unique_id( 'wp-block-gallery-' )`
// so we need to normalize the random id.
$normalized_html = preg_replace( '/wp-block-gallery-\d+/', 'wp-block-gallery-1', $normalized_html );
$expected_html = self::strip_r( file_get_contents( $server_html_path ) );
// Convert HTML to be white space insensitive.
$normalized_html = preg_replace( '/(\s+$)/m', '', $normalized_html );
$expected_html = preg_replace( '/(\s+$)/m', '', $expected_html );
$this->assertSame(
$expected_html,
$normalized_html,
"File '$html_path' does not match expected value"
);
}
/**
* @ticket 53148
*/
public function test_render_field_in_block_json() {
$result = register_block_type(
DIR_TESTDATA . '/blocks/notice'
);
$actual_content = do_blocks( '<!-- wp:tests/notice {"message":"Hello from the test"} --><!-- /wp:tests/notice -->' );
$this->assertSame( '<p class="wp-block-tests-notice">Hello from the test</p>', trim( $actual_content ) );
}
/**
* @ticket 45109
*/
public function test_dynamic_block_rendering() {
$settings = array(
'render_callback' => array(
$this,
'render_test_block',
),
);
register_block_type( 'core/test', $settings );
// The duplicated dynamic blocks below are there to ensure that do_blocks() replaces each one-by-one.
$post_content =
'before' .
'<!-- wp:core/test {"value":"b1"} --><!-- /wp:core/test -->' .
'<!-- wp:core/test {"value":"b1"} --><!-- /wp:core/test -->' .
'between' .
'<!-- wp:core/test {"value":"b2"} /-->' .
'<!-- wp:core/test {"value":"b2"} /-->' .
'after';
$updated_post_content = do_blocks( $post_content );
$this->assertSame(
$updated_post_content,
'before' .
'1:b1' .
'2:b1' .
'between' .
'3:b2' .
'4:b2' .
'after'
);
}
/**
* @ticket 45109
*/
public function test_global_post_persistence() {
global $post;
register_block_type(
'core/test',
array(
'render_callback' => array(
$this,
'render_test_block_wp_query',
),
)
);
$posts = self::factory()->post->create_many( 5 );
$post = get_post( end( $posts ) );
$global_post = $post;
do_blocks( '<!-- wp:core/test /-->' );
$this->assertSame( $global_post, $post );
}
public function test_render_latest_comments_on_password_protected_post() {
$post_id = self::factory()->post->create(
array(
'post_password' => 'password',
)
);
$comment_text = wp_generate_password( 10, false );
self::factory()->comment->create(
array(
'comment_post_ID' => $post_id,
'comment_content' => $comment_text,
)
);
$comments = do_blocks( '<!-- wp:latest-comments {"commentsToShow":1,"displayExcerpt":true} /-->' );
$this->assertStringNotContainsString( $comment_text, $comments );
}
/**
* @ticket 45109
*/
public function test_dynamic_block_renders_string() {
$settings = array(
'render_callback' => array(
$this,
'render_test_block_numeric',
),
);
register_block_type( 'core/test', $settings );
$block_type = new WP_Block_Type( 'core/test', $settings );
$rendered = $block_type->render();
$this->assertSame( '10', $rendered );
$this->assertIsString( $rendered );
}
public function test_dynamic_block_gets_inner_html() {
register_block_type(
'core/dynamic',
array(
'render_callback' => array(
$this,
'render_serialize_dynamic_block',
),
)
);
$output = do_blocks( '<!-- wp:dynamic -->inner<!-- /wp:dynamic -->' );
$data = unserialize( base64_decode( $output ) );
$this->assertSame( 'inner', $data[1] );
}
public function test_dynamic_block_gets_rendered_inner_blocks() {
register_block_type(
'core/test',
array(
'render_callback' => array(
$this,
'render_test_block_numeric',
),
)
);
register_block_type(
'core/dynamic',
array(
'render_callback' => array(
$this,
'render_serialize_dynamic_block',
),
)
);
$output = do_blocks( '<!-- wp:dynamic -->before<!-- wp:test /-->after<!-- /wp:dynamic -->' );
$data = unserialize( base64_decode( $output ) );
$this->assertSame( 'before10after', $data[1] );
}
public function test_dynamic_block_gets_rendered_inner_dynamic_blocks() {
register_block_type(
'core/dynamic',
array(
'render_callback' => array(
$this,
'render_serialize_dynamic_block',
),
)
);
$output = do_blocks( '<!-- wp:dynamic -->before<!-- wp:dynamic -->deep inner<!-- /wp:dynamic -->after<!-- /wp:dynamic -->' );
$data = unserialize( base64_decode( $output ) );
$inner = $this->render_serialize_dynamic_block( array(), 'deep inner' );
$this->assertSame( $data[1], 'before' . $inner . 'after' );
}
/**
* Helper function to remove relative paths and extension from a filename, leaving just the fixture name.
*
* @since 5.0.0
*
* @param string $filename The filename to clean.
* @return string The cleaned fixture name.
*/
protected function clean_fixture_filename( $filename ) {
$filename = wp_basename( $filename );
$filename = preg_replace( '/\..+$/', '', $filename );
return $filename;
}
/**
* Helper function to return the filenames needed to test the parser output.
*
* @since 5.0.0
*
* @param string $filename The cleaned fixture name.
* @return array The input and expected output filenames for that fixture.
*/
protected function pass_parser_fixture_filenames( $filename ) {
return array(
"$filename.html",
"$filename.server.html",
);
}
/**
* Helper function to remove '\r' characters from a string.
*
* @since 5.0.0
*
* @param string $input The string to remove '\r' from.
* @return string The input string, with '\r' characters removed.
*/
protected function strip_r( $input ) {
return str_replace( "\r", '', $input );
}
/**
* Test block rendering function.
*
* @since 5.0.0
*
* @param array $attributes Block attributes.
* @return string Block output.
*/
public function render_test_block( $attributes ) {
$this->test_block_instance_number += 1;
return $this->test_block_instance_number . ':' . $attributes['value'];
}
/**
* Test block rendering function, returning numeric value.
*
* @since 5.0.0
*
* @return int Block output.
*/
public function render_test_block_numeric() {
return 10;
}
/**
* Test block rendering function, returning base64 encoded serialised value.
*
* @since 5.0.0
*
* @return string Block output.
*/
public function render_serialize_dynamic_block( $attributes, $content ) {
return base64_encode( serialize( array( $attributes, $content ) ) );
}
/**
* Test block rendering function, creating a new WP_Query instance.
*
* @since 5.0.0
*
* @return string Block output.
*/
public function render_test_block_wp_query() {
$content = '';
$recent = new WP_Query(
array(
'numberposts' => 10,
'orderby' => 'ID',
'order' => 'DESC',
'post_type' => 'post',
'post_status' => 'draft, publish, future, pending, private',
'suppress_filters' => true,
)
);
while ( $recent->have_posts() ) {
$recent->the_post();
$content .= get_the_title();
}
wp_reset_postdata();
return $content;
}
}
```
|
```go
//
//
// 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 surfer
import (
"compress/flate"
"compress/gzip"
"compress/zlib"
"crypto/tls"
"io"
"math/rand"
"net"
"net/http"
"net/http/cookiejar"
"strings"
"time"
)
// Surf is the default Download implementation.
type Surf struct {
cookieJar *cookiejar.Jar
}
// New Surf
func New() Surfer {
s := new(Surf)
s.cookieJar, _ = cookiejar.New(nil)
return s
}
// Download surfer
func (surf *Surf) Download(param *Request) (*http.Response, error) {
err := param.prepare()
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
param.client = surf.buildClient(param)
resp, err := surf.httpRequest(param)
if err == nil {
switch resp.Header.Get("Content-Encoding") {
case "gzip":
var gzipReader *gzip.Reader
gzipReader, err = gzip.NewReader(resp.Body)
if err == nil {
resp.Body = gzipReader
}
case "deflate":
resp.Body = flate.NewReader(resp.Body)
case "zlib":
var readCloser io.ReadCloser
readCloser, err = zlib.NewReader(resp.Body)
if err == nil {
resp.Body = readCloser
}
}
}
return param.writeback(resp), err
}
// buildClient creates, configures, and returns a *http.Client type.
func (surf *Surf) buildClient(req *Request) *http.Client {
client := &http.Client{
CheckRedirect: req.checkRedirect,
}
if req.EnableCookie {
client.Jar = surf.cookieJar
}
transport := &http.Transport{
Dial: func(network, addr string) (net.Conn, error) {
c, err := net.DialTimeout(network, addr, req.DialTimeout)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
if req.ConnTimeout > 0 {
c.SetDeadline(time.Now().Add(req.ConnTimeout))
}
return c, nil
},
}
if req.proxy != nil {
transport.Proxy = http.ProxyURL(req.proxy)
}
if strings.ToLower(req.url.Scheme) == "https" {
transport.TLSClientConfig = &tls.Config{RootCAs: nil, InsecureSkipVerify: true}
transport.DisableCompression = true
}
client.Transport = transport
return client
}
// send uses the given *http.Request to make an HTTP request.
func (surf *Surf) httpRequest(param *Request) (resp *http.Response, err error) {
req, err := http.NewRequest(param.Method, param.Url, param.body)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
req.Header = param.Header
if param.TryTimes <= 0 {
for {
resp, err = param.client.Do(req)
if err != nil {
if !param.EnableCookie {
l := len(UserAgents["common"])
r := rand.New(rand.NewSource(time.Now().UnixNano()))
req.Header.Set("User-Agent", UserAgents["common"][r.Intn(l)])
}
time.Sleep(param.RetryPause)
continue
}
break
}
} else {
for i := 0; i < param.TryTimes; i++ {
resp, err = param.client.Do(req)
if err != nil {
if !param.EnableCookie {
l := len(UserAgents["common"])
r := rand.New(rand.NewSource(time.Now().UnixNano()))
req.Header.Set("User-Agent", UserAgents["common"][r.Intn(l)])
}
time.Sleep(param.RetryPause)
continue
}
break
}
}
return resp, err
}
```
|
Francis Wedgwood (25 November 1800 – 2 October 1888) a grandson of the English potter Josiah Wedgwood
Born in Tarrant Gunville, Dorset, Wedgwood was the son of the MP Josiah Wedgwood II. He became a partner in the Wedgwood firm in 1827 and was left in sole charge after the retirement of his father and elder brother Josiah Wedgwood III.
On 26 April 1832 in Rolleston on Dove, he married Frances Mosley, daughter of the Rev. John Peploe Mosley, rector of Rolleston. She was the granddaughter of the late Sir John Parker Mosley, 1st Baronet, and cousin to Sir Oswald Mosley, 2nd Baronet. Francis and Frances had seven children:
Godfrey Wedgwood (1833–1905)
Amy Wedgwood (1835–1910)
Cicely Mary Wedgwood (1837–1917)
Clement Francis Wedgwood (1840–1889)
Laurence Wedgwood (1844–1913)
Constance Rose Wedgwood (1846–1903)
Mabel Frances Wedgwood (born and died 1852)
Economic difficulties in the 1840s led to Etruria Works and Etruria Hall being put up for sale, though only the hall was sold, because he had no inclination to live there, as the location had become compromised. He built a new house on a small estate at Barlaston, which, if less grand, was in a better situation.
He was joined in business by his eldest son Godfrey, and later by his younger sons Clement Francis Wedgwood and Laurence. Wedgwood retired from business in 1876 and died at Barlaston, Staffordshire in 1888.
References
1800 births
1888 deaths
People from North Dorset District
English potters
Darwin–Wedgwood family
People from Barlaston
Wedgwood pottery
|
Andrei Aleksandrovich Smyshlyayev (; born 29 May 1983) is a former Russian professional football player.
Club career
He played 3 seasons in the Russian Football National League for FC Lokomotiv Chita.
External links
1983 births
Living people
Russian men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
FC Chita players
FC Buryatia Ulan-Ude players
FC Sibiryak Bratsk players
|
A by-election was held for the New South Wales Legislative Assembly electorate of East Sydney on 29 May 1861 because Henry Parkes had resigned having accepted a government commission with a salary of to travel to England to lecture on immigration with William Bede Dalley.
Dates
Result
Henry Parkes resigned having accepted a government commission.
See also
Electoral results for the district of East Sydney
List of New South Wales state by-elections
References
1861 elections in Australia
New South Wales state by-elections
1860s in New South Wales
|
```java
package edu.umd.cs.findbugs.detect;
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.emptyIterable;
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.instanceOf;
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.is;
import static org.hamcrest.MatcherAssert.assertThat;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.extension.ExtendWith;
import edu.umd.cs.findbugs.BugCollection;
import edu.umd.cs.findbugs.SortedBugCollection;
import edu.umd.cs.findbugs.test.SpotBugsExtension;
import edu.umd.cs.findbugs.test.SpotBugsRunner;
@ExtendWith(SpotBugsExtension.class)
class ResolveMethodReferencesTest {
/**
* @see <a href="path_to_url">GitHub
* issue</a>
*/
@Test
void testIssue338(SpotBugsRunner spotbugs) {
BugCollection bugCollection = spotbugs.performAnalysis(Paths.get("../spotbugsTestCases/build/classes/java/main/lambdas/Issue338.class"));
assertThat(bugCollection, is(emptyIterable()));
assertThat(bugCollection, instanceOf(SortedBugCollection.class));
assertThat(((SortedBugCollection) bugCollection).missingClassIterator().hasNext(), is(false));
}
}
```
|
```org
#+TITLE: EmacsWiki: Programmable Completion
#+URL: path_to_url
#+AUTHOR: lujun9972
#+TAGS: emacs-common/
#+DATE: [2017-04-17 12:58]
#+LANGUAGE: zh-CN
#+OPTIONS: H:6 num:nil toc:t \n:nil ::t |:t ^:nil -:nil f:t *:t <:nil
Emacs `pcomplete.el . `pcomplete.el, [[path_to_url
*:* `pcomplete.elprogrammable completion, [[path_to_url manual ([[path_to_url programmed completion.
.
* Adding programmable completion using pcomplete
** setup,mode hook
:
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(defun pcomplete-erc-setup ()
"Setup erc-mode to use pcomplete."
(set (make-local-variable 'pcomplete-parse-arguments-function)
'pcomplete-parse-erc-arguments)
(set (make-local-variable 'pcomplete-command-completion-function)
'pcomplete/erc-mode/complete-command)
(set (make-local-variable 'pcomplete-command-name-function)
'pcomplete-erc-command-name)
(set (make-local-variable 'pcomplete-default-completion-function)
(lambda () (pcomplete-here (pcomplete-erc-nicks))))
(set (make-local-variable 'pcomplete-suffix-list) '(? ?:))
)
(add-hook 'erc-mode-hook 'pcomplete-erc-setup)
#+END_SRC
**
+ pcomplete-parse-arguments-function
=pcomplete-parse-arguments-function= . .
+ pcomplete-command-name-function
. .
, MSG major mode erc-mode , pcomplete =pcomplete/erc-mode/MSG= =pcomplete/MSG= .
+ pcomplete-default-completion-function
, =pcomplete-default-completion-function= .
=(pcomplete-here ( list of completions ))=
+ pcomplete-command-completion-function
=(pcomplete-here ( list of completions ))=
```
|
is a work of classical Japanese literature, written around 974, that falls under the genre of nikki bungaku, or diary literature. The author of Kagerō Nikki was a woman known only as the Mother of Michitsuna. Using a combination of waka poems and prose, she conveys the life of a noblewoman during the Heian period.
In English Kagerō Nikki is often called The Gossamer Years, which is the title given to the first English translation by Edward Seidensticker. The term kagerō has three possible meanings: it may mean a mayfly; a heat wave; or a thin film of cobweb, which is the meaning proposed by the English Orientalist Arthur Waley.
Origin
During the Heian Period, prominent families often collected and compiled their poems in a family collection, or kashū. It is likely that Fujiwara no Kaneie, her husband, asked the Mother of Michitsuna to create such a collection for their family. However, because she decided to add her own experiences along with the poems that she and Kaneie exchanged, Kagerō Nikki emerged. From the outset, the Mother of Michitsuna reveals her concerns by exploring the reality of her condition. It is commonly believed that Michitsuna’s Mother began writing the work in around 971, when she was facing one of her marriage crises.
Story
Sonja Arntzen argued that the work also functions as a record of the death of Michitsuna’s Mother’s marriage and her struggle to find a reason for living. Kagerō Nikki unfolds around the principal relationship between Michitsuna’s Mother and her husband, Fujiwara no Kaneie, while also placing a hefty emphasis on the author’s other social relationships, such that between herself, her son, and later on her adopted daughter. The diary entries detail events of particular emotional significance, such as when Kaneie visits other women while she stays at home taking care of their son ("the boy"). The Mother of Michitsuna's deep feelings for Kaneie are apparent in the way her words take on a tone of inner anguish as Kaneie's visits dwindle.
In an attempt to find solace, the Mother of Michitsuna makes pilgrimages to temples and mountains of religious importance. She often expresses her desire to become a nun, but the effect that act would have on her son’s future plagues her mind and prevents her from ever taking Buddhist vows. Towards the end of the diary, she finally reconciles herself to her separation from Kaneie, and determines to devote herself to caring for her son and her adopted daughter.
The story ends with Michitsuna’s mother watching the festival of the souls’ return in the new year, and she hears a knock on her door during the late night. The visitor’s identity is never disclosed in the work.
Style
Kagerō Nikki is said to be a diary, but it is "written in a mixture of styles; the first half characterized more by memoir, the latter half by day-to-day entry." The amount of time that passes between events is sometimes weeks or months.
The Mother of Michitsuna is credited with creating "a new form of self-expression and psychological exploration that expanded the potential of kana prose writing and influenced subsequent woman's writing, including The Tale of Genji." She achieves this raw, intimate expression by exploiting the first-person point of view allowed by the diary genre. Edward Seidensticker characterized the diary as “a remarkably frank personal confession” that describes “a disturbed state of mind.” Donald Keene has described Kagerō Nikki as “a self-portrait devastating in its honesty,” one “written passionately and without a thought to how readers might judge her actions.”
Another characteristic of the work is the unique way in which the author labels people in her life. For example, in one entry she writes "that 'splendid' personage of Machi Alley" when referring to the woman with whom Kaneie is having an affair. The sarcastic tone reflects the author’s attitude to the person in question: "This method of labeling people shows how very egocentric she was in her dealings with others, defining them solely in relationship to herself."
On the other hand, Sonja Arntzen argued in her 1997 translation that Michitsuna’s Mother “contributed a realistic mode of writing to Japanese prose” and highlights the psychological sophistication shown in Kagerō Nikki that recognizes the mutability of mental states and memories. Arntzen also praised Kagerō Nikki for its “awareness of the fictiveness of her [Michitsuna’s Mother] telling” and described the style of the work as resembling a “stream of consciousness”.
Marriage customs
Kagerō Nikki is the first piece of literature in which Heian social relations and customs are clearly drawn out. The marriage customs in Japan at the time revolved around the idea of "duolocal residence", in which the husband lived in a separate house while the wife stayed at her parents’ residence. Although there was not a structured procedure for divorce, the stoppage of visits signaled the end of a relationship. In expressing her frustration with this system, the Mother of Michitsuna provides valuable insight into the life of married couples during the Heian period. There was also no taboo against the marriage of an uncle with a niece, as seen in the proposed marriage of Tōnori ("the Kami") to Kaneie's daughter.
Author
Life
Born in 935 as the daughter of a provincial governor, Fujiwara no Tomoyasu, the Mother of Michitsuna was a lower- to mid-level member of the aristocratic class. In 954, at the age of nineteen, she married Fujiwara no Kaneie (929-990), who had recently attained the position of captain of the Right Guards. Kaneie later became the Minister of the Right and Regent after his daughter gave birth to Emperor En'yū's son. Although Kaneie continued to climb the social hierarchy, the Mother of Michitsuna’s position as a secondary wife and mother of only one child left her in an unstable social position. Her tenuous relations with Kaneie drove her to consider becoming a nun, but her son and others in her family convinced her to remain in the secular world. She later adopted a daughter of Kaneie's by another woman. Not long after that, the Mother of Michitsuna's sixteen-year-long marriage came to an end. According to her diary, the Mother of Michitsuna devoted her life to her children, and Michitsuna later was able to attain the position of Major Counselor.
Poems
The Mother of Michitsuna was known for her skill in waka, classical thirty-one-syllable poems, as indicated by the inclusion of some of her poems in Fujiwara no Teika's anthology Ogura Hyakunin Isshu (or One Hundred Poets, One Hundred Poems, c. 1235) and in the third imperial waka anthology Shūi Wakashū.
With her expertise on waka, Michitsuna’s Mother composed poems that facilitated social relationships and also put a stop to others. Besides making compositions using her own name, she also wrote poems on behalf of her husband and her son in order to help them advance in social hierarchy and engage in courtship, demonstrating her artistic talent as a skilled poet.
In Book 3 of Kagerō Nikki, Michitsuna asks his mother to create poems that can help him court the woman that he was trying to pursue. Another instance was when Michitsuna’s Mother passed on her knowledge of literary excellence by teaching her adopted daughter calligraphy and waka. In addition, to reject the advances of an older man who was trying to court her daughter, the author also produced poems in response to his courtship.
Marriage Politics
Michitsuna’s Mother lived during the age of monogatari, or “tale” or “romance” literature. While this is so, the author depicts her life story as one that does not have its own happy ending. Instead, she writes about the realities of marriage during her time—one that is driven by politics.
While both sons and daughters are important to marriage politics, women are regarded as having a more crucial role to this system as they are regarded as the bearers of the next generation. This is the reason why Michitsuna’s mother bemoaned having a son instead of a daughter in Book 3.
Legacy
In a society in which kana writing was considered a women's activity, inferior to the Chinese writing of educated men, Heian women produced what are today known as some of the most enduring and classical works in Japanese literature. The Mother of Michitsuna speculated that her work would be as ephemeral as "the diary of a mayfly or the shimmering heat on a summer's day," yet she played a crucial role in this legacy.
In modern times, Kagerō Nikki is often considered by the academia as the first autobiography written by a woman. Despite Michitsuna’s Mother’s portrayal of herself as someone who is ordinary and has little significance, the impact that her work has on Japanese literature would disagree with her sentiment.
See also
Heian literature
List of Japanese classical texts
Notes
Bibliography
Shirane, Haruo, ed. Traditional Japanese Literature: An Anthology, Beginnings to 1600. New York: Columbia UP, 2007.
Watanabe, Minoru; Richard Bowring. "Style and Point of View in the Kagero Nikki."Journal of Japanese Studies, Vol. 10, No.2. (Summer, 1984), pp. 365–384. .
McCullough, William H."Japanese Marriage Institutions in the Heian Period".Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, Vol.27 (1967), pp. 103–167. .
"Fujiwara no Kaneie." Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan. Online ed. 1993.
Arntzen, Sonja. The Kagerō Diary: A Woman’s Autobiographical Text from Tenth-Century Japan. University of Michigan Press. 2020. doi:10.1353/book.77824.
Akiyama, Ken. “Ōchō Joryū Bungaku no Sekai”. Tokyo: Tokyo Daigaku Shuppankai, pp. 209. 1972.
Pigeot, Jacqueline. “From the Kagerō no Nikki to the Genji Monogatari”. Cipango- French Journal of Japanese Studies [Online], Vol. 3. 2014. https://doi.org/10.4000/cjs.687
Late Old Japanese texts
Diaries of the Heian period
10th-century Japanese books
|
Likewise is the debut studio album by Frances Quinlan of Hop Along. It was released on January 31, 2020, by Saddle Creek Records.
Production
Likewise is Frances Quinlan's first solo album under their own name. They had earlier released a solo album, Freshman Year, as Hop Along, Queen Ansleis, in 2005. Quinlan recorded Likewise with Joe Reinhart, a bandmate from Hop Along. They felt that the recording experience opened their instrumentation palette beyond the guitar and made them a more adventurous collaborator. New instruments in their repertoire include strings, autoharp, and synthesizers.
Saddle Creek announced the record in October 2019 for a January 31, 2020, release. The lead single, "Rare Thing", accompanied the announcement. Based on a dream about their infant niece, the song explores the ability to love generously. Likewise second single, "Now That I'm Back", followed the next month. The song addresses the long road of learning to compromise in a romantic relationship. Quinlan released "Your Reply", a celebratory song about nearly understanding someone, early in January 2020. The album's last song, a cover of Built to Spill's "Carry the Zero", is a favorite of Quinlan's, often played in their solo sets and soundchecks.
Quinlan created the album's cover art. A limited edition release of the album on colored vinyl included autographed artwork. A promotional tour for the album is set to run from January to March 2020.
Critical reception
At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, this release received an average score of 83, based on 12 reviews.
The album was one of Pitchfork most anticipated in 2020.
Accolades
Track listing
See also
List of 2020 albums
References
External links
2020 albums
Saddle Creek Records albums
Frances Quinlan albums
|
```go
// Unless explicitly stated otherwise all files in this repository are licensed
// This product includes software developed at Datadog (path_to_url
// Package secret implements 'agent secret'.
package secret
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/spf13/cobra"
"go.uber.org/fx"
"github.com/DataDog/datadog-agent/cmd/agent/command"
"github.com/DataDog/datadog-agent/comp/core"
"github.com/DataDog/datadog-agent/comp/core/config"
log "github.com/DataDog/datadog-agent/comp/core/log/def"
apiutil "github.com/DataDog/datadog-agent/pkg/api/util"
"github.com/DataDog/datadog-agent/pkg/util/fxutil"
)
// cliParams are the command-line arguments for this subcommand
type cliParams struct {
*command.GlobalParams
}
// Commands returns a slice of subcommands for the 'agent' command.
func Commands(globalParams *command.GlobalParams) []*cobra.Command {
cliParams := &cliParams{
GlobalParams: globalParams,
}
secretInfoCommand := &cobra.Command{
Use: "secret",
Short: "Display information about secrets in configuration.",
Long: ``,
RunE: func(_ *cobra.Command, _ []string) error {
return fxutil.OneShot(showSecretInfo,
fx.Supply(command.GetDefaultCoreBundleParams(cliParams.GlobalParams)),
core.Bundle(),
)
},
}
secretRefreshCommand := &cobra.Command{
Use: "refresh",
Short: "Refresh secrets in configuration.",
Long: ``,
RunE: func(_ *cobra.Command, _ []string) error {
return fxutil.OneShot(secretRefresh,
fx.Supply(command.GetDefaultCoreBundleParams(cliParams.GlobalParams)),
core.Bundle(),
)
},
}
secretInfoCommand.AddCommand(secretRefreshCommand)
return []*cobra.Command{secretInfoCommand}
}
func showSecretInfo(config config.Component, _ log.Component) error {
res, err := callIPCEndpoint(config, "agent/secrets")
if err != nil {
return err
}
fmt.Println(string(res))
return nil
}
func secretRefresh(config config.Component, _ log.Component) error {
res, err := callIPCEndpoint(config, "agent/secret/refresh")
if err != nil {
return err
}
fmt.Println(string(res))
return nil
}
func callIPCEndpoint(config config.Component, endpointURL string) ([]byte, error) {
endpoint, err := apiutil.NewIPCEndpoint(config, endpointURL)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return endpoint.DoGet()
}
```
|
Gaseous signaling molecules are gaseous molecules that are either synthesized internally (endogenously) in the organism, tissue or cell or are received by the organism, tissue or cell from outside (say, from the atmosphere or hydrosphere, as in the case of oxygen) and that are used to transmit chemical signals which induce certain physiological or biochemical changes in the organism, tissue or cell. The term is applied to, for example, oxygen, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrous oxide, hydrogen cyanide, ammonia, methane, hydrogen, ethylene, etc.
Select gaseous signaling molecules behave as neurotransmitters and are called gasotransmitters. These include nitric oxide, carbon monoxide, and hydrogen sulfide.
Historically, the study of gases and physiological effects was categorized under factitious airs.
The biological roles of each of the gaseous signaling molecules are outlined below.
Gasotransmitters
Gasotransmitters are a class of neurotransmitters. Only three gases are accepted to be classified as gasotransmitters including nitric oxide, carbon monoxide, and hydrogen sulfide.
Gaseous Signaling Molecules
Oxygen
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide, CO2, is one of the mediators of local autoregulation of blood supply. If its levels are high, the capillaries expand to allow a greater blood flow to that tissue.
Bicarbonate, HCO3−, ions are crucial for regulating blood pH. A person's breathing rate influences the level of CO2 in their blood. Breathing that is too slow or shallow causes respiratory acidosis, while breathing that is too rapid leads to hyperventilation, which can cause respiratory alkalosis.
Although the body requires oxygen for metabolism, low oxygen levels normally do not stimulate breathing. Rather, breathing is stimulated by higher carbon dioxide levels.
The respiratory centers try to maintain an arterial CO2 pressure of 40 mm Hg. With intentional hyperventilation, the CO2 content of arterial blood may be lowered to 10–20 mm Hg (the oxygen content of the blood is little affected), and the respiratory drive is diminished. This is why one can hold one's breath longer after hyperventilating than without hyperventilating. This carries the risk that unconsciousness may result before the need to breathe becomes overwhelming, which is why hyperventilation is particularly dangerous before free diving.
Nitric oxide
Nitric oxide, NO, is a key vertebrate biological messenger important in many physiological and pathological processes, acting, for instance, as a powerful vasodilator in humans (see Biological functions of nitric oxide).
Nitrous oxide
Nitrous oxide, N2O, in biological systems can be formed by an enzymatic or non-enzymatic reduction of nitric oxide. In vitro studies have shown that endogenous nitrous oxide can be formed by the reaction between nitric oxide and thiol. Some authors have shown that this process of NO reduction to N2O takes place in hepatocytes, specifically in their cytoplasm and mitochondria, and suggested that the N2O can possibly be produced in mammalian cells. It is well known that N2O is produced by some bacteria during process called denitrification.
In 1981, it was first suggested from clinical work with nitrous oxide (N2O) that a gas had a direct action at pharmacological receptors and thereby acted as a neurotransmitter. In vitro experiments confirmed these observations which were replicated at NIDA later.
Apart from its direct and indirect actions at opioid receptors, it was also shown that N2O inhibits NMDA receptor-mediated activity and ionic currents and diminishes NMDA receptor-mediated excitotoxicity and neurodegeneration. Nitrous oxide also inhibits methionine synthase and slows the conversion of homocysteine to methionine, increases homocysteine concentration and decreases methionine concentration. This effect was shown in lymphocyte cell cultures and in human liver biopsy samples.
Nitrous oxide does not bind as a ligand to the heme and does not react with thiol-containing proteins. Nevertheless, studies have shown that nitrous oxide can reversibly and non-covalently "insert" itself into the inner structures of some heme-containing proteins such as hemoglobin, myoglobin, cytochrome oxidase and alter their structure and function. The ability of nitrous oxide to alter the structure and function of these proteins was demonstrated by shifts in infrared spectra of cysteine thiols of hemoglobin and by partial and reversible inhibition of cytochrome oxidase.
Endogenous nitrous oxide can possibly play a role in modulating endogenous opioid and NMDA systerosclerosis, severe sepsis, severe malaria, or autoimmunity. Clinical tests involving humans have been performed, but the results have not yet been released.
Carbon suboxide
Carbon suboxide, C3O2, can be produced in small amounts in any biochemical process that normally produces carbon monoxide, CO, for example, during heme oxidation by heme oxygenase-1. It can also be formed from malonic acid. It has been shown that carbon suboxide in an organism can quickly polymerize into macrocyclic polycarbon structures with the common formula (C3O2)n (mostly (C3O2)6 and (C3O2)8), and that those macrocyclic compounds are potent inhibitors of Na+/K+-ATP-ase and Ca-dependent ATP-ase, and have digoxin-like physiological properties and natriuretic and antihypertensive actions. Those macrocyclic carbon suboxide polymer compounds are thought to be endogenous digoxin-like regulators of Na+/K+-ATP-ases and Ca-dependent ATP-ases, and endogenous natriuretics and antihypertensives. Other than that, some authors think also that those macrocyclic compounds of carbon suboxide can possibly diminish free radical formation and oxidative stress and play a role in endogenous anticancer protective mechanisms, for example in the retina.
Sulfur dioxide
The role of sulfur dioxide, SO2, in mammalian biology is not yet well understood. Sulfur dioxide blocks nerve signals from the pulmonary stretch receptors and abolishes the Hering–Breuer inflation reflex.
It was shown that endogenous sulfur dioxide plays a role in diminishing an experimental lung damage caused by oleic acid. Endogenous sulfur dioxide lowered lipid peroxidation, free radical formation, oxidative stress and inflammation during an experimental lung damage. Conversely, a successful lung damage caused a significant lowering of endogenous sulfur dioxide production, and an increase in lipid peroxidation, free radical formation, oxidative stress and inflammation. Moreover, blockade of an enzyme that produces endogenous SO2 significantly increased the amount of lung tissue damage in the experiment. Conversely, adding acetylcysteine or glutathione to the rat diet increased the amount of endogenous SO2 produced and decreased the lung damage, the free radical formation, oxidative stress, inflammation and apoptosis.
It is considered that endogenous sulfur dioxide plays a significant physiological role in regulating cardiac and blood vessel function, and aberrant or deficient sulfur dioxide metabolism can contribute to several different cardiovascular diseases, such as arterial hypertension, atherosclerosis, pulmonary arterial hypertension, stenocardia.
It was shown that in children with pulmonary arterial hypertension due to congenital heart diseases the level of homocysteine is higher and the level of endogenous sulfur dioxide is lower than in normal control children. Moreover, these biochemical parameters strongly correlated to the severity of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Authors considered homocysteine to be one of useful biochemical markers of disease severity and sulfur dioxide metabolism to be one of potential therapeutic targets in those patients.
Endogenous sulfur dioxide also has been shown to lower the proliferation rate of endothelial smooth muscle cells in blood vessels, via lowering the MAPK activity and activating adenylyl cyclase and protein kinase A. Smooth muscle cell proliferation is one of important mechanisms of hypertensive remodeling of blood vessels and their stenosis, so it is an important pathogenetic mechanism in arterial hypertension and atherosclerosis.
Endogenous sulfur dioxide in low concentrations causes endothelium-dependent vasodilation. In higher concentrations it causes endothelium-independent vasodilation and has a negative inotropic effect on cardiac output function, thus effectively lowering blood pressure and myocardial oxygen consumption. The vasodilating effects of sulfur dioxide are mediated via ATP-dependent calcium channels and L-type ("dihydropyridine") calcium channels. Endogenous sulfur dioxide is also a potent antiinflammatory, antioxidant and cytoprotective agent. It lowers blood pressure and slows hypertensive remodeling of blood vessels, especially thickening of their intima. It also regulates lipid metabolism.
Endogenous sulfur dioxide also diminishes myocardial damage, caused by isoproterenol adrenergic hyperstimulation, and strengthens the myocardial antioxidant defense reserve.
Hydrogen cyanide
Some authors have shown that neurons can produce hydrogen cyanide, HCN, upon activation of their opioid receptors by endogenous or exogenous opioids. They have also shown that neuronal production of HCN activates NMDA receptors and plays a role in signal transduction between neuronal cells (neurotransmission). Moreover, increased endogenous neuronal HCN production under opioids was seemingly needed for adequate opioid analgesia, as analgesic action of opioids was attenuated by HCN scavengers. They considered endogenous HCN to be a neuromodulator.
It was also shown that, while stimulating muscarinic cholinergic receptors in cultured pheochromocytoma cells increases HCN production, in a living organism (in vivo) muscarinic cholinergic stimulation actually decreases HCN production.
Leukocytes generate HCN during phagocytosis.
The vasodilatation, caused by sodium nitroprusside, has been shown to be mediated not only by NO generation, but also by endogenous cyanide generation, which adds not only toxicity, but also some additional antihypertensive efficacy compared to nitroglycerine and other non-cyanogenic nitrates which do not cause blood cyanide levels to rise.
Ammonia
Ammonia, NH3, also plays a role in both normal and abnormal animal physiology. It is biosynthesised through normal amino acid metabolism, but is toxic in high concentrations. The liver converts ammonia to urea through a series of reactions known as the urea cycle. Liver dysfunction, such as that seen in cirrhosis, may lead to elevated amounts of ammonia in the blood (hyperammonemia). Likewise, defects in the enzymes responsible for the urea cycle, such as ornithine transcarbamylase, lead to hyperammonemia. Hyperammonemia contributes to the confusion and coma of hepatic encephalopathy, as well as the neurologic disease common in people with urea cycle defects and organic acidurias.
Ammonia is important for normal animal acid/base balance. After formation of ammonium from glutamine, α-ketoglutarate may be degraded to produce two molecules of bicarbonate, which are then available as buffers for dietary acids. Ammonium is excreted in the urine, resulting in net acid loss. Ammonia may itself diffuse across the renal tubules, combine with a hydrogen ion, and thus allow for further acid excretion.
Methane
Some authors have shown that endogenous methane, CH4, is produced not only by the intestinal flora and then absorbed into the blood, but also is produced - in small amounts - by eukaryotic cells (during process of lipid peroxidation). And they have also shown that the endogenous methane production rises during an experimental mitochondrial hypoxia, for example, sodium azide intoxication. They thought that methane could be one of intercellular signals of hypoxia and stress.
Other authors have shown that cellular methane production also rises during sepsis or bacterial endotoxemia, including an experimental imitation of endotoxemia by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) administration.
Some other researchers have shown that methane, produced by the intestinal flora, is not fully "biologically neutral" to the intestine, and it participates in the normal physiologic regulation of peristalsis. And its excess causes not only belching, flatulence and belly pain, but also functional constipation.
Ethylene
Ethylene, H2C=CH2, serves as a hormone in plants. It acts at trace levels throughout the life of the plant by stimulating or regulating the ripening of fruit, the opening of flowers, and the abscission (or shedding) of leaves.
Commercial ripening rooms use "catalytic generators" to make ethylene gas from a liquid supply of ethanol. Typically, a gassing level of 500 to 2,000 ppm is used, for 24 to 48 hours. Care must be taken to control carbon dioxide levels in ripening rooms when gassing, as high temperature ripening () has been seen to produce CO2 levels of 10% in 24 hours.
Ethylene has been used since the ancient Egyptians, who would gash figs in order to stimulate ripening (wounding stimulates ethylene production by plant tissues). The ancient Chinese would burn incense in closed rooms to enhance the ripening of pears. In 1864, it was discovered that gas leaks from street lights led to stunting of growth, twisting of plants, and abnormal thickening of stems. In 1901, a Russian scientist named Dimitry Neljubow showed that the active component was ethylene. Sarah Doubt discovered that ethylene stimulated abscission in 1917. It wasn't until 1934 that Gane reported that plants synthesize ethylene. In 1935, Crocker proposed that ethylene was the plant hormone responsible for fruit ripening as well as senescence of vegetative tissues.
Ethylene is produced from essentially all parts of higher plants, including leaves, stems, roots, flowers, fruits, tubers, and seeds.
Ethylene production is regulated by a variety of developmental and environmental factors. During the life of the plant, ethylene production is induced during certain stages of growth such as germination, ripening of fruits, abscission of leaves, and senescence of flowers. Ethylene production can also be induced by a variety of external aspects such as mechanical wounding, environmental stresses, and certain chemicals including auxin and other regulators.
Ethylene is biosynthesized from the amino acid methionine to S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM, also called Adomet) by the enzyme Met Adenosyltransferase. SAM is then converted to 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) by the enzyme ACC synthase (ACS). The activity of ACS determines the rate of ethylene production, therefore regulation of this enzyme is key for the ethylene biosynthesis. The final step requires oxygen and involves the action of the enzyme ACC-oxidase (ACO), formerly known as the ethylene forming enzyme (EFE). Ethylene biosynthesis can be induced by endogenous or exogenous ethylene. ACC synthesis increases with high levels of auxins, especially indole acetic acid (IAA) and cytokinins.
Ethylene is perceived by a family of five transmembrane protein dimers such as the ETR1 protein in Arabidopsis. The gene encoding an ethylene receptor has been cloned in Arabidopsis thaliana and then in tomato. Ethylene receptors are encoded by multiple genes in the Arabidopsis and tomato genomes. Mutations in any of the gene family, which comprises five receptors in Arabidopsis and at least six in tomato, can lead to insensitivity to ethylene. DNA sequences for ethylene receptors have also been identified in many other plant species and an ethylene binding protein has even been identified in Cyanobacteria.
Environmental cues such as flooding, drought, chilling, wounding, and pathogen attack can induce ethylene formation in plants. In flooding, roots suffer from lack of oxygen, or anoxia, which leads to the synthesis of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC). ACC is transported upwards in the plant and then oxidized in leaves. The ethylene produced causes nastic movements (epinasty) of the leaves, perhaps helping the plant to lose water.
Ethylene in plant induces such responses:
Seedling triple response, thickening and shortening of hypocotyl with pronounced apical hook.
In pollination, when the pollen reaches the stigma, the precursor of the ethene, ACC, is secreted to the petal, the ACC releases ethylene with ACC oxidase.
Stimulates leaf and flower senescence
Stimulates senescence of mature xylem cells in preparation for plant use
Induces leaf abscission
Induces seed germination
Induces root hair growth — increasing the efficiency of water and mineral absorption through rhizosheath formation
Induces the growth of adventitious roots during flooding
Stimulates survival under low-oxygen conditions (hypoxia) in submerged plant tissues
Stimulates epinasty — leaf petiole grows out, leaf hangs down and curls into itself
Stimulates fruit ripening
Induces a climacteric rise in respiration in some fruit which causes a release of additional ethylene.
Affects gravitropism
Inhibits root growth in response to soil compaction, shade and flooding
Stimulates nutational bending
Inhibits stem growth and stimulates stem and cell broadening and lateral branch growth outside of seedling stage (see Hyponastic response)
Interference with auxin transport (with high auxin concentrations)
Inhibits shoot growth and stomatal closing except in some water plants or habitually flooded ones such as some rice varieties, where the opposite occurs (conserving and )
Induces flowering in pineapples
Inhibits short day induced flower initiation in Pharbitus nil and Chrysanthemum morifolium
Small amounts of endogenous ethylene are also produced in mammals, including humans, due to lipid peroxidation. Some of endogenous ethylene is then oxidized to ethylene oxide, which is able to alkylate DNA and proteins, including hemoglobin (forming a specific adduct with its N-terminal valine, N-hydroxyethyl-valine). Endogenous ethylene oxide, just as like environmental (exogenous) one, can alkylate guanine in DNA, forming an adduct 7-(2-hydroxyethyl)-guanine, and this poses an intrinsic carcinogenic risk. It is also mutagenic.
References
External links
Biochemistry
Molecular biology
Molecules
Signal transduction
|
Sir Arthur Stanley Woodwark (1875 - 11 May 1945), was a British physician who served as dean of the medical school at Westminster Hospital.
He authored the Manual of Medicine, first published in 1912, before reaching a fourth edition. His main work involved being a medical examiner, compensation cases and being a medical witness.
Early life and education
Stanley Woodwark was born in 1875, the third of six sons of George S. Woodwark of King’s Lynn, and was educated at Felsted, Essex.
Career
After studying medicine at St Bartholomew's Hospital and gaining his MRCS and LRCP in 1902, he spent some time as a ship’s surgeon and took resident appointments at the Royal Free Hospital. In 1906 he passed the MBBS after spending some time in general practice. He completed junior posts at the Great Northern Central Hospital, the Hospital for Sick Children, St. Bartholomew’s, where he was casualty physician, and King's College Hospital, where he was medical registrar. In 1909 he gained his MD. At the Throat Hospital, Golden Square, and the Royal Waterloo Hospital for Children and Women, he held honorary appointments. During the First World War, he was promoted to the rank of colonel, and held the position of D.A.D.M.S., London District, deputy assistant director-general at the War Office. At the Queen Alexandra Military Hospital he was appointed consulting physician.
In 1912 he authored the Manual of Medicine, which reached four editions. His main work involved being a medical examiner, compensation cases and being a medical witness.
In 1919 he was appointed assistant physician to the Westminster Hospital and dean of its medical school. He gained his FRCP the following year. He had been an examiner for both the LMSSA and Conjoint board.
Awards and honours
He was awarded the CMG in 1918 and the CBE in 1919. He was made deputy lieutenant in 1931.. In 1932 he was knighted, and was also made knight of St John of Jerusalem. He served as master of the Society of Apothecaries between 1941 and 1943, was master of the Barbers from 1942 to 1944, and master of the Turner's company in 1943. He was president of the Royal Institute of Public Health and Hygiene. He was also a member of the BMA, the Savage Club, and on council for the MDU.
Personal and family
In 1911 he married Hilda, daughter of Sir Richard Robinson, and they had a daughter and three sons, including George Millington Woodwark.
Selected publications
References
1875 births
1945 deaths
Alumni of Westminster Hospital Medical School
20th-century British medical doctors
British medical academics
Knights Hospitaller
|
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a centre-back for Iwaki FC.
Club career
In March 2019, Egawa moved to Brazilian side Londrina-PR on loan, alongside teammate Kohei Hattori. At the end of the following season, it was announced that Egawa would move to fellow Japanese side Iwaki FC ahead of the 2021 season.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
2000 births
Living people
People from Ōtsu, Shiga
Association football people from Shiga Prefecture
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Japan Football League players
J3 League players
J2 League players
Kyoto Sanga FC players
Iwaki FC players
Londrina Esporte Clube players
Japanese expatriate men's footballers
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Brazil
Expatriate men's footballers in Brazil
|
```javascript
Default function parameters
Symbols in ES6
Creating promises
Hoisting with `var` and `let`
ES6 Generator Transpiler
```
|
Zinc lactate is a chemical compound, a salt of zinc and lactic acid with the formula Zn(C3H5O3)2.
Synthesis
Reaction of lactic acid with zinc oxide:
2CH3CH(OH)COOH + ZnO → Zn(C3H5O3)2 + H2O
Physical properties
Zinc lactate appears as a white to almost white fine powder.
Zinc lactate is nearly odourless, highly soluble in water, and insoluble in ethanol.
Zinc lactate forms dihydrates with the chemical formula Zn(C3H5O3)2 • 2H2O.
Use
The compound is used in dental care products like toothpaste or mouthwash.
Can also be used as a dietary ingredient and as a nutrient.
The compound has antioxidant properties in mammals and can improve intestinal function.
References
Lactates
Zinc compounds
|
```objective-c
// This source code is licensed under both the GPLv2 (found in the
// (found in the LICENSE.Apache file in the root directory).
//
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file. See the AUTHORS file for names of contributors.
#pragma once
#include "rocksdb/threadpool.h"
#include "rocksdb/env.h"
#include <memory>
#include <functional>
namespace rocksdb {
class ThreadPoolImpl : public ThreadPool {
public:
ThreadPoolImpl();
~ThreadPoolImpl();
ThreadPoolImpl(ThreadPoolImpl&&) = delete;
ThreadPoolImpl& operator=(ThreadPoolImpl&&) = delete;
// Implement ThreadPool interfaces
// Wait for all threads to finish.
// Discards all the jobs that did not
// start executing and waits for those running
// to complete
void JoinAllThreads() override;
// Set the number of background threads that will be executing the
// scheduled jobs.
void SetBackgroundThreads(int num) override;
int GetBackgroundThreads() override;
// Get the number of jobs scheduled in the ThreadPool queue.
unsigned int GetQueueLen() const override;
// Waits for all jobs to complete those
// that already started running and those that did not
// start yet
void WaitForJobsAndJoinAllThreads() override;
// Make threads to run at a lower kernel IO priority
// Currently only has effect on Linux
void LowerIOPriority();
// Make threads to run at a lower kernel CPU priority
// Currently only has effect on Linux
void LowerCPUPriority();
// Ensure there is at aleast num threads in the pool
// but do not kill threads if there are more
void IncBackgroundThreadsIfNeeded(int num);
// Submit a fire and forget job
// These jobs can not be unscheduled
// This allows to submit the same job multiple times
void SubmitJob(const std::function<void()>&) override;
// This moves the function in for efficiency
void SubmitJob(std::function<void()>&&) override;
// Schedule a job with an unschedule tag and unschedule function
// Can be used to filter and unschedule jobs by a tag
// that are still in the queue and did not start running
void Schedule(void (*function)(void* arg1), void* arg, void* tag,
void (*unschedFunction)(void* arg));
// Filter jobs that are still in a queue and match
// the given tag. Remove them from a queue if any
// and for each such job execute an unschedule function
// if such was given at scheduling time.
int UnSchedule(void* tag);
void SetHostEnv(Env* env);
Env* GetHostEnv() const;
// Return the thread priority.
// This would allow its member-thread to know its priority.
Env::Priority GetThreadPriority() const;
// Set the thread priority.
void SetThreadPriority(Env::Priority priority);
static void PthreadCall(const char* label, int result);
struct Impl;
private:
// Current public virtual interface does not provide usable
// functionality and thus can not be used internally to
// facade different implementations.
//
// We propose a pimpl idiom in order to easily replace the thread pool impl
// w/o touching the header file but providing a different .cc potentially
// CMake option driven.
//
// Another option is to introduce a Env::MakeThreadPool() virtual interface
// and override the environment. This would require refactoring ThreadPool usage.
//
// We can also combine these two approaches
std::unique_ptr<Impl> impl_;
};
} // namespace rocksdb
```
|
Sandra D. Knight is a retired American actress.
Acting career
Film
Knight acted in low-budget films of the 1950s and 1960s, such as Frankenstein's Daughter (1958) in which she played the titular role, The Terror (1963) starring Boris Karloff and Jack Nicholson, where she plays an evil spirit, and Tower of London (1962) with Vincent Price. Her most well-known film is the bootleg moonshine action epic Thunder Road (1958) starring Robert Mitchum.
Television
She appeared as a guest star in numerous television series, including the episode "The Legacy" in the Western Tales of Wells Fargo , an episode of the science fiction anthology series One Step Beyond called "The Burning Girl"; an episode titled "Knock on Any Tombstone" of the Warner Bros. detective show Bourbon Street Beat; the episode "The Search for Cope Borden" in the Western The Man from Blackhawk; the episode "Home Town", in the Western Tate; the Western The Rebel; the episodes "Drifter's Gold" and "The Last Journey" in the Western Laramie; the Western Wagon Train in the episode "The Bettina May Story"; the episode "Separate Checks" in the detective show Surfside 6; the episode "A Time to Run" of the Western The Tall Man; and the episode "The Yellow Badge of Courage" in the sitcom I'm Dickens, He's Fenster.
Personal life
In 1962, Knight married fellow actor Jack Nicholson, with whom she had worked on The Terror. They have a daughter, Jennifer. Knight retired from acting in 1966. Knight and Nicholson divorced in 1968, and she married John Arthur Stephenson in 1982.
Selected filmography
Film
Thunder Road (1958)
Frankenstein's Daughter (1958)
Tower of London (1962)
The Terror (1963)
Blood Bath (1966)
Television
State Trooper (1958)
Tales of Wells Fargo (1958)
One Step Beyond (1959)
Bourbon Street Beat (1960)
Goodyear Theatre (1960)
The Man from Blackhawk (1960)
Tate (1960)
The Rebel (1960-1961)
Laramie (1960-1961)
Wagon Train (1961)
Surfside 6 (1961)
The Tall Man (1962)
I'm Dickens, He's Fenster (1962)
References
External links
Official website
20th-century American actresses
Actresses from Pennsylvania
American film actresses
American television actresses
Living people
21st-century American women
Year of birth missing (living people)
|
The 2023 Isle of Man TT was held between Monday 29 May and Saturday 10 June, on the Isle of Man TT Mountain Course.
The event was marked by the high profile absences of possible podium contenders Lee Johnston and Nathan Harrison due to injury, multiple TT winner Ian Hutchinson due to a stroke, and fastest ever newcomer Glenn Irwin due to personal reasons.
This year saw the outright lap record broken again by Peter Hickman achieving on Friday 9th June during the second RL360 Superstock race aboard the Monster Energy by FHO Racing BMW M1000RR.
Michael Dunlop saw success during the event by earning 4 victories (Superbike, Supersport 1, Supersport 2, Lightweight 1) putting him at 25 total, one below his uncle Joey Dunlop. He also set a new supersport record of , Peter Hickman also manage to break the average on a supersport with .
The Birchall brothers, Ben and Tom, saw continued success by winning both Sidecar races taking their tally to 14 and 11 in a row. They also set a new lap record of during the second Sidecar race.
The event saw the unfortunate passing of one competitor on the final lap of the first Supertwin TT, Spanish rider Raul Torras Martinez.
Schedule
Results
Monster Energy Supersport TT Race 1
3wheeling.media Sidecar TT Race 1
RST Superbike TT
RL360 Superstock TT Race 1
Carole Nash Supertwin TT Race 1
3wheeling.media Sidecar TT Race 2
Monster Energy Supersport TT Race 2
RL360 Superstock TT Race 2
Carole Nash Supertwin TT Race 2
Milwaukee Senior TT
Wins table
Sources
2023
2023 in motorcycle sport
2023 in British motorsport
|
```go
package workflowtemplate
import (
"github.com/ovh/cds/engine/api/database/gorpmapping"
"github.com/ovh/cds/sdk"
)
func init() {
gorpmapping.Register(
gorpmapping.New(sdk.WorkflowTemplate{}, "workflow_template", true, "id"),
gorpmapping.New(sdk.WorkflowTemplateInstance{}, "workflow_template_instance", true, "id"),
gorpmapping.New(sdk.AuditWorkflowTemplate{}, "workflow_template_audit", true, "id"),
gorpmapping.New(sdk.AuditWorkflowTemplateInstance{}, "workflow_template_instance_audit", true, "id"),
gorpmapping.New(sdk.WorkflowTemplateBulk{}, "workflow_template_bulk", true, "id"),
)
}
```
|
```ruby
class Wellington < Formula
desc "Project-focused tool to manage Sass and spriting"
homepage "path_to_url"
url "path_to_url"
sha256 your_sha256_hash
license "Apache-2.0"
head "path_to_url", branch: "master"
bottle do
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, arm64_sonoma: your_sha256_hash
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, arm64_ventura: your_sha256_hash
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, arm64_monterey: your_sha256_hash
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, arm64_big_sur: your_sha256_hash
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, sonoma: your_sha256_hash
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, ventura: your_sha256_hash
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, monterey: your_sha256_hash
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, big_sur: your_sha256_hash
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, catalina: your_sha256_hash
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, mojave: your_sha256_hash
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, high_sierra: your_sha256_hash
sha256 cellar: :any_skip_relocation, x86_64_linux: your_sha256_hash
end
# upstream go1.20 support report, path_to_url
deprecate! date: "2023-08-20", because: :unmaintained
# Bump to 1.20 on the next release, if possible.
depends_on "go@1.19" => :build
def install
ldflags = "-X github.com/wellington/wellington/version.Version=#{version}"
system "go", "build", *std_go_args(output: bin/"wt", ldflags:), "wt/main.go"
end
test do
s = "div { p { color: red; } }"
expected = <<~EOS
/* line 1, stdin */
div p {
color: red; }
EOS
assert_equal expected, pipe_output("#{bin}/wt --comment", s, 0)
end
end
```
|
```cmake
# 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
# - Find CRCUTIL (crcutil/include.h, libcrcutil.a)
# This module defines
# CRCUTIL_INCLUDE_DIR, directory containing headers
# CRCUTIL_SHARED_LIB, path to libcrcutil's shared library
# CRCUTIL_STATIC_LIB, path to libcrcutil's static library
# CRCUTIL_FOUND, whether crcutil has been found
find_path(CRCUTIL_INCLUDE_DIR crcutil/interface.h
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH
NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH)
find_library(CRCUTIL_SHARED_LIB crcutil
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH
NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH)
find_library(CRCUTIL_STATIC_LIB libcrcutil.a
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH
NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH)
include(FindPackageHandleStandardArgs)
find_package_handle_standard_args(Crcutil REQUIRED_VARS
CRCUTIL_SHARED_LIB CRCUTIL_STATIC_LIB CRCUTIL_INCLUDE_DIR)
```
|
Andrew McMenemy (born 7 August 1984) is a professional rugby union referee who represents the Scottish Rugby Union. He now serves as a Television Match Official for the Pro14.
Rugby union career
Playing career
Amateur career
McMenemy played for Gala.
Referee career
Professional career
McMenemy's first ever game he refereed was Kelso U18s v Musselburgh U18s.
He became a professional referee in 2010.
McMenemy refereed in the Scottish Premiership.
His final game as a professional referee was in the Pro12 on 1 March 2015 when Connacht played Benetton Treviso.
International career
He was in the panel of referees for the 2008 Rugby Union Junior World Championship; five years later also as head referee. He also gained experience in female test matches, including the 2010 World Cup. At the representative level, he made his debut in the Georgia-Romania match in March 2009 in the 2008 European Nations Cup of Nations 2008-2010 and in the following years he also appeared in this competition. In addition to conducting representation meetings, he was also a line judge.
Outside of rugby
He played cricket for Gala Cricket Club and captained the side in 2004.
McMenemy was originally a Fire Prevention Engineer.
References
External links
Scottish rugby referee Andrew McMenemy takes us through the new scrum engagement laws
Living people
Scottish rugby union referees
Rugby union officials
1984 births
|
Sinzing is a municipality in the district of Regensburg in Bavaria in Germany.
Geography
Sinzing is located on the Schwarzen Laber and the Danube, about eight kilometers west of Regensburg.
Municipality structure
There are 17 districts
Adlstein
Alling
Bergmatting
Bruckdorf
Dürnstetten
Eilsbrunn
Grafenried
Hart (PLZ 93152)
Kleinprüfening
Kohlstadt
Kühblöß
Mariaort
Minoritenhof
Niederviehhausen
Oberalling
Reichenstetten
Riegling
Saxberg
Schneckenbach
Sinzing
Steg
Thalhof
Unteralling
Viehhausen
Vogelsang
Waltenhofen
Zeiler (PLZ 93152)
History
Sinzing first appears in historical records in 921. In 1031, the part known as Eilsbrunn was mentioned. This part was, however, almost completely destroyed during the Thirty Years' War. The fortifications in Niederviehhausen were also destroyed; only a tower is still visible. From 1145 until 1966, it was possible to cross the Danube at Sinzing, and until 1485, Sinzing was part of the trade route between Regensburg and Nürnberg. Wine was cultivated in Sinzing up until the 17th century. In the 19th century Sinzing had many mills, some paper factories and a tobacco factory.
The modern district was created in 1972 by the incorporation of the previously independent districts of Sinzing, Viehhausen, Eilsbrunn, and Bergmatting. The Gaststätte Röhrl, the oldest continuously operated restaurant in the world, is located in Eilsbrunn.
Culture and sights
Architectural engineering
Pilgrimage Church Mariaort:
The town of Ort was first mentioned in a document in 1020. The church dates from 1192. It was looted in the Thirty Years War, expanded in 1774–1776 and badly damaged in World War II. Early classical high altar, side altars from 1650. The juniper bush on the pulpit on the outside of the church symbolizes that the miraculous image should have swum on a juniper bush from the Black Sea to Mariaort.
Oberviehhausen Castle:
The small castle was first mentioned in a document in 1435, it changed hands several times over the centuries. It was destroyed by the Swedes during the Thirty Years War and only rebuilt in 1697. The castle building is now used as a rectory.
Castle ruin Niederviehhausen:
The castle was destroyed by the Swedes during the Thirty Years War. Today only the six-story, 22-meter-high tower made of humpback ashlar remains.
Old church in Sinzing:
Church with Romanesque frescoes from 1145. The building with the massive tower with pyramid roof probably dates from the 13th or 14th century. The furnishings are baroque.
Bruckdorf Church: mainly from the 11th century.
Röhrl restaurant in Eilsbrunn:
Family-owned since 1658 and, according to the Guinness Book of Records, the oldest continuously operated restaurant in the world
References
Regensburg (district)
Populated places on the Danube
|
Exocentrus adspersus is a species of longhorn beetles of the subfamily Lamiinae. It was described by Mulsant in 1846, and is known from Europe, the Caucasus, and Russia. The beetles inhabit various deciduous trees, although their preferred host plants are oaks. They measure long and can live for approximately 2 years.
References
Beetles described in 1846
Beetles of Europe
Acanthocinini
|
```python
#
# 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
""""A pipeline that uses RunInference to perform translation
with a T5 language model.
This pipeline takes a list of english sentences and then uses
the T5ForConditionalGeneration from Hugging Face to translate the
english sentence into german.
"""
import argparse
import sys
import apache_beam as beam
from apache_beam.ml.inference.base import RunInference
from apache_beam.ml.inference.pytorch_inference import PytorchModelHandlerTensor
from apache_beam.ml.inference.pytorch_inference import make_tensor_model_fn
from apache_beam.options.pipeline_options import PipelineOptions
from transformers import AutoConfig
from transformers import AutoTokenizer
from transformers import T5ForConditionalGeneration
class Preprocess(beam.DoFn):
def __init__(self, tokenizer: AutoTokenizer):
self._tokenizer = tokenizer
def process(self, element):
"""
Process the raw text input to a format suitable for
T5ForConditionalGeneration model inference
Args:
element: A string of text
Returns:
A tokenized example that can be read by the
T5ForConditionalGeneration
"""
input_ids = self._tokenizer(
element, return_tensors="pt", padding="max_length",
max_length=512).input_ids
return input_ids
class Postprocess(beam.DoFn):
def __init__(self, tokenizer: AutoTokenizer):
self._tokenizer = tokenizer
def process(self, element):
"""
Process the PredictionResult to print the translated texts
Args:
element: The RunInference output to be processed.
"""
decoded_inputs = self._tokenizer.decode(
element.example, skip_special_tokens=True)
decoded_outputs = self._tokenizer.decode(
element.inference, skip_special_tokens=True)
print(f"{decoded_inputs} \t Output: {decoded_outputs}")
def parse_args(argv):
"""Parses args for the workflow."""
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument(
"--model_state_dict_path",
dest="model_state_dict_path",
required=True,
help="Path to the model's state_dict.",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--model_name",
dest="model_name",
required=False,
help="Path to the model's state_dict.",
default="t5-11b",
)
return parser.parse_known_args(args=argv)
def run():
"""
Runs the interjector pipeline which translates English sentences
into German using the RunInference API. """
known_args, pipeline_args = parse_args(sys.argv)
pipeline_options = PipelineOptions(pipeline_args)
gen_fn = make_tensor_model_fn('generate')
model_handler = PytorchModelHandlerTensor(
state_dict_path=known_args.model_state_dict_path,
model_class=T5ForConditionalGeneration,
model_params={
"config": AutoConfig.from_pretrained(known_args.model_name)
},
device="cpu",
inference_fn=gen_fn)
eng_sentences = [
"The house is wonderful.",
"I like to work in NYC.",
"My name is Shubham.",
"I want to work for Google.",
"I am from India."
]
task_prefix = "translate English to German: "
task_sentences = [task_prefix + sentence for sentence in eng_sentences]
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(known_args.model_name)
# [START Pipeline]
with beam.Pipeline(options=pipeline_options) as pipeline:
_ = (
pipeline
| "CreateInputs" >> beam.Create(task_sentences)
| "Preprocess" >> beam.ParDo(Preprocess(tokenizer=tokenizer))
| "RunInference" >> RunInference(model_handler=model_handler)
| "PostProcess" >> beam.ParDo(Postprocess(tokenizer=tokenizer)))
# [END Pipeline]
if __name__ == "__main__":
run()
```
|
The Blue Ribbon Online Free Speech Campaign (officially the Blue Ribbon Campaign for Online Freedom of Speech, Press and Association) is an online advocacy campaign for intellectual freedom on the Internet, orchestrated by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF). Web site owners are encouraged to place images of blue ribbons on their sites and link to EFF's campaign. This is done so that they can help spread awareness of the threats to unrestricted speech in new media.
History
The campaign was launched immediately after the passing of the Communications Decency Act (CDA) in the United States on February 1, 1996, followed by the Black World Wide Web protest on February 8, 1996, and remained popular throughout the 1990s and into the early 2000s. The Communications Decency Act was ruled unconstitutional in large part by the Supreme Court on June 26, 1997 in a joint ACLU/EFF suit. EFF relaunched the campaign on June 15, 1998 to raise awareness of other legislation that they felt threatened freedom of expression online, especially the CDA follow-up bill, the Child Online Protection Act (COPA), also eventually overturned.
References
. Electronic Frontier Foundation, February 1, 1996.
. Electronic Frontier Foundation, 1996.
The campaign's launch message as archived from Usenet
"EFF Urges Internet Users to Join a New Blue Ribbon Campaign to Oppose Current Attempts to Censor the Net". EFFector online newsletter, Vol. 11, No. 9; Electronic Frontier Foundation, June 15, 1998.
External links
"Help Us Protect Free Speech Online!" – Blue Ribbon Campaign homepage at EFF
Ribbon symbolism
Internet-based and online protests
Internet-related activism
Projects established in 1996
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Communications Decency Act
1996 in Internet culture
|
```shell
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Tags: long, no-debug
set -e
CUR_DIR=$(cd "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")" && pwd)
CLICKHOUSE_CLIENT_SERVER_LOGS_LEVEL=none
# shellcheck source=../shell_config.sh
. "$CUR_DIR"/../shell_config.sh
${CLICKHOUSE_CLIENT} --query="DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t"
${CLICKHOUSE_CLIENT} --query="CREATE TABLE t (x Int8) ENGINE = MergeTree ORDER BY tuple()"
function thread_ops()
{
local TIMELIMIT=$((SECONDS+$1))
local it=0
while [ $SECONDS -lt "$TIMELIMIT" ] && [ $it -lt 100 ];
do
it=$((it+1))
${CLICKHOUSE_CLIENT} --query="INSERT INTO t VALUES (0)"
${CLICKHOUSE_CLIENT} --query="INSERT INTO t VALUES (0)"
${CLICKHOUSE_CLIENT} --query="OPTIMIZE TABLE t FINAL" 2>/dev/null &
${CLICKHOUSE_CLIENT} --query="ALTER TABLE t DETACH PARTITION tuple()"
${CLICKHOUSE_CLIENT} --query="SELECT count() FROM t HAVING count() > 0"
done
}
export -f thread_ops
TIMEOUT=30
thread_ops $TIMEOUT &
wait
$CLICKHOUSE_CLIENT -q "DROP TABLE t"
```
|
Anne Of Green Gables: The Musical is a musical based on the 1908 novel Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery. The book was written by Don Harron exclusively, the music by Norman Campbell and the lyrics in a joint venture by Don Harron, Norman Campbell, Elaine Campbell and Mavor Moore. The musical was Canada's longest-running musical, having been performed annually from its opening in 1965 until 2019, with the planned 2020 and 2021 productions cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In March 2014, it was officially recognized as the longest running annual musical theatre production in the world by Guinness World Records.
Anne returned to the Charlottetown Festival stage for the 2022 season, however organizers announced late in the year that the show would be produced only in alternating years from then on. The musical is planned to return in 2024, coinciding with the 150th anniversary of Montgomery's birth.
Productions and background
Background
The idea for the musical version of the book came about when the Campbells (Norman and Elaine) visited Don Harron, and he gave them the book Anne of Green Gables, suggesting that it would make a musical. The three prepared a musical version, which was broadcast in 1956 on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation as a television movie.
Mavor Moore, the founding artistic director of Charlottetown's Confederation Centre of the Arts, used a song from that Green Gables TV movie in the inaugural variety performance. Queen Elizabeth II was in the audience. A stage version was then written, with the premiere in 1965 at the Charlottetown Festival.
Productions
The musical was originally directed and choreographed by Alan Lund. It was performed every summer beginning in 1965, headlining the Charlottetown Festival at the Confederation Centre of the Arts, Prince Edward Island, making this Canada's longest-running mainstage musical. Just before its 50th season, in 2014, it was announced that this production of Anne of Green Gables: The Musical had been named by Guinness World Records as the "longest-running annual musical theatre production" in the world. Its 2500th performance was given on August 23, 2017. A song from the musical was part of the feature performance at the opening of the Confederation Centre of the Arts on October 6, 1964, playing to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II and His Royal Highness The Duke of Edinburgh as well as Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson. The production was not performed in 2020 as the Charlottetown Festival was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and was excluded from the Charlottetown Festival lineup for 2021 as public health restrictions in effect at the time made producing the show impossible. The production returned in 2022, and it was then announced that the show would be performed only in alternating years from then on.
The musical has also toured outside of Prince Edward Island. Its first tour was in 1967, visiting the major Canadian cities. In 1970 the musical represented Canada at the World's Fair in Osaka, Japan. The second national tour took place in 1974, at 34 venues; the third national tour was in 1982 with 9 stops. In 1969 it opened in London's West End and won that year's Drama Critics Award for Best New Musical of that year with Canadian Barbara Hamilton playing Marilla. It played off-Broadway in New York from December 21, 1971, to January 2, 1972, at the New York City Center. During the 1980s and 1990s the musical was produced in Japan by Gekidan Shiki.
An independent production opened on April 16, 1969, at the New Theatre, London, running for nine months and starring Polly James as Anne.
In 1991, The Charlottetown Festival toured the musical to Japan on a 2-month, 8 city tour. The tour was organized by director Walter Learning, and starred Leisa Way as "Anne", Denise Ferguson as "Marilla" and David Hughes as "Matthew".
In May 2009, Dancap Productions brought the original Charlottetown Festival production starring Amy Wallis to Toronto for a limited run at the Elgin Theatre.
In May 2013, Theatre Calgary produced a new production with new arrangements and orchestrations by Dave Pierce.
In December 2019, EK Productions staged an immersive version in Adelaide starring Issy Darwent and directed by Benjamin Maio Mackay.
Musical numbers
The musical numbers vary with the production, but this is the list as it appears on the cast recording.
Act One
Overture/Great Workers For the Cause/Where is Matthew going? – Full Company
Gee I'm Glad I'm No One Else But Me – Anne Shirley and Matthew Cuthbert
We Clearly Requested a Boy – Marilla Cuthbert, Anne Shirley and Matthew Cuthbert
The Facts – Anne Shirley, Mrs Spencer, Marilla Cuthbert and Mrs Blewett
Humble Pie – Matthew Cuthbert and Anne Shirley
Apology – Anne Shirley
Back to School – Mr Phillips and Students
Wondrin' – Gilbert Blythe
Did you Hear? – Josie Pye, Mrs Pye, Lucilla, Mrs Barry, Rachel Lynde and Marilla Cuthbert
Ice Cream – Diana Barry, Anne Shirley and Ensemble
Act Two
Summer – The Students
Kindred Spirits – Anne Shirley & Diana Barry
Open The Window – Miss Stacy and the Students
Kindred Spirits (reprise) - Diana Barry
Open The Window (reprise) - Miss Stacy
I'll Show Him – Anne Shirley and Gilbert Blythe
General Store – Lucilla, Matthew and the Townspeople
If It Hadn't Been For Me – Full Company
Anne of Green Gables – Matthew Cuthbert
The Words (reprise) – Marilla Cuthbert
Wondrin' (reprise) – Gilbert Blythe and Anne Shirley
For the showings in the year 2008 in Charlottetown, commemorating the 100th "ANNE"iversary, a portrayal of L.M. Montgomery and the students sang a reprise of "Anne of Green Gables" in the beginning, following a bit of history of how Montgomery arrived at the plot of "Anne".
School productions typically either cut out a few tracks (Humble Pie, I'll Show Him, to name a couple) or change the key to better suit some of the more inexperienced student vocalists' ranges, as well as keep the plot fast-paced.
Actors in the role of Anne
Charlottetown Festival
Jamie Ray (1965–67)
Gracie Finley (1968–74, 1984–85)
Malorie-Ann Spiller (1975–78)
Susan Cuthbert (1979–80)
Thea MacNeil (1981–83)
Tracey Moore (1986)
Leisa Way (1987–90, 1993)
Glynis Ranney (1991–92)
Tracy Michailidis (1994–96)
Samantha Winstanley (1997)
Sharmaine Ryan (1998–99)
Chilina Kennedy (2000–01)
Jennifer Toulmin (2002–05, 2010) with Lisa Messina as an alternate in 2003 and Allyson Pratt as an alternate in 2010
Amy Wallis (2006–09)
Tess Benger (2011–12)
Katie Kerr (2013–14)
Jessica Gallant (2015–16)
AJ Bridel (2017–2018)
Emma Rudy (2019), was scheduled to perform the role in 2020
Kelsey Verzotti (2022)
Film adaptation
In 2013, Canadian indie film producers The Film Farm and Side Road Media announced plans to turn the long-running musical into a feature film, written by actor and playwright Kristen Thomson. The film was cancelled, due to the Anne with an E CBC/Netflix television series.
Disambiguation
Anne of Green Gables: A New Musical, a new adaptation of the story with original songs by Matt Vinson and Matte O'Brien, premiered at Finger Lakes Music Theatre Festival in 2018 before releasing a concept recording in November 2020. A follow-up production is set for Goodspeed Opera House in 2022.
References
External links
"Anne of Green Gables: The Musical", official website
Anne of Green Gables, Confederation Centre of the Arts
"Anne of Green Gables", on Musical Theatre Audition, includes audition advice and show information
"Behind Anne of Green Gables: The Musical", The Charlottetown Festival/Confederation Centre of the Arts, 2017
Anne of Green Gables
Musicals set in Prince Edward Island
Musicals based on novels
1965 musicals
Canadian musicals
|
```xml
/* eslint-disable @typescript-eslint/no-explicit-any */
// TODO: breaking change: remove, unnecessary abstraction, just use Record directly
/**
* Extend this interface to build a type that is treated as an open set of properties, where each key is a string.
*/
export type StringIndexed = Record<string, any>;
// TODO: breaking change: no longer used! remove
/**
* @deprecated No longer works in TypeScript 4.3
*/
export type KnownKeys<_T> = never;
/**
* Type function which allows either types `T` or `U`, but not both.
*/
export type XOR<T, U> = T | U extends Record<string, unknown> ? (Without<T, U> & U) | (Without<U, T> & T) : T | U;
type Without<T, U> = { [P in Exclude<keyof T, keyof U>]?: never };
```
|
Negash Teklit (born 12 April 1966) is an Eritrean professional football player and manager.
Career
In the 1980s he played for the Ethiopia national football team.
In April 2002 he coached the Eritrea national football team at the 1st Africa Military Games (CISM) in Nairobi. Later, he worked in the staff of representation.
Since 2009 until December 2012 he was a head coach of the Eritrea national football team.
Selections U20 directed Eritrea to the end in CECAFA U-20 Championship in 2010, but lost the final of the U-20 National Teams Uganda.
References
External links
Profile at Soccerpunter.com
Living people
Ethiopian men's footballers
Ethiopia men's international footballers
Eritrean football managers
Eritrea national football team managers
1970 births
Men's association football players not categorized by position
|
Bissektipelta (meaning "Bissekty shield") is a genus of ankylosaurine thyreophoran dinosaurs that lived in Asia during the Late Cretaceous in what is now the Bissekty Formation of Uzbekistan. Bissektipelta is a monospecific genus, containing only the type species B. archibaldi.
History of discovery
In September 1998, the joint Uzbek-Russian-British-American-Project excavated the braincase of an ankylosaur. In 2002, Alexandr Averianov, based on this find, named a second species of the genus Amtosaurus: Amtosaurus archibaldi. The specific name honours James David Archibald, leading the URBAC (Uzbekistan, Russia, Britain, America, & Canada) project that performed the excavation.
The holotype, ZIN PH 1/6, and only known specimen was collected from the Bissekty Formation, dating from the late Turonian-Coniacian, of Dzharakuduk. The holotype consists of a well-preserved, fully ossified braincase with a partial skull roof, along with isolated teeth and osteoderms.
In 2004, Jolyon Parish and Paul Barrett concluded that the type species of Amtosaurus, Amtosaurus magnus, was a nomen dubium, a dubious name. This implied that no other species could be validly referred to the genus Amtosaurus. A. archibaldi should be reassigned to a new taxon. They renamed the genus as Bissektipelta with the generic name combining a reference to the geological formation with a Latin pelta (meaning small shield), which is derived from the Greek peltè (meaning shield). The type species is the original A. archibaldi but the new combination is Bissektipelta archibaldi.
Two additional specimens were referred to by Kuzmin and colleagues in 2020. These consist of ZIN PH 281/16, a smaller but well-preserved partial braincase with open sutures between some bones and ZIN PH 2329/16, another braincase similar in size to the holotype that is slightly damaged and mixed up within the sediment layer.
Description
Parish & Barrett indicated some distinguishing traits of Bissektipelta. One of these is an autapomorphy, a unique derived character. On the top skull roof grooves are present, together forming a truncated "Y" and separating three polygonal areas of flat remodelled bone tissue. These grooves reflected the position of skull osteoderms. Averianov had in 2002 proposed three traits in which A. archibaldi differed from A. magnus. Its braincase has three exits for the Nervus hypoglossus (cranial nerve XII) instead of two. It also has a more limited angle of 90° between the ventral surfaces of the basioccipital and the basisphenoid, and more caudally, to the rear, situated basipterygoid processes. In 2004, these were no longer considered unique traits but the triple exits were seen as rare.
Classification
When described in 2002, Averianov placed A. archibaldi in the Ankylosauridae. Parish & Barrett thought such precision was unwarranted and placed the newly Bissektipelta in a more general Ankylosauria. However, Victoria M. Arbour and Philip J. Currie affirmed the position within the Ankylosauridae. Based on numerous cranial traits, Kuzmin and colleagues have placed Bissektipelta within the advanced Ankylosaurinae in a basal position and confirmed its valid taxonomic status.
Paleobiology
In 2019, Alifanov and Saveliev redescribed the braincase noting that Bissektipelta had a well-developed olfaction, poor hearing and eyesight, good taste sensitivity, omnivorous diet and the unusual ability for filter-feeding. Also, the brain structure of Bissektipelta is rather primitive compared with other ankylosaur species. In 2020, Ivan Kuzmin and colleagues described and examined the braincase specimens of Bissektipelta in extensive detail. They performed a 3D reconstruction of the endocast of the brain cavity using CT scans and they revealed that a considerable part of the brain of Bissektipelta was occupied by olfactory bulbs, confirming that Bissektipelta had an extremely developed sense of smell. The numerous small vascular canals around the skull roof, the lateral wall of the brain case and cranial vessels form a complex network around the brain which allowed the redistribution of the blood flow and physiological mechanisms for heat exchange in order to cool-down the brain and maintain optimal temperatures. In addition, the length of the cochlear ducts in the inner ear suggests that Bissektipelta, and many other ankylosaurs, were adapted for low frequency-hearing within 100 Hz and 3000 Hz. The elongated cochlear ducts in the more advanced ankylosaurines seem to indicate that these traits were adapted for enhanced hearing at lower frequencies.
See also
Timeline of ankylosaur research
References
Ankylosaurids
Turonian life
Late Cretaceous dinosaurs of Asia
Fossils of Uzbekistan
Ornithischian genera
|
The 1977–78 Whitbread Round the World Race was the second edition of the around-the-world sailing event Whitbread Round the World Race. On 27 August 1977, 15 boats started out from Portsmouth for the Whitbread Round the World Race under a moderate Northerly breeze and light patchy rain. Most of the second Whitbread Race was dominated by a tight race between Swan 65 King's Legend and Flyer, the latter eventually winning the race. All 15 boats finished the race. Great Britain II was winner on elapsed time for the second race in succession. This race was notable for the fact that Clare Francis became the first woman to skipper a Whitbread entry, the Swan 65 ADC Accutrac.
Legs
Results
References
External links
[* History]
The Ocean Race
Whitbread Round The World Race, 1977-78
Whitbread Round The World Race, 1977-78
1978 in New Zealand sport
|
```java
package com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.proxy.resource;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.netty.ByteBufUtils;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.netty.commands.ByteBufReceiver;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.netty.commands.NettyClient;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.proxy.ProxyEndpoint;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.core.proxy.endpoint.DefaultProxyEndpoint;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.proxy.DefaultProxyServer;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.proxy.TestProxyConfig;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.proxy.integrate.AbstractProxyIntegrationTest;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.simpleserver.Server;
import io.netty.buffer.ByteBuf;
import io.netty.buffer.Unpooled;
import io.netty.channel.Channel;
import org.apache.commons.pool2.PooledObject;
import org.junit.After;
import org.junit.Before;
import org.junit.Ignore;
import org.junit.Test;
/**
* @author chen.zhu
* <p>
* Oct 31, 2018
*/
public class SslEnabledNettyClientFactoryTest extends AbstractProxyIntegrationTest {
private DefaultProxyServer server;
private SslEnabledNettyClientFactory factory;
@Before
public void beforeSslEnabledNettyClientFactoryTest() throws Exception {
server = startFirstProxy();
factory = new SslEnabledNettyClientFactory(new TestResourceManager());
factory.start();
}
@After
public void afterSslEnabledNettyClientFactoryTest() {
server.stop();
}
@Test
public void testMakeObject() throws Exception {
Server localServer = startEchoServer();
int tlsPort = server.getConfig().frontendTlsPort();
PooledObject<NettyClient> clientPooledObject = factory.makeObject(new DefaultProxyEndpoint(ProxyEndpoint.PROXY_SCHEME.PROXYTLS + "://127.0.0.1:" + tlsPort));
clientPooledObject.getObject().sendRequest(Unpooled.copiedBuffer(String.format("+PROXY ROUTE TCP://127.0.0.1:%d\r\nhello", localServer.getPort()).getBytes()));
sleep(1000);
}
@Test
public void testTLSHandShakeError() throws Exception {
int tlsPort = server.getConfig().frontendTlsPort();
PooledObject<NettyClient> clientPooledObject = factory.makeObject(new DefaultProxyEndpoint(ProxyEndpoint.PROXY_SCHEME.PROXYTLS + "://127.0.0.1:" + tlsPort));
clientPooledObject.getObject().sendRequest(Unpooled.copiedBuffer(("+PROXY MONITOR PingStats\r\n").getBytes()));
sleep(1000);
}
@Ignore
@Test
public void manuallyTestFWS() throws Exception {
PooledObject<NettyClient> clientPooledObject = factory.makeObject(new DefaultProxyEndpoint(ProxyEndpoint.PROXY_SCHEME.PROXYTLS + "://10.2.134.71:443"));
clientPooledObject.getObject().sendRequest(
Unpooled.copiedBuffer(("+PROXY MONITOR PingStats\r\n+PROXY MONITOR TunnelStats\r\n+PROXY MONITOR SocketStats\r\n").getBytes()),
new ByteBufReceiver() {
@Override
public RECEIVER_RESULT receive(Channel channel, ByteBuf byteBuf) {
logger.info("{}", ByteBufUtils.readToString(byteBuf));
return RECEIVER_RESULT.SUCCESS;
}
@Override
public void clientClosed(NettyClient nettyClient) {
}
@Override
public void clientClosed(NettyClient nettyClient, Throwable th) {
}
});
sleep(1000);
}
@Test
public void manuallyTestTimeoutLog() throws Exception {
PooledObject<NettyClient> clientPooledObject = factory.makeObject(new DefaultProxyEndpoint(ProxyEndpoint.PROXY_SCHEME.PROXYTLS + "://10.0.0.0:443"));
clientPooledObject.getObject().sendRequest(
Unpooled.copiedBuffer(("+PROXY MONITOR PingStats\r\n+PROXY MONITOR TunnelStats\r\n+PROXY MONITOR SocketStats\r\n").getBytes()),
new ByteBufReceiver() {
@Override
public RECEIVER_RESULT receive(Channel channel, ByteBuf byteBuf) {
logger.info("{}", ByteBufUtils.readToString(byteBuf));
return RECEIVER_RESULT.SUCCESS;
}
@Override
public void clientClosed(NettyClient nettyClient) {
}
@Override
public void clientClosed(NettyClient nettyClient, Throwable th) {
}
});
sleep(1000);
}
}
```
|
Gerardo Zamora (born 6 January 1964) is an Argentine politician who has served as Governor of Santiago del Estero since 2017, and previously from 2005 to 2013. He is a member of the centrist Radical Civic Union (UCR).
Early life and education
Born in rural Bowen, Mendoza Province, Zamora's family moved to Santiago del Estero in 1968. He later became a leader in student politics, serving as President of the UCR student chapter Franja Morada at the Catholic University of Santiago del Estero and as President of the UCR's youth wing for two terms. He became a lawyer and continued his political activities.
Political career
Elected to the Provincial Legislature in Santiago del Estero in 1991, he served in the post until 1993, and was elected Mayor of the city of Santiago del Estero in 1995. He became a provincial deputy once again in 1997 and served as President of the UCR caucus until 1999. In that year he was elected vice-mayor of Santiago del Estero and took over as Mayor in 2001 when the incumbent resigned. In 2003 he was elected Mayor of the city in his own right with 64% of the vote, serving until 2004.
Zamora has been a key UCR supporter of Peronist Presidents Néstor Kirchner and Cristina Fernández de Kirchner (a 'K' Radical, as UCR allies of Kirchnerism are known), and opposed leading UCR figures' plans to support an opposing candidate to the Kirchners in the 2007 presidential elections. He was elected governor in 2005 on the Civic Front for Santiago ticket, with the support of some Peronists and Socialists as well as most Radicals (UCR) in the province.
From 2005 until 2007, Zamora's vice-governor was Emilio Rached; Rached was elected to the Argentine Senate in 2007, and later broke ranks with the governor. Zamora was re-elected governor in 2008 with 85% of the vote. Governor Zamora sought an amendment to the provincial constitution that would enable a third consecutive term; the amendment was defeated in an October 22, 2013, Argentine Supreme Court ruling, however. His alliance with Kirchnerists had by then led to his break with the UCR, which opted to endorse former Vice Governor Emilio Rached in a Progressive, Civic and Social Front ticket for the upcoming 2013 gubernatorial elections. Zamora nominated his wife, Claudia Ledesma, as the Civic Front for Santiago candidate for governor and she defeated Rached by a 65-to-15% margin; the outgoing governor was concurrently elected to the Argentine Senate.
In 2013, his ex-vicegovernor, Emilio Rached, declared that Zamora acts like the "Mafia"
Supported by President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner in a bid to broaden her support among Radicales K, Zamora was elected Provisional President of the Argentine Senate with the support of Kirchner's majority Front for Victory caucus; he took office on 28 February 2014.
Personal life
Zamora has married twice; he has one son from his first marriage, and two sons and a daughter from his second. His current and second wife, Claudia Ledesma Abdala, has served as Governor of Santiago del Estero and as provisional president of the Senate as well.
References
|-
|-
|-
1964 births
Living people
People from Mendoza Province
Argentine people of Spanish descent
20th-century Argentine lawyers
Mayors of Santiago del Estero
Governors of Santiago del Estero Province
Members of the Argentine Senate for Santiago del Estero
Members of the Chamber of Deputies of Santiago del Estero
Radical Civic Union politicians
|
Valencia is a master-planned community located in the Santa Clarita Valley of Los Angeles County, California. It lies mostly within the city limits of Santa Clarita (see Valencia, Santa Clarita, California), although some parts extend into unincorporated Los Angeles County (see Valencia, California). Valencia is divided into several residential subdivisions, or "villages."
Villages
River Village and Villa Metro were developed by the Newhall Land and Farming Company and have "Valencia" on their entrance signs, however they are east of Valencia proper and often considered part of Saugus.
Alta Vista - single-family homes and townhomes adjacent to Valencia High School.
Arbor Park
Arroyo West
Avignon
Belcaro - Senior single-family homes.
Bridgeport - Cape Cod style single-family and apartments homes surrounding an artificial lake.
Brighton Village
Bungalows - Bungalow / cottage style single-family homes.
Central Valley
Cheyenne - Small condo style living.
Copperhill - An area with a mix of single family and apartment homes.
Cornerstone - Condo and townhome community, across Decoro Drive from Valencia High School.
Creekside - An area specially designed with the first-time home buyer in mind.
Discovery
Fairways - Duplex style homes next to the Vista Valencia Golf Course.
FivePoint Valencia
Franciscan Hill - Small condo style homes duplicating San Francisco style living.
Heritage
Lakeshore - Apartment style homes surrounding a lake. Located close to the Vista Valencia Golf Course.
Las Ventanas
Mayfair - Detached condominiums, cottage/bungalow style
Meadows
Montana
Montecito
North Park - a mix of apartment homes and single-family homes.
North Valencia
North Valley
Northbridge - a large village containing mostly cottage / bungalow style single-family homes (no apartments or condos).
Northbridge Point - A sequel to Northbridge, the two are next to each other and contain the same type of single-family homes.
Northglen
Old Orchard Condos
Old Orchard I - Valencia's first village, contains single-family homes.
Old Orchard II - A sequel to Old Orchard, contains single-family homes.
Old Orchard III - A sequel to Old Orchard, contains single-family homes. Adjacent to Placerita Junior High School and Hart High School.
Orchard Arms - Senior subsidized.
Portofino - Condo style homes.
Promenade at Town Center
Provence - Apartment homes located in the North Park village.
Riverwalk at Town Center
River Village- new development currently in construction.
Rose Arbor
Santa Fe
Sienna Villas
Skycrest - Apartments
South Valley
Stone Creek
Summit
Tempo
Tesoro del Valle
Valencia Glen - Single-family homes, located north of the Old Orchard area.
Valencia Hills
Valencia Racquet Club - townhome community next to Arroyo Seco Junior High School.
Valencia Villa - Senior subsidized.
Village Homes North
Village Walk - Condominiums, builder tagline: "Urban living in a suburban setting."
Villa Metro - New Community of 315 contemporary Mediterranean styled single-family homes and townhomes, near the Santa Clarita Metrolink station.
Vista Ridge
Westridge - Containing large, single-family homes, duplexes and a golf-course. Includes West Ranch High School and Rancho Pico Junior High School. Sometimes considered part of Stevenson Ranch.
West Creek / West Hills - large development (West Hills is gated) containing single-family homes and condominiums. West Creek includes Rio Norte Junior High School.
Woodglen - Apartment homes located near CalArts and the Vista Valencia Golf Course.
Woodlands - Gated community with a variety of home sizes and styles near Interstate 5 and Valencia Boulevard.
These are tracts. The Santa Clarita Valley is made up of several communities (Valencia, Stevenson Ranch, Saugus, Newhall, Castaic, Val Verde and Canyon Country). Each of these areas have hundreds of tracts with various floorplans.
References
Valencia
|
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<ContentPage xmlns="path_to_url"
xmlns:x="path_to_url"
x:Class="Xamarin.Forms.Controls.GalleryPages.CollectionViewGalleries.GroupingGalleries.BasicGrouping">
<ContentPage.Content>
<CollectionView x:Name="CollectionView" IsGrouped="True" Header="This is a header" Footer="Hey, a footer.">
<CollectionView.ItemTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<StackLayout>
<Label Text="{Binding Name}" Margin="5,0,0,0"/>
</StackLayout>
</DataTemplate>
</CollectionView.ItemTemplate>
<CollectionView.GroupHeaderTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<Label Text="{Binding Name}" BackgroundColor="LightGreen" FontSize="16" FontAttributes="Bold"/>
</DataTemplate>
</CollectionView.GroupHeaderTemplate>
<CollectionView.GroupFooterTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<StackLayout>
<Label Text="{Binding Count, StringFormat='{}Total members: {0:D}'}" BackgroundColor="Orange"
Margin="0,0,0,15"/>
</StackLayout>
</DataTemplate>
</CollectionView.GroupFooterTemplate>
</CollectionView>
</ContentPage.Content>
</ContentPage>
```
|
```javascript
/**
* @license
*/
import assert from 'assert/strict';
import jsdom from 'jsdom';
import {I18nFormatter} from '../../renderer/i18n-formatter.js';
import {DOM} from '../../renderer/dom.js';
import {DetailsRenderer} from '../../renderer/details-renderer.js';
import {CriticalRequestChainRenderer} from '../../renderer/crc-details-renderer.js';
import {Globals} from '../../renderer/report-globals.js';
const superLongURL =
'path_to_url
const DETAILS = {
type: 'criticalrequestchain',
chains: {
0: {
request: {
endTime: 1,
responseReceivedTime: 5,
startTime: 0,
url: 'path_to_url
transferSize: 1000,
},
children: {
1: {
request: {
endTime: 16,
responseReceivedTime: 14,
startTime: 11,
url: 'path_to_url
transferSize: 2000,
},
children: {},
},
2: {
request: {
endTime: 17.123456789,
responseReceivedTime: 15,
startTime: 12,
url: superLongURL,
transferSize: 3000,
},
children: {},
},
3: {
request: {
endTime: 18,
responseReceivedTime: 16,
startTime: 13,
url: 'about:blank',
transferSize: 4000,
},
children: {},
},
},
},
},
longestChain: {
duration: 7000,
length: 2,
transferSize: 1,
},
};
describe('DetailsRenderer', () => {
let dom;
let detailsRenderer;
before(() => {
Globals.apply({
providedStrings: {},
i18n: new I18nFormatter('en'),
reportJson: null,
});
const {document} = new jsdom.JSDOM().window;
dom = new DOM(document);
detailsRenderer = new DetailsRenderer(dom);
});
after(() => {
Globals.i18n = undefined;
});
it('renders tree structure', () => {
const el = CriticalRequestChainRenderer.render(dom, DETAILS, detailsRenderer);
const chains = el.querySelectorAll('.lh-crc-node');
// Main request
assert.equal(chains.length, 4, 'generates correct number of chain nodes');
assert.ok(!chains[0].querySelector('.lh-text__url-host'), 'should be no origin for root url');
assert.equal(chains[0].querySelector('.lh-text__url a').textContent, 'path_to_url
assert.equal(chains[0].querySelector('.lh-text__url a').href, 'path_to_url
assert.equal(chains[0].querySelector('.lh-text__url a').rel, 'noopener');
assert.equal(chains[0].querySelector('.lh-text__url a').target, '_blank');
// Children
assert.ok(chains[1].querySelector('.lh-crc-node__tree-marker .lh-vert-right'));
assert.equal(chains[1].querySelectorAll('.lh-crc-node__tree-marker .lh-right').length, 2);
assert.equal(chains[1].querySelector('.lh-text__url a').textContent, '/b.js');
assert.equal(chains[1].querySelector('.lh-text__url a').href, 'path_to_url
assert.equal(chains[1].querySelector('.lh-text__url a').rel, 'noopener');
assert.equal(chains[1].querySelector('.lh-text__url a').target, '_blank');
assert.equal(chains[1].querySelector('.lh-text__url-host').textContent, '(example.com)');
const durationNodes = chains[1].querySelectorAll('.lh-crc-node__chain-duration');
assert.equal(durationNodes[0].textContent, ' - 5,000\xa0ms, ');
// Note: actual transferSize is 2000 bytes but formatter formats to KiBs.
assert.equal(durationNodes[1].textContent, '1.95\xa0KiB');
});
});
```
|
Keshav Sen (born 21 September 1923) is an Indian former sports shooter. He competed in the trap event at the 1960 Summer Olympics.
References
External links
1923 births
Possibly living people
Indian male sport shooters
Olympic shooters for India
Shooters at the 1960 Summer Olympics
People from Ratlam district
|
```smalltalk
using System;
using System.Linq;
using Xamarin.Forms.Internals;
namespace Xamarin.Forms.Controls.GalleryPages.PerformanceGallery.Scenarios
{
[Preserve(AllMembers = true)]
internal class ActivityIndicatorScenario1 : PerformanceScenario
{
public ActivityIndicatorScenario1()
: base("[ActivityIndicator] Running")
{
View = new ActivityIndicator { IsRunning = true };
}
}
}
```
|
```smalltalk
/* ====================================================================
contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
this work for Additional information regarding copyright ownership.
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.
==================================================================== */
namespace NPOI.HSSF.UserModel
{
using System;
/**
* This class makes an <c>EvaluationCycleDetector</c> instance available to
* each thRead via a <c>ThReadLocal</c> in order to avoid Adding a parameter
* to a few protected methods within <c>HSSFFormulaEvaluator</c>.
*
* @author Josh Micich
*/
class EvaluationCycleDetectorManager
{
[ThreadStatic]
static EvaluationCycleDetector ecd = new EvaluationCycleDetector();
/**
* @return
*/
public static EvaluationCycleDetector GetTracker()
{
return ecd;
}
private EvaluationCycleDetectorManager()
{
// no instances of this class
}
}
}
```
|
```javascript
Texture2D<float4> uTex : register(t1);
SamplerState uSampler : register(s0);
static float4 FragColor;
static float2 vUV;
struct SPIRV_Cross_Input
{
float2 vUV : TEXCOORD0;
};
struct SPIRV_Cross_Output
{
float4 FragColor : SV_Target0;
};
void frag_main()
{
FragColor = uTex.Sample(uSampler, vUV);
FragColor += uTex.Sample(uSampler, vUV, int2(1, 1));
}
SPIRV_Cross_Output main(SPIRV_Cross_Input stage_input)
{
vUV = stage_input.vUV;
frag_main();
SPIRV_Cross_Output stage_output;
stage_output.FragColor = FragColor;
return stage_output;
}
```
|
A collimator is a device which narrows a beam of particles or waves. To narrow can mean either to cause the directions of motion to become more aligned in a specific direction (i.e., make collimated light or parallel rays), or to cause the spatial cross section of the beam to become smaller (beam limiting device).
History
The English physicist Henry Kater was the inventor of the floating collimator, which rendered a great service to practical astronomy. He reported about his invention in January 1825. In his report, Kater mentioned previous work in this area by Carl Friedrich Gauss and Friedrich Bessel.
Optical collimators
In optics, a collimator may consist of a curved mirror or lens with some type of light source and/or an image at its focus. This can be used to replicate a target focused at infinity with little or no parallax.
In lighting, collimators are typically designed using the principles of nonimaging optics.
Optical collimators can be used to calibrate other optical devices, to check if all elements are aligned on the optical axis, to set elements at proper focus, or to align two or more devices such as binoculars or gun barrels and gunsights. A surveying camera may be collimated by setting its fiduciary markers so that they define the principal point, as in photogrammetry.
Optical collimators are also used as gun sights in the collimator sight, which is a simple optical collimator with a cross hair or some other reticle at its focus. The viewer only sees an image of the reticle. They have to use it either with both eyes open and one eye looking into the collimator sight, with one eye open and moving the head to alternately see the sight and the target, or with one eye to partially see the sight and target at the same time. Adding a beam splitter allows the viewer to see the reticle and the field of view, making a reflector sight.
Collimators may be used with laser diodes and CO2 cutting lasers. Proper collimation of a laser source with long enough coherence length can be verified with a shearing interferometer.
X-ray, gamma ray, and neutron collimators
In X-ray optics, gamma ray optics, and neutron optics, a collimator is a device that filters a stream of rays so that only those traveling parallel to a specified direction are allowed through. Collimators are used for X-ray, gamma-ray, and neutron imaging because it is difficult to focus these types of radiation into an image using lenses, as is routine with electromagnetic radiation at optical or near-optical wavelengths. Collimators are also used in radiation detectors in nuclear power stations to make them directionally sensitive.
Applications
The figure to the right illustrates how a Söller collimator is used in neutron and X-ray machines. The upper panel shows a situation where a collimator is not used, while the lower panel introduces a collimator. In both panels the source of radiation is to the right, and the image is recorded on the gray plate at the left of the panels.
Without a collimator, rays from all directions will be recorded; for example, a ray that has passed through the top of the specimen (to the right of the diagram) but happens to be travelling in a downwards direction may be recorded at the bottom of the plate. The resultant image will be so blurred and indistinct as to be useless.
In the lower panel of the figure, a collimator has been added (blue bars). This may be a sheet of lead or other material opaque to the incoming radiation with many tiny holes bored through it or in the case of neutrons it can be a sandwich arrangement (which can be up to several feet long - see ENGIN-X) with many layers alternating between neutron absorbing material (e.g. gadolinium) with neutron transmitting material. This can be something simple e.g. air. or if mechanical strength is needed then aluminium may be used. If this forms part of a rotating assembly, the sandwich may be curved. This allows energy selection in addition to collimation - the curvature of the collimator and its rotation will present a straight path only to one energy of neutrons. Only rays that are travelling nearly parallel to the holes will pass through them—any others will be absorbed by hitting the plate surface or the side of a hole. This ensures that rays are recorded in their proper place on the plate, producing a clear image.
For industrial radiography using gamma radiation sources such as iridium-192 or cobalt-60, a collimator (beam limiting device) allows the radiographer to control the exposure of radiation to expose a film and create a radiograph, to inspect materials for defects. A collimator in this instance is most commonly made of tungsten, and is rated according to how many half value layers it contains, i.e., how many times it reduces undesirable radiation by half. For instance, the thinnest walls on the sides of a 4 HVL tungsten collimator thick will reduce the intensity of radiation passing through them by 88.5%. The shape of these collimators allows emitted radiation to travel freely toward the specimen and the x-ray film, while blocking most of the radiation that is emitted in undesirable directions such as toward workers.
Limitations
Although collimators improve resolution, they also reduce intensity by blocking incoming radiation, which is undesirable for remote sensing instruments that require high sensitivity. For this reason, the gamma ray spectrometer on the Mars Odyssey is a non-collimated instrument. Most lead collimators let less than 1% of incident photons through. Attempts have been made to replace collimators with electronic analysis.
In radiation therapy
Collimators (beam limiting devices) are used in linear accelerators used for radiotherapy treatments. They help to shape the beam of radiation emerging from the machine and can limit the maximum field size of a beam.
The treatment head of a linear accelerator consists of both a primary and secondary collimator. The primary collimator is positioned after the electron beam has reached a vertical orientation. When using photons, it is placed after the beam has passed through the X-ray target. The secondary collimator is positioned after either a flattening filter (for photon therapy) or a scattering foil (for electron therapy). The secondary collimator consists of two jaws which can be moved to either enlarge or minimize the size of the treatment field.
New systems involving multileaf collimators (MLCs) are used to further shape a beam to localise treatment fields in radiotherapy. MLCs consist of approximately 50–120 leaves of heavy, metal collimator plates which slide into place to form the desired field shape.
Computing the spatial resolution
To find the spatial resolution of a parallel hole collimator with a hole length, , a hole diameter and a distance to the imaged object , the following formula can be used
where the effective length is defined as
Where is the linear attenuation coefficient of the material from which the collimator is made.
See also
Autocollimation
Autocollimator
Collimated light
Hohlraum
Nonimaging optics
Snoot in lighting
References
Accelerator physics
Neutron instrumentation
Optical devices
Radiology
Synchrotron instrumentation
X-ray instrumentation
|
```php
<?php
/*
*
*
* path_to_url
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
*/
namespace Google\Service\SecurityCommandCenter;
class BatchCreateResourceValueConfigsRequest extends \Google\Collection
{
protected $collection_key = 'requests';
protected $requestsType = CreateResourceValueConfigRequest::class;
protected $requestsDataType = 'array';
/**
* @param CreateResourceValueConfigRequest[]
*/
public function setRequests($requests)
{
$this->requests = $requests;
}
/**
* @return CreateResourceValueConfigRequest[]
*/
public function getRequests()
{
return $this->requests;
}
}
// Adding a class alias for backwards compatibility with the previous class name.
class_alias(BatchCreateResourceValueConfigsRequest::class, your_sha256_hashfigsRequest');
```
|
The 2021 O'Reilly Auto Parts 253 was a NASCAR Cup Series race that was held on February 21, 2021 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida.
Added as a replacement for the cancelled Auto Club 400 because of California restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2021 race was scheduled for 70 laps on the road course, it was the second race of the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season. The race is lengthened from the 2020 schedule, where it was run at 65 laps of the course for 235 miles. It was a race in 2021, similar to the Charlotte and Road America road course races.
Chicane issues
During the Busch Clash, track visibility issues came after a safety car situation was called on Lap 9 of the first segment of 15 laps with excessive mud and dirt at the exit of the bus stop on the backstretch. The mud and dirt led to Kevin Harvick spinning early in the race, visibility issues, and later in the race, leader Martin Truex Jr. caused a safety car by crashing at the exit after overdriving the chicane and losing traction from the mud that had accumulated during the race.
A social media post by Denny Hamlin confirmed on February 16 that additional work was being done in the bus stop kerbing, with officials planning to add "sausage kerbing" (also known as "turtles") to the chicane as used in the front stretch chicane in the bus stop to prevent drivers from short-cutting the chicane and throwing mud on the circuit. The right rumble strip is long while the left is long.
Entry list
(R) denotes rookie driver.
(i) denotes driver who are ineligible for series driver points.
Starting Lineup
Chase Elliott was awarded the pole for the race. This is the first of 28 scheduled one-day races using the competition-based formula from the 2020 season that began with last year's road course race based on owner point standings (35%) and from the previous round, the car's fastest lap (15%) and finishing position (driver's for 25% and owner's for 25%; 41st position is used in the average if the driver or owner did not participate in the previous race).
Race
The seventy lap race was won by Joe Gibbs Racing driver Christopher Bell in a Toyota. A safety car period was called for rain which bunched the pack up, but the leaders changed onto dry tires rather than rain tires. Another caution period was called because Tyler Reddick's car caught fire. Bell claimed the lead when he overtook Joey Logano on the penultimate lap. It was Bell's first Cup Series victory. It was the first time since the 1950 NASCAR Grand National Series that a year's opening brace of races had maiden winners. Bell's teammate Hamlin finished in third behind Logano. Polesitter Elliott led most of the race but span after a collision with Kurt Busch and came 21st. Busch finished fourth ahead of Brad Keselowski. Both drivers gained positions by not making additional pit stops. Before this, Busch had fallen down the order after he span while leading, while Keselowski had also made mistakes. Harvick followed Keselowski, while A. J. Allmendinger took Kaulig Racing's best Cup Series result in seventh. Michael McDowell, who had won the 2021 Daytona 500 a week prior, recovered from a lap one puncture to finish eighth. Kyle Larson and Kyle Busch were both in the top five in the final twenty laps, but Larson spun into a tire barrier coming out of turn 7 and finished 30th, while Busch's team made a strategic error and was involved in a minor crash with Chris Buescher, finishing 35th.
Bell said he was "not overly shocked", but felt that "to win the first road course of the year is quite surprising". He also said that he "certainly knew we would be in contention or at least competitive today." He expressed the view that road racing "showcases talent".
The caution flag flown for rain during the last stage of the race was criticized as an "entertainment" caution, due to the surface being not being considered too wet to continue racing, as well as also altering the finish of the race preventing Elliott (who, alongside Kyle Busch, questioned the caution over the radio on NASCAR Race Hubs Radioactive segment, the show's team radio chatter highlights) from walking away easily with a win. The race had been declared a dry race at the start. Had the start been declared a wet race (teams must start on rain tires), NASCAR would not call a safety car situation if it dries, and rains again. NASCAR changed rules in 2022 where, if a race was declared a dry race to start, a safety car is no longer automatically implemented when rain becomes an issue to prevent this situation.
Stage ResultsStage OneLaps: 16Stage TwoLaps: 18
Final Stage ResultsStage Three'''Laps:'' 36
Race statistics
Lead changes: 12 among 7 different drivers
Cautions/Laps: 8 for 12
Red flags: 0
Time of race: 2 hours, 59 minutes and 32 seconds
Average speed:
Media
Television
Fox Sports televised the race in the United States on Fox. Mike Joy, six-time Daytona winner Jeff Gordon and Clint Bowyer called the race from the broadcast booth. Jamie Little and Regan Smith handled pit road for the television side. Larry McReynolds provided insight from the Fox Sports studio in Charlotte.
Radio
MRN had the radio call for the race, which was also simulcast on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio.
Standings after the race
Drivers' Championship standings
Manufacturers' Championship standings
Note: Only the first 16 positions are included for the driver standings.
References
NASCAR races at Daytona International Speedway
O'Reilly Auto Parts 253
O'Reilly Auto Parts 253
O'Reilly Auto Parts 253
|
Pierre-Georges Arlabosse (; 8 July 1891 – 8 February 1950) was a French politician, born in Pamiers.
He became acting President of Lebanon for 5 days, from 4 to 9 April 1941 for the interim period in transfer of presidency from Émile Eddé, the third president of the Lebanese republic under the French Mandate 1936 to 1941 and president Alfred Naqqache (French transliteration Alfred Georges Naccache), the fourth president for 1941 to 1943.
See also
List of presidents of Lebanon
References
1891 births
1950 deaths
Arlabosse, Pierre-Georges
Lebanon under French rule
French expatriates in Lebanon
|
```xml
/*
* Wire
*
* This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program 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, see path_to_url
*
*/
import {amplify} from 'amplify';
import ko from 'knockout';
import {container} from 'tsyringe';
import {Runtime} from '@wireapp/commons';
import {WebAppEvents} from '@wireapp/webapp-events';
import {PrimaryModal, usePrimaryModalState} from 'Components/Modals/PrimaryModal';
import {iterateItem} from 'Util/ArrayUtil';
import {isEscapeKey} from 'Util/KeyboardUtil';
import {t} from 'Util/LocalizerUtil';
import type {ActionsViewModel} from './ActionsViewModel';
import {CallingViewModel} from './CallingViewModel';
import {ContentViewModel} from './ContentViewModel';
import type {MainViewModel, ViewModelRepositories} from './MainViewModel';
import type {CallingRepository} from '../calling/CallingRepository';
import type {ConversationRepository} from '../conversation/ConversationRepository';
import {ConversationState} from '../conversation/ConversationState';
import type {Conversation} from '../entity/Conversation';
import type {User} from '../entity/User';
import {SidebarTabs, useSidebarStore} from '../page/LeftSidebar/panels/Conversations/useSidebarStore';
import {PanelState} from '../page/RightSidebar';
import {useAppMainState} from '../page/state';
import {ContentState, ListState, useAppState} from '../page/useAppState';
import {PropertiesRepository} from '../properties/PropertiesRepository';
import {SearchRepository} from '../search/SearchRepository';
import type {TeamRepository} from '../team/TeamRepository';
import {TeamState} from '../team/TeamState';
import {showContextMenu} from '../ui/ContextMenu';
import {showLabelContextMenu} from '../ui/LabelContextMenu';
import {Shortcut} from '../ui/Shortcut';
import {ShortcutType} from '../ui/ShortcutType';
import {UserState} from '../user/UserState';
export class ListViewModel {
private readonly userState: UserState;
private readonly teamState: TeamState;
private readonly conversationState: ConversationState;
readonly isActivatedAccount: ko.PureComputed<boolean>;
readonly lastUpdate: ko.Observable<number>;
readonly repositories: ViewModelRepositories;
public readonly mainViewModel: MainViewModel;
public readonly conversationRepository: ConversationRepository;
public readonly propertiesRepository: PropertiesRepository;
private readonly callingRepository: CallingRepository;
public readonly teamRepository: TeamRepository;
public readonly searchRepository: SearchRepository;
private readonly actionsViewModel: ActionsViewModel;
public readonly contentViewModel: ContentViewModel;
public readonly callingViewModel: CallingViewModel;
private readonly isProAccount: ko.PureComputed<boolean>;
public readonly selfUser: ko.Subscribable<User>;
private readonly visibleListItems: ko.PureComputed<(string | Conversation)[]>;
get isFederated() {
return this.mainViewModel.isFederated;
}
constructor(mainViewModel: MainViewModel, repositories: ViewModelRepositories) {
this.userState = container.resolve(UserState);
this.teamState = container.resolve(TeamState);
this.conversationState = container.resolve(ConversationState);
this.mainViewModel = mainViewModel;
this.repositories = repositories;
this.conversationRepository = repositories.conversation;
this.callingRepository = repositories.calling;
this.teamRepository = repositories.team;
this.propertiesRepository = repositories.properties;
this.searchRepository = repositories.search;
this.actionsViewModel = mainViewModel.actions;
this.contentViewModel = mainViewModel.content;
this.callingViewModel = mainViewModel.calling;
this.isProAccount = this.teamState.isTeam;
this.selfUser = this.userState.self;
this.isActivatedAccount = ko.pureComputed(() => this.selfUser()?.isActivatedAccount());
// State
this.lastUpdate = ko.observable();
this.visibleListItems = ko.pureComputed(() => {
const {listState} = useAppState.getState();
const isStatePreferences = listState === ListState.PREFERENCES;
if (isStatePreferences) {
const preferenceItems = [
ContentState.PREFERENCES_ACCOUNT,
ContentState.PREFERENCES_DEVICES,
ContentState.PREFERENCES_OPTIONS,
ContentState.PREFERENCES_AV,
];
if (!Runtime.isDesktopApp()) {
preferenceItems.push(ContentState.PREFERENCES_ABOUT);
}
return preferenceItems;
}
const hasConnectRequests = !!this.userState.connectRequests().length;
const states: (string | Conversation)[] = hasConnectRequests ? [ContentState.CONNECTION_REQUESTS] : [];
return states.concat(this.conversationState.visibleConversations());
});
this._initSubscriptions();
}
private readonly _initSubscriptions = () => {
amplify.subscribe(WebAppEvents.CONVERSATION.SHOW, (conversation?: Conversation) => {
this.openConversations(conversation?.archivedState());
});
amplify.subscribe(WebAppEvents.PREFERENCES.MANAGE_ACCOUNT, this.openPreferencesAccount);
amplify.subscribe(WebAppEvents.PREFERENCES.MANAGE_DEVICES, this.openPreferencesDevices);
amplify.subscribe(WebAppEvents.PREFERENCES.SHOW_AV, this.openPreferencesAudioVideo);
amplify.subscribe(WebAppEvents.SEARCH.SHOW, this.openStartUI);
amplify.subscribe(WebAppEvents.SHORTCUT.NEXT, this.goToNext);
amplify.subscribe(WebAppEvents.SHORTCUT.PREV, this.goToPrevious);
amplify.subscribe(WebAppEvents.SHORTCUT.ARCHIVE, this.clickToArchive);
amplify.subscribe(WebAppEvents.SHORTCUT.DELETE, this.clickToClear);
amplify.subscribe(WebAppEvents.SHORTCUT.NOTIFICATIONS, this.changeNotificationSetting);
amplify.subscribe(WebAppEvents.SHORTCUT.SILENCE, this.changeNotificationSetting); // todo: deprecated - remove when user base of wrappers version >= 3.4 is large enough
};
readonly answerCall = (conversationEntity: Conversation): void => {
const call = this.callingRepository.findCall(conversationEntity.qualifiedId);
if (!call) {
return;
}
if (call.isConference && !this.callingRepository.supportsConferenceCalling) {
PrimaryModal.show(PrimaryModal.type.ACKNOWLEDGE, {
text: {
message: `${t('modalConferenceCallNotSupportedMessage')} ${t('modalConferenceCallNotSupportedJoinMessage')}`,
title: t('modalConferenceCallNotSupportedHeadline'),
},
});
} else {
this.callingViewModel.callActions.answer(call);
}
};
readonly changeNotificationSetting = () => {
if (this.isProAccount()) {
const {rightSidebar} = useAppMainState.getState();
rightSidebar.goTo(PanelState.NOTIFICATIONS, {entity: this.conversationState.activeConversation()});
} else {
this.clickToToggleMute();
}
};
readonly goToNext = () => {
this.iterateActiveItem(true);
};
readonly goToPrevious = () => {
this.iterateActiveItem(false);
};
onKeyDownListView = (keyboardEvent: KeyboardEvent) => {
const {currentModalId} = usePrimaryModalState.getState();
// don't switch view for primary modal(ex: preferences->set status->modal opened)
// when user press escape, only close the modal and stay within the preference screen
if (isEscapeKey(keyboardEvent) && currentModalId === null) {
const newState = this.isActivatedAccount() ? ListState.CONVERSATIONS : ListState.TEMPORARY_GUEST;
this.switchList(newState);
}
};
private readonly iterateActiveItem = (reverse = false) => {
const {listState} = useAppState.getState();
const isStatePreferences = listState === ListState.PREFERENCES;
return isStatePreferences ? this.iterateActivePreference(reverse) : this.iterateActiveConversation(reverse);
};
private readonly iterateActiveConversation = (reverse: boolean) => {
const {contentState} = useAppState.getState();
const isStateRequests = contentState === ContentState.CONNECTION_REQUESTS;
const activeConversationItem = isStateRequests
? ContentState.CONNECTION_REQUESTS
: this.conversationState.activeConversation();
const nextItem = iterateItem(this.visibleListItems(), activeConversationItem, reverse);
const isConnectionRequestItem = nextItem === ContentState.CONNECTION_REQUESTS;
if (isConnectionRequestItem) {
return this.contentViewModel.switchContent(ContentState.CONNECTION_REQUESTS);
}
if (nextItem) {
amplify.publish(WebAppEvents.CONVERSATION.SHOW, nextItem, {});
}
};
private readonly iterateActivePreference = (reverse: boolean) => {
const {contentState} = useAppState.getState();
let activePreference = contentState;
const isDeviceDetails = activePreference === ContentState.PREFERENCES_DEVICE_DETAILS;
if (isDeviceDetails) {
activePreference = ContentState.PREFERENCES_DEVICES;
}
const nextPreference = iterateItem(this.visibleListItems(), activePreference, reverse) as ContentState;
if (nextPreference) {
this.contentViewModel.switchContent(nextPreference);
}
};
openPreferencesAccount = async (): Promise<void> => {
await this.teamRepository.getTeam();
const {setCurrentTab} = useSidebarStore.getState();
setCurrentTab(SidebarTabs.PREFERENCES);
this.switchList(ListState.PREFERENCES);
this.contentViewModel.switchContent(ContentState.PREFERENCES_ACCOUNT);
};
readonly openPreferencesDevices = (): void => {
this.switchList(ListState.PREFERENCES);
return this.contentViewModel.switchContent(ContentState.PREFERENCES_DEVICES);
};
readonly openPreferencesAbout = (): void => {
this.switchList(ListState.PREFERENCES);
return this.contentViewModel.switchContent(ContentState.PREFERENCES_ABOUT);
};
readonly openPreferencesAudioVideo = (): void => {
this.switchList(ListState.PREFERENCES);
return this.contentViewModel.switchContent(ContentState.PREFERENCES_AV);
};
readonly openPreferencesOptions = (): void => {
this.switchList(ListState.PREFERENCES);
return this.contentViewModel.switchContent(ContentState.PREFERENCES_OPTIONS);
};
readonly openStartUI = (): void => {
this.switchList(ListState.START_UI);
};
readonly switchList = (newListState: ListState, loadPreviousContent = true): void => {
const {listState} = useAppState.getState();
const isStateChange = listState !== newListState;
if (isStateChange) {
this.hideList();
this.updateList(newListState, loadPreviousContent);
this.showList(newListState);
}
};
readonly openConversations = (archive = false): void => {
const {currentTab, setCurrentTab} = useSidebarStore.getState();
const newState = this.isActivatedAccount()
? archive
? ListState.ARCHIVE
: ListState.CONVERSATIONS
: ListState.TEMPORARY_GUEST;
this.switchList(newState, false);
setCurrentTab(archive ? SidebarTabs.ARCHIVES : currentTab);
};
private readonly hideList = (): void => {
document.removeEventListener('keydown', this.onKeyDownListView);
};
private readonly showList = (newListState: ListState): void => {
const {setListState} = useAppState.getState();
setListState(newListState);
this.lastUpdate(Date.now());
document.addEventListener('keydown', this.onKeyDownListView);
};
private readonly updateList = (newListState: ListState, loadPreviousContent: boolean): void => {
switch (newListState) {
case ListState.PREFERENCES:
this.contentViewModel.switchContent(ContentState.PREFERENCES_ACCOUNT);
break;
case ListState.TEMPORARY_GUEST:
case ListState.CONVERSATIONS:
if (loadPreviousContent) {
this.contentViewModel.loadPreviousContent();
}
}
};
readonly showTemporaryGuest = (): void => {
this.switchList(ListState.TEMPORARY_GUEST);
const conversationEntity = this.conversationState.getMostRecentConversation();
amplify.publish(WebAppEvents.CONVERSATION.SHOW, conversationEntity, {});
};
readonly onContextMenu = (
conversationEntity: Conversation,
event: MouseEvent | React.MouseEvent<Element, MouseEvent>,
): void => {
const entries = [];
if (conversationEntity.isMutable()) {
const notificationsShortcut = Shortcut.getShortcutTooltip(ShortcutType.NOTIFICATIONS);
if (this.isProAccount()) {
entries.push({
click: () => this.clickToOpenNotificationSettings(conversationEntity),
label: t('conversationsPopoverNotificationSettings'),
title: t('tooltipConversationsNotifications', notificationsShortcut),
});
} else {
const label = conversationEntity.showNotificationsNothing()
? t('conversationsPopoverNotify')
: t('conversationsPopoverSilence');
const title = conversationEntity.showNotificationsNothing()
? t('tooltipConversationsNotify', notificationsShortcut)
: t('tooltipConversationsSilence', notificationsShortcut);
entries.push({
click: () => this.clickToToggleMute(conversationEntity),
label,
title,
});
}
}
if (!conversationEntity.is_archived()) {
const {conversationLabelRepository} = this.conversationRepository;
if (!conversationLabelRepository.isFavorite(conversationEntity)) {
entries.push({
click: () => {
conversationLabelRepository.addConversationToFavorites(conversationEntity);
},
label: t('conversationPopoverFavorite'),
});
} else {
entries.push({
click: () => conversationLabelRepository.removeConversationFromFavorites(conversationEntity),
label: t('conversationPopoverUnfavorite'),
});
}
const customLabel = conversationLabelRepository.getConversationCustomLabel(conversationEntity);
if (customLabel) {
entries.push({
click: () => conversationLabelRepository.removeConversationFromLabel(customLabel, conversationEntity),
label: t('conversationsPopoverRemoveFrom', customLabel.name, {}, true),
});
}
entries.push({
click: () => showLabelContextMenu(event, conversationEntity, conversationLabelRepository),
label: t('conversationsPopoverMoveTo'),
});
}
if (conversationEntity.is_archived()) {
entries.push({
click: () => this.clickToUnarchive(conversationEntity),
label: t('conversationsPopoverUnarchive'),
});
} else {
const shortcut = Shortcut.getShortcutTooltip(ShortcutType.ARCHIVE);
entries.push({
click: () => this.clickToArchive(conversationEntity),
label: t('conversationsPopoverArchive'),
title: t('tooltipConversationsArchive', shortcut),
});
}
if (conversationEntity.isRequest()) {
entries.push({
click: () => this.clickToCancelRequest(conversationEntity),
label: t('conversationsPopoverCancel'),
});
}
if (conversationEntity.isClearable()) {
entries.push({
click: () => this.clickToClear(conversationEntity),
label: t('conversationsPopoverClear'),
});
}
if (!conversationEntity.isGroup()) {
const userEntity = conversationEntity.firstUserEntity();
const canBlock = userEntity && (userEntity.isConnected() || userEntity.isRequest());
const canUnblock = userEntity && userEntity.isBlocked();
if (canBlock) {
entries.push({
click: () => this.clickToBlock(conversationEntity),
label: t('conversationsPopoverBlock'),
});
} else if (canUnblock) {
entries.push({
click: () => this.clickToUnblock(conversationEntity),
label: t('conversationsPopoverUnblock'),
});
}
}
if (conversationEntity.isLeavable()) {
entries.push({
click: () => this.clickToLeave(conversationEntity),
label: t('conversationsPopoverLeave'),
});
}
showContextMenu(event, entries, 'conversation-list-options-menu');
};
readonly clickToArchive = (conversationEntity = this.conversationState.activeConversation()): void => {
if (this.isActivatedAccount()) {
this.actionsViewModel.archiveConversation(conversationEntity);
}
};
clickToBlock = async (conversationEntity: Conversation): Promise<void> => {
const userEntity = conversationEntity.firstUserEntity();
if (!userEntity) {
return;
}
await this.actionsViewModel.blockUser(userEntity);
};
clickToUnblock = async (conversationEntity: Conversation): Promise<void> => {
const userEntity = conversationEntity.firstUserEntity();
if (!userEntity) {
return;
}
await this.actionsViewModel.unblockUser(userEntity);
};
readonly clickToCancelRequest = (conversationEntity: Conversation): void => {
const userEntity = conversationEntity.firstUserEntity();
const hideConversation = this.shouldHideConversation(conversationEntity);
const nextConversationEntity = this.conversationRepository.getNextConversation(conversationEntity);
this.actionsViewModel.cancelConnectionRequest(userEntity, hideConversation, nextConversationEntity);
};
readonly clickToClear = (conversationEntity = this.conversationState.activeConversation()): void => {
this.actionsViewModel.clearConversation(conversationEntity);
};
readonly clickToLeave = (conversationEntity: Conversation): void => {
this.actionsViewModel.leaveConversation(conversationEntity);
};
readonly clickToToggleMute = (conversationEntity = this.conversationState.activeConversation()): void => {
this.actionsViewModel.toggleMuteConversation(conversationEntity);
};
readonly clickToOpenNotificationSettings = (
conversationEntity = this.conversationState.activeConversation(),
): void => {
amplify.publish(WebAppEvents.CONVERSATION.SHOW, conversationEntity, {openNotificationSettings: true});
};
readonly clickToUnarchive = (conversationEntity: Conversation): void => {
this.conversationRepository.unarchiveConversation(conversationEntity, true, 'manual un-archive').then(() => {
if (!this.conversationState.archivedConversations().length) {
this.switchList(ListState.CONVERSATIONS);
}
});
};
private readonly shouldHideConversation = (conversationEntity: Conversation): boolean => {
const {listState} = useAppState.getState();
const isStateConversations = listState === ListState.CONVERSATIONS;
const isActiveConversation = this.conversationState.isActiveConversation(conversationEntity);
return isStateConversations && isActiveConversation;
};
}
```
|
Purified in Blood (PiB) is a Norwegian metal band from Hommersåk, near Sandnes. They started up in the winter of 2003, and dissolved in January 2007 though on April 25, 2008 they announced that they now are back. They play metal with roots in hardcore.
History
In the summer of 2004 they released the EP Last Leaves of a Poisoned Tree on the American underground-label New Eden Records. Later that year they won the Zoom-awards together with Rumble in Rhodos and Vishnu. As a result of this the band got to play during by:Larm and Øya Festival in 2005, and also tour around the country. They also toured several times in United States and Europe with bands like Undying, Heaven Shall Burn and God Forbid.
In the spring of 2005 the signed for the German recordlabel Alveran Records, who released their full length Reaper of Souls, in 2006.
The album also got released on Abacus Records in the US.
January 21, 2006 the band won the Alarm Award 2006 for Best Live Band, competing with huge Norwegian bands such as Madrugada, Kaizers Orchestra and Turbonegro.
The band dissolved in January 2007. There was reportedly many reasons for the breakup, but one of them, and maybe the most significant one, is that several of the members had decided no longer to follow the Straight Edge lifestyle, which had been an important theme in the band's material. The band announced the break-up with this blog on their MySpace-site:
We want to thank each and everyone of you who supported us and helped us along the way.
-Glenn, Hallgeir, Sander, Tommy, Stig & Anders
"Good things never last"
April 25, 2008 the Purified in Blood-members announced that they were gathered again to play together, this time stronger, harder and better than ever.
The same way that the dissolvation was advertised, they gave notice of their reunion on MySpace:
Purified in Blood Reunion
To all our friends out there; we are back and we are stronger than ever!
This summer we will appear at the Norwegian Hove festival and at a show with the mighty Madball in Oslo. Stay tuned for news throughout the summer.
HORNS!
- Glenn, Hallgeir, Sander, Tommy, Stig & Anders
PURIFIED IN BLOOD
In 2010, they released an album entitled "Under Black Skies" on Universal Recordings and have played many shows, supporting bands such as Slayer, Enslaved, Darkest Hour, Protest the Hero and Born of Osiris
In 2011 the second singer Glenn Reaper left the band.
In 2012 Purified in Blood signed with the Norwegian metal label Indie Recordings and released their highly acclaimed 3rd album "Flight Of A Dying Sun"
Sideprojects
Anders Mosness used to play guitar in Kvelertak, now he is playing in the drone/doom/experimental band "Solens Barn". Glenn Reaper now plays in the doom/stoner band Helldiver.
Band members
Glenn Reaper (vocals) 2003-2011
Hallgeir Skretting Enoksen (vocals)
Sander Sagblad Loen (lead guitar)
Tommy Svela (rhythm guitar)
Stig Skog Andersen (bass)
Anders Mosness (drums)
Discography
Albums
2006: Reaper of Souls
2010: Under Black Skies
2012: Flight Of A Dying Sun
EP's
2004: Last Leaves of a Poisoned Tree
External links
www.facebook.com/purifiedinblood
Purified in Blood MySpace
Norwegian metalcore musical groups
Musical groups established in 2003
2003 establishments in Norway
Musical groups disestablished in 2007
2007 disestablishments in Norway
Musical groups reestablished in 2008
Musical groups from Rogaland
Straight edge groups
Abacus Recordings artists
|
```c
/**
* @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.
*/
#include "stdlib/math/base/special/csignum.h"
#include "stdlib/complex/float64/ctor.h"
#include "stdlib/complex/float64/reim.h"
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#define NAME "csignum"
#define ITERATIONS 1000000
#define REPEATS 3
/**
* Prints the TAP version.
*/
static void print_version( void ) {
printf( "TAP version 13\n" );
}
/**
* Prints the TAP summary.
*
* @param total total number of tests
* @param passing total number of passing tests
*/
static void print_summary( int total, int passing ) {
printf( "#\n" );
printf( "1..%d\n", total ); // TAP plan
printf( "# total %d\n", total );
printf( "# pass %d\n", passing );
printf( "#\n" );
printf( "# ok\n" );
}
/**
* Prints benchmarks results.
*
* @param elapsed elapsed time in seconds
*/
static void print_results( double elapsed ) {
double rate = (double)ITERATIONS / elapsed;
printf( " ---\n" );
printf( " iterations: %d\n", ITERATIONS );
printf( " elapsed: %0.9f\n", elapsed );
printf( " rate: %0.9f\n", rate );
printf( " ...\n" );
}
/**
* Returns a clock time.
*
* @return clock time
*/
static double tic( void ) {
struct timeval now;
gettimeofday( &now, NULL );
return (double)now.tv_sec + (double)now.tv_usec/1.0e6;
}
/**
* Generates a random number on the interval [0,1).
*
* @return random number
*/
static double rand_double( void ) {
int r = rand();
return (double)r / ( (double)RAND_MAX + 1.0 );
}
/**
* Runs a benchmark.
*
* @return elapsed time in seconds
*/
static double benchmark( void ) {
double elapsed;
double re;
double im;
double t;
double v;
int i;
stdlib_complex128_t x;
stdlib_complex128_t y;
t = tic();
for ( i = 0; i < ITERATIONS; i++ ) {
v = ( 1000.0*rand_double() ) - 500.0;
x = stdlib_complex128( v, v );
y = stdlib_base_csignum( x );
stdlib_complex128_reim( y, &re, &im );
if ( re != re ) {
printf( "unexpected result\n" );
break;
}
}
elapsed = tic() - t;
if ( im != im ) {
printf( "unexpected result\n" );
}
return elapsed;
}
/**
* Main execution sequence.
*/
int main( void ) {
double elapsed;
int i;
// Use the current time to seed the random number generator:
srand( time( NULL ) );
print_version();
for ( i = 0; i < REPEATS; i++ ) {
printf( "# c::native::%s\n", NAME );
elapsed = benchmark();
print_results( elapsed );
printf( "ok %d benchmark finished\n", i+1 );
}
print_summary( REPEATS, REPEATS );
}
```
|
Reginald Ryedell Bullock (born March 16, 1991) is an American professional basketball player for the Houston Rockets of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He played college basketball for the North Carolina Tar Heels before being selected by the Los Angeles Clippers in the first round of the 2013 NBA draft with the 25th overall pick. Bullock has also played for the Phoenix Suns, Detroit Pistons, Los Angeles Lakers, and New York Knicks.
High school career
Bullock led his high school basketball team, the Kinston High Vikings, to three state championship games during his high school career, winning two championship titles. In 2008, they won the 3A title and in 2010 won the 2A title. During the 2010 championship game against West Caldwell, he was named Most Valuable Player and scored a team high of 15 points. He averaged 25 points and 11 rebounds per game for the 2009–2010 season to make the AP All-State men's team for a third straight season.
He was chosen to play in the 2010 McDonald's All-American game, where he was on the East Team along with Tobias Harris, Kendall Marshall, Kyrie Irving, and Jared Sullinger. Bullock also played in the Nike Hoops Summit game, the Spalding Hoophall Classic, the Jordan Brand Classic, the King James Classic, and the City of Palms Classic.
Bullock played on the CP3 Allstars in the AAU circuit. The team won the Gold Bracket Championships, were champions of Southern Jam Fest, runners up at Gibbons TOC, and in the Final Four at the Knoxvegas Heat.
College career
Bullock committed to attending the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in January 2008, shortly after receiving a scholarship offer from the Tar Heels. He also received offers from Maryland, Ohio State, Wake Forest, and Indiana.
In Bullock's freshman season in 2010–11, he was sixth on the team in scoring and the second-leading scorer off the bench at 6.1 points per game. On February 27, 2011, he tore the lateral meniscus in his left knee in a win over Maryland. He had surgery on March 7 to repair the injury and missed the rest of the 2010–11 season.
In his sophomore season in 2011–12, he led UNC in three-pointers made with 71 and three-point percentage at 38.2%. With 8.8 points per game, he was the fourth-leading scorer on the team.
In his junior season in 2012–13, he was UNC's third-leading scorer at a career-best 13.9 per game. He was also second on the team in three-pointers, rebounds (6.5) and third in scoring, assists (101) and steals (44).
Over 100 career games, Bullock averaged 9.9 points, 5.0 rebounds, 1.7 assists in 24.6 minutes per game.
Professional career
Los Angeles Clippers (2013–2015)
Bullock was selected by the Los Angeles Clippers with the 25th overall pick in the 2013 NBA draft. On July 11, 2013, he signed his first professional contract with the Clippers. He then joined the Clippers for the 2013 NBA Summer League. Bullock made his NBA debut on October 29, 2013, against the Los Angeles Lakers, scoring two points.
Phoenix Suns (2015)
On January 15, 2015, Bullock was traded to the Phoenix Suns in a three-team trade also involving the Boston Celtics. Ten days later, he made his debut for the Suns against his former team, the Clippers, in a 120–100 loss. On January 29, he was assigned to the Bakersfield Jam of the NBA Development League. Three days later, he was recalled by the Suns. On February 7, he was reassigned to the Jam. Four days later he was recalled. Bullock went on to score his first basket for the Suns in a 110–96 victory over the Denver Nuggets on February 25, 2015.
Detroit Pistons (2015–2019)
On July 9, 2015, Bullock was traded to the Detroit Pistons, along with Danny Granger and Marcus Morris, in exchange for a 2020 second-round draft pick. On October 25, 2015, the Pistons exercised their fourth-year team option on Bullock's rookie scale contract, extending the contract through the 2016–17 season. On December 19, he was assigned to the Grand Rapids Drive, the Pistons' D-League affiliate. He was recalled by the Pistons the next day.
After hip and back issues delayed his 2016–17 season debut, Bullock appeared in just four games before being sidelined with another injury on November 25, 2016, having suffered a left knee meniscus tear against the Miami Heat two days earlier. On November 30, was ruled out for two to four months after requiring surgery to address the left meniscus tear.
On July 14, 2017, Bullock re-signed with the Pistons. On December 17, 2017, he scored a career-high 20 points in a 114–110 win over the Orlando Magic. On December 30, 2017, he set a new career high with 22 points in a 93–79 win over the San Antonio Spurs.
On November 11, 2018, Bullock had a career-high 23 points with six 3-pointers in a 113–103 loss to the Charlotte Hornets. He set a new career high with 24 points on December 17 against the Milwaukee Bucks, before surpassing that mark on December 19 with 33 points against the Minnesota Timberwolves.
Los Angeles Lakers (2019)
On February 6, 2019, Bullock was traded to the Los Angeles Lakers in exchange for Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk and a future second round draft pick.
New York Knicks (2019–2021)
On July 16, 2019, Bullock signed with the New York Knicks, and underwent successful surgery on the next day for a cervical disc herniation. In his debut with the Knicks on January 1, 2020, Bullock scored 11 points in a 117–93 win against the Portland Trail Blazers.
Dallas Mavericks (2021–2023)
On August 6, 2021, Bullock signed with the Dallas Mavericks. He made his debut on October 21, 2021, in a 87–113 loss to the Atlanta Hawks, scoring three points.
On July 12, 2023, Bullock was traded to the San Antonio Spurs as part of a three-team trade that sent Grant Williams to the Mavericks. However, he was waived by the Spurs on September 30.
Houston Rockets (2023–present)
On October 4, 2023, Bullock signed with the Houston Rockets.
Career statistics
NBA
Regular season
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|L.A. Clippers
| 43 || 0 || 9.2 || .355 || .301 || .778 || 1.3 || .3 || .2 || .0 || 2.7
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|L.A. Clippers
| 25 || 2 || 10.5 || .426 || .385 || .800 || 1.6 || .2 || .4 || .1 || 2.6
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|Phoenix
| 11 || 0 || 6.8 || .063 || .000 || .500 || .9 || .2 || .1 || .2 || .4
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|Detroit
| 37 || 0 || 11.6 || .439 || .415 || .933 || 1.8 || .7 || .3 || .1 || 3.3
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|Detroit
| 31 || 5 || 15.1 || .422 || .384 || .714 || 2.1 || .9 || .6 || .1 || 4.5
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|Detroit
| 62 || 52 || 27.9 || .489 || .445 || .796 || 2.5 || 1.5 || .8 || .2 || 11.3
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|Detroit
| 44 || 44 || 30.8 || .413 || .388 || .875 || 2.8 || 2.5 || .5 || .1 || 12.1
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|L.A. Lakers
| 19 || 16 || 27.6 || .412 || .343 || .810 || 2.6 || 1.1 || .8 || .4 || 9.3
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|New York
| 29 || 19 || 23.6 || .402 || .333 || .810 || 2.3 || 1.4 || .9 || .1 || 8.1
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|New York
| 65 || 64 || 30.0 || .442 || .410 || .909 || 3.4 || 1.5 || .8 || .2 || 10.9
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|Dallas
| 68 || 37 || 28.0 || .401 || .360 || .833 || 3.5 || 1.2 || .6 || .2 || 8.6
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|Dallas
| 78 || 55 || 30.3 || .409 || .380 || .703 || 3.6 || 1.4 || .7 || .2 || 7.2
|- class="sortbottom"
| style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"|Career
| 512 || 294 || 23.7 || .425 || .384 || .827 || 2.7 || 1.2 || .6 || .1 || 7.7
Playoffs
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|L.A. Clippers
| 2 || 0 || 2.5 || 1.000 || .000 || .000 || .0 || .5 || .0 || .0 || 1.0
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|Detroit
| 2 || 0 || 11.0 || .833 || .667 || .000 || 1.0 || 1.5 || .5 || .0 || 6.0
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|New York
| 5 || 5 || 32.4 || .385 || .345 || .800 || 3.4 || 1.2 || .6 || .2 || 8.8
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"|Dallas
| 18 || 18 || 39.3 || .404 || .397 || .889 || 4.6 || 1.7 || 1.2 || .1 || 10.6
|- class="sortbottom"
| style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"|Career
| 27 || 23 || 33.2 || .416 || .393 || .870 || 3.7 || 1.5 || 1.0 || .1 || 9.2
College
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|2010–11
| style="text-align:left;"|North Carolina
| 27 || 0 || 14.5 || .367 || .296 || .565 || 2.8 || .6 || .7 || .1 || 6.1
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|2011–12
| style="text-align:left;"|North Carolina
| 38 || 18 || 25.4 || .428 || .382 || .727 || 5.1 || 1.4 || .7 || .2 || 8.8
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|2012–13
| style="text-align:left;"|North Carolina
| 35 || 35 || 31.4 || .483 || .436 || .767 || 6.5 || 2.9 || 1.3 || .3 || 13.9
|- class="sortbottom"
| style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"|Career
| 100 || 53 || 24.6 || .439 || .387 || .720 || 5.0 || 1.7 || .9 || .2 || 9.9
Awards
2010 McDonald's All-American Team Selection
2010 North Carolina Gatorade Player of the Year
2009–2010 Associated Press Men's Prep Basketball Player of the Year
2010 Jordan Brand Classic Team Selection
2022 NBA Social Justice Champion Award
Personal life
Bullock has a son. Bullock's transgender sister, Mia Henderson, was murdered in Baltimore on July 16, 2014. A suspect was arrested in August 2015. In August 2016, Bullock said of his sister, "She lived as herself, she taught me how to be (myself). She taught me how to take care of the family... She was happy with being who she was. She wasn't worried about how others felt about her. A person that can isolate the whole world out and not care about other people's feelings is a strong person, to me. That was one of the biggest things that I got from her." Bullock remains engaged in LGBT rights, volunteering to train gay and transgender youth alongside Jason Collins, a basketball player who came out as gay in a 2013 edition of Sports Illustrated. Bullock has also taken part with his young son Treyson in the New York City LGBT Pride March as part of the LGBT NBA float. He was honored during the GLAAD Media Awards, and is active in the charity "NBA Voices for LGBT Youth and Allies". He also appears in documentary from Vice Sports where he talks about his sister and his engagement towards the gay community in her memory. He is also involved in anti-bullying campaigns.
On October 29, 2019, Keiosha Moore, Bullock's other sister, was murdered in Baltimore.
References
External links
North Carolina Tar Heels bio
1991 births
Living people
21st-century African-American sportspeople
African-American basketball players
American LGBT rights activists
American men's basketball players
Bakersfield Jam players
Basketball players from Baltimore
Basketball players from North Carolina
Dallas Mavericks players
Detroit Pistons players
Grand Rapids Drive players
Houston Rockets players
Los Angeles Clippers draft picks
Los Angeles Clippers players
Los Angeles Lakers players
McDonald's High School All-Americans
New York Knicks players
North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball players
Parade High School All-Americans (boys' basketball)
People from Kinston, North Carolina
Phoenix Suns players
Shooting guards
Small forwards
|
```shell
Execute a command without saving it in history
Quick `bash` shortcuts
Useful aliasing in bash
Keep useful commands in your shell history with tags
The Basics of Environment Variables
```
|
Dharmapuri is a state assembly constituency in Dharmapuri district in Tamil Nadu, India. Its State Assembly Constituency number is 59. It comprises a portion of Dharmapuri taluk and is a part of the similarly named constituency which is used for national elections to the Parliament of India. It is one of the 234 State Legislative Assembly Constituencies in Tamil Nadu, in India.
Madras State
Tamil Nadu
Election results
2021
2016
2011
2006
2001
1996
1991
1989
1984
1980
1977
1971
1967
1962
1957
1952
References
Assembly constituencies of Tamil Nadu
Dharmapuri district
|
Kuki Baptist Convention (KBC) is a Baptist Christian denomination in Northeast India. It is associated with the Manipur Baptist Convention.
History
The Kuki Baptist Convention (KBC) was established at Tujangwaichong village in the present day Kangpokpi district on 16 March 1958.
The Gospel Mission Society, presently known as the Mission Board was established in 1988 with Capt.Retd. Lalkholun as its president and Rev Yangthong Haokip as its first Secretary. At present, the congregation has 32 missionaries and 20 native Evangelists serving in different fields. As in 2018 KBCs consists of 21 parish, with 293 villages, 9092 household with a budget is Rs. 12,000,000.
References
Further reading
External links
Kuki Baptist Convention
Baptist Christianity in India
Baptist denominations in India
Christianity in Manipur
Kuki tribes
Baptist denominations established in the 19th century
|
```java
/*
*
*
* path_to_url
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
*/
package org.hongxi.whatsmars.netty.discard;
import io.netty.bootstrap.ServerBootstrap;
import io.netty.channel.ChannelFuture;
import io.netty.channel.ChannelInitializer;
import io.netty.channel.ChannelPipeline;
import io.netty.channel.EventLoopGroup;
import io.netty.channel.nio.NioEventLoopGroup;
import io.netty.channel.socket.SocketChannel;
import io.netty.channel.socket.nio.NioServerSocketChannel;
import io.netty.handler.logging.LogLevel;
import io.netty.handler.logging.LoggingHandler;
import io.netty.handler.ssl.SslContext;
import io.netty.handler.ssl.SslContextBuilder;
import io.netty.handler.ssl.util.SelfSignedCertificate;
/**
* Discards any incoming data.
*/
public final class DiscardServer {
static final boolean SSL = System.getProperty("ssl") != null;
static final int PORT = Integer.parseInt(System.getProperty("port", "8009"));
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
// Configure SSL.
final SslContext sslCtx;
if (SSL) {
SelfSignedCertificate ssc = new SelfSignedCertificate();
sslCtx = SslContextBuilder.forServer(ssc.certificate(), ssc.privateKey()).build();
} else {
sslCtx = null;
}
EventLoopGroup bossGroup = new NioEventLoopGroup(1);
EventLoopGroup workerGroup = new NioEventLoopGroup();
try {
ServerBootstrap b = new ServerBootstrap();
b.group(bossGroup, workerGroup)
.channel(NioServerSocketChannel.class)
.handler(new LoggingHandler(LogLevel.INFO))
.childHandler(new ChannelInitializer<SocketChannel>() {
@Override
public void initChannel(SocketChannel ch) {
ChannelPipeline p = ch.pipeline();
if (sslCtx != null) {
p.addLast(sslCtx.newHandler(ch.alloc()));
}
p.addLast(new DiscardServerHandler());
}
});
// Bind and start to accept incoming connections.
ChannelFuture f = b.bind(PORT).sync();
// Wait until the server socket is closed.
// In this example, this does not happen, but you can do that to gracefully
// shut down your server.
f.channel().closeFuture().sync();
} finally {
workerGroup.shutdownGracefully();
bossGroup.shutdownGracefully();
}
}
}
```
|
```xml
export * from "./TextRenderer"
```
|
```lua
require('copas')
local hc = require('httpclient').new()
local myopt =
{
{
'-pos_feature', false,
[[Use treetagger to inject pos tags, the parameter is the path to the model to use. `treetagger`
is expected to be in found in executable path.]]
},
{
'-pos_server_host', 'localhost',
[[POS server to use.]]
},
{
'-pos_server_port', 3000,
[[Port on the POS server to use.]]
}
}
local function declareOptsFn(cmd)
cmd:setCmdLineOptions(myopt, 'Tokenizer')
end
local function treetaggerFn(opt, tokens)
if opt.pos_feature then
local tok_nofeats = ''
for _,v in ipairs(tokens) do
local p = v:find('')
if p then
v = v:sub(1,p-1)
end
if tok_nofeats ~= '' then
tok_nofeats = tok_nofeats..' '
end
tok_nofeats = tok_nofeats..v
end
local res = hc:post("http://"..opt.pos_server_host..':'..opt.pos_server_port..'/pos', tok_nofeats)
assert(res.code==200)
local s = string.gsub(res.body, "\t", "")
local idx = 1
for pos in string.gmatch(s, "%S+") do
tokens[idx] = tokens[idx] .. '' .. pos
idx = idx + 1
end
end
return tokens
end
return {
post_tokenize = treetaggerFn,
hookName = function() return "treetagger" end,
declareOpts = declareOptsFn
}
```
|
Jhumke is a Bollywood film. It was released in 1946.
References
External links
1946 films
1940s Hindi-language films
Indian black-and-white films
Saadat Hasan Manto
|
```objective-c
/*
* This file is part of the GNU LIBICONV Library.
*
* The GNU LIBICONV Library is free software; you can redistribute it
* and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public
*
* The GNU LIBICONV Library 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 GNU
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
* If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street,
* Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
*/
/*
* ISO-8859-3
*/
static const unsigned short iso8859_3_2uni[96] = {
/* 0xa0 */
0x00a0, 0x0126, 0x02d8, 0x00a3, 0x00a4, 0xfffd, 0x0124, 0x00a7,
0x00a8, 0x0130, 0x015e, 0x011e, 0x0134, 0x00ad, 0xfffd, 0x017b,
/* 0xb0 */
0x00b0, 0x0127, 0x00b2, 0x00b3, 0x00b4, 0x00b5, 0x0125, 0x00b7,
0x00b8, 0x0131, 0x015f, 0x011f, 0x0135, 0x00bd, 0xfffd, 0x017c,
/* 0xc0 */
0x00c0, 0x00c1, 0x00c2, 0xfffd, 0x00c4, 0x010a, 0x0108, 0x00c7,
0x00c8, 0x00c9, 0x00ca, 0x00cb, 0x00cc, 0x00cd, 0x00ce, 0x00cf,
/* 0xd0 */
0xfffd, 0x00d1, 0x00d2, 0x00d3, 0x00d4, 0x0120, 0x00d6, 0x00d7,
0x011c, 0x00d9, 0x00da, 0x00db, 0x00dc, 0x016c, 0x015c, 0x00df,
/* 0xe0 */
0x00e0, 0x00e1, 0x00e2, 0xfffd, 0x00e4, 0x010b, 0x0109, 0x00e7,
0x00e8, 0x00e9, 0x00ea, 0x00eb, 0x00ec, 0x00ed, 0x00ee, 0x00ef,
/* 0xf0 */
0xfffd, 0x00f1, 0x00f2, 0x00f3, 0x00f4, 0x0121, 0x00f6, 0x00f7,
0x011d, 0x00f9, 0x00fa, 0x00fb, 0x00fc, 0x016d, 0x015d, 0x02d9,
};
static int
iso8859_3_mbtowc (conv_t conv, ucs4_t *pwc, const unsigned char *s, int n)
{
unsigned char c = *s;
if (c < 0xa0) {
*pwc = (ucs4_t) c;
return 1;
}
else {
unsigned short wc = iso8859_3_2uni[c-0xa0];
if (wc != 0xfffd) {
*pwc = (ucs4_t) wc;
return 1;
}
}
return RET_ILSEQ;
}
static const unsigned char iso8859_3_page00[96] = {
0xa0, 0x00, 0x00, 0xa3, 0xa4, 0x00, 0x00, 0xa7, /* 0xa0-0xa7 */
0xa8, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0xad, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0xa8-0xaf */
0xb0, 0x00, 0xb2, 0xb3, 0xb4, 0xb5, 0x00, 0xb7, /* 0xb0-0xb7 */
0xb8, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0xbd, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0xb8-0xbf */
0xc0, 0xc1, 0xc2, 0x00, 0xc4, 0x00, 0x00, 0xc7, /* 0xc0-0xc7 */
0xc8, 0xc9, 0xca, 0xcb, 0xcc, 0xcd, 0xce, 0xcf, /* 0xc8-0xcf */
0x00, 0xd1, 0xd2, 0xd3, 0xd4, 0x00, 0xd6, 0xd7, /* 0xd0-0xd7 */
0x00, 0xd9, 0xda, 0xdb, 0xdc, 0x00, 0x00, 0xdf, /* 0xd8-0xdf */
0xe0, 0xe1, 0xe2, 0x00, 0xe4, 0x00, 0x00, 0xe7, /* 0xe0-0xe7 */
0xe8, 0xe9, 0xea, 0xeb, 0xec, 0xed, 0xee, 0xef, /* 0xe8-0xef */
0x00, 0xf1, 0xf2, 0xf3, 0xf4, 0x00, 0xf6, 0xf7, /* 0xf0-0xf7 */
0x00, 0xf9, 0xfa, 0xfb, 0xfc, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0xf8-0xff */
};
static const unsigned char iso8859_3_page01[120] = {
0xc6, 0xe6, 0xc5, 0xe5, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x08-0x0f */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x10-0x17 */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0xd8, 0xf8, 0xab, 0xbb, /* 0x18-0x1f */
0xd5, 0xf5, 0x00, 0x00, 0xa6, 0xb6, 0xa1, 0xb1, /* 0x20-0x27 */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x28-0x2f */
0xa9, 0xb9, 0x00, 0x00, 0xac, 0xbc, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x30-0x37 */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x38-0x3f */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x40-0x47 */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x48-0x4f */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x50-0x57 */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0xde, 0xfe, 0xaa, 0xba, /* 0x58-0x5f */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x60-0x67 */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0xdd, 0xfd, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x68-0x6f */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x70-0x77 */
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0xaf, 0xbf, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0x78-0x7f */
};
static const unsigned char iso8859_3_page02[8] = {
0xa2, 0xff, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* 0xd8-0xdf */
};
static int
iso8859_3_wctomb (conv_t conv, unsigned char *r, ucs4_t wc, int n)
{
unsigned char c = 0;
if (wc < 0x00a0) {
*r = wc;
return 1;
}
else if (wc >= 0x00a0 && wc < 0x0100)
c = iso8859_3_page00[wc-0x00a0];
else if (wc >= 0x0108 && wc < 0x0180)
c = iso8859_3_page01[wc-0x0108];
else if (wc >= 0x02d8 && wc < 0x02e0)
c = iso8859_3_page02[wc-0x02d8];
if (c != 0) {
*r = c;
return 1;
}
return RET_ILUNI;
}
```
|
```smalltalk
/*****************************************************************************
*
* ReoGrid - .NET Spreadsheet Control
*
* path_to_url
*
* THIS CODE AND INFORMATION IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
* KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND/OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
* PURPOSE.
*
* Author: Jingwood <jingwood at unvell.com>
*
*
****************************************************************************/
using System;
using System.ComponentModel;
#if DEBUG
using System.Diagnostics;
#endif // DEBUG
#if EX_SCRIPT
using unvell.ReoScript;
#endif // EX_SCRIPT
using unvell.ReoGrid.Events;
using unvell.ReoGrid.Views;
using unvell.ReoGrid.Graphics;
namespace unvell.ReoGrid
{
partial class Worksheet
{
#region Position
internal CellPosition selStart = new CellPosition(0, 0);
internal CellPosition selEnd = new CellPosition(0, 0);
#region Focus & Hover
internal CellPosition focusPos = new CellPosition(0, 0);
/// <summary>
/// The column focus pos goes when enter key pressed.
/// </summary>
private int focusReturnColumn = 0;
/// <summary>
/// Get or set current focused cell position.
/// </summary>
public CellPosition FocusPos
{
get
{
return this.focusPos;
}
set
{
// different with current focus pos
if (this.focusPos != value)
{
var newFocusPos = this.FixPos(value);
// not empty position
if (!newFocusPos.IsEmpty)
{
var focusCell = cells[newFocusPos.Row, newFocusPos.Col];
if (focusCell != null)
{
// new focus cell may be an invalid cell, need check it
if (!focusCell.IsValidCell)
{
// if inside any merged cell, find the merge-start-cell
newFocusPos = GetMergedCellOfRange(focusCell).InternalPos;
}
}
}
// compare to current focus position again
if (this.focusPos != newFocusPos)
{
// if current focus position is not empty
if (!focusPos.IsEmpty)
{
// get the cell, and invoke OnLostFocus if cell's has body
var focusCell = cells[focusPos.Row, focusPos.Col];
if (focusCell != null && focusCell.body != null)
{
focusCell.body.OnLostFocus();
}
}
this.focusPos = newFocusPos;
// invoke OnGotFocus on new focus position
if (!this.focusPos.IsEmpty)
{
var focusCell = cells[focusPos.Row, focusPos.Col];
if (focusCell != null && focusCell.body != null && focusCell.IsValidCell)
{
focusCell.body.OnGotFocus();
}
if (!this.selectionRange.Contains(this.focusPos))
{
SelectRange(this.focusPos.Row, this.FocusPos.Col, 1, 1);
}
}
this.RequestInvalidate();
FocusPosChanged?.Invoke(this, new CellPosEventArgs(focusPos));
}
}
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Raise when focus cell is changed
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler<CellPosEventArgs> FocusPosChanged;
private FocusPosStyle focusPosStyle = FocusPosStyle.Default;
/// <summary>
/// Get or set focus position display style
/// </summary>
public FocusPosStyle FocusPosStyle
{
get
{
return this.focusPosStyle;
}
set
{
if (this.focusPosStyle != value)
{
RequestInvalidate();
this.focusPosStyle = value;
FocusPosStyleChanged?.Invoke(this, null);
}
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Focus position style changed.
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler<EventArgs> FocusPosStyleChanged;
internal CellPosition hoverPos;
/// <summary>
/// Cell when mouse moving and hover on
/// </summary>
public CellPosition HoverPos
{
get
{
return hoverPos;
}
internal set
{
if (hoverPos != value)
{
// raise cell mouse enter
if (!hoverPos.IsEmpty)
{
CellMouseEventArgs evtArg = null;
if (CellMouseLeave != null)
{
evtArg = new CellMouseEventArgs(this, hoverPos);
CellMouseLeave(this, evtArg);
}
var cell = cells[hoverPos.Row, hoverPos.Col];
if (cell != null)
{
if (!cell.IsValidCell)
{
cell = GetMergedCellOfRange(cell);
}
if (cell.body != null)
{
if (evtArg == null)
{
evtArg = new CellMouseEventArgs(this, cell);
}
bool processed = cell.body.OnMouseLeave(evtArg);
if (processed) this.RequestInvalidate();
}
}
}
hoverPos = value;
// raise cell mouse leave
if (!hoverPos.IsEmpty)
{
CellMouseEventArgs evtArg = null;
if (CellMouseEnter != null)
{
evtArg = new CellMouseEventArgs(this, hoverPos);
CellMouseEnter(this, evtArg);
}
var cell = cells[hoverPos.Row, hoverPos.Col];
if (cell != null)
{
if (!cell.IsValidCell)
{
cell = GetMergedCellOfRange(cell);
}
if (cell.body != null)
{
if (evtArg == null)
{
evtArg = new CellMouseEventArgs(this, cell);
evtArg.Cell = cell;
}
bool processed = cell.body.OnMouseEnter(evtArg);
if (processed) this.RequestInvalidate();
}
}
}
HoverPosChanged?.Invoke(this, new CellPosEventArgs(hoverPos));
}
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Raise when hover cell is changed
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler<CellPosEventArgs> HoverPosChanged;
#endregion // Focus & Hover
internal RangePosition selectionRange = new RangePosition(0, 0, 1, 1);
/// <summary>
/// Current selection range of entire grid. If SelectionMode is None, the value of this property will be Empty.
/// </summary>
public RangePosition SelectionRange
{
get { return selectionRange; }
set { SelectRange(value); }
}
#endregion // Position
#region Mode & Style
internal WorksheetSelectionMode selectionMode = WorksheetSelectionMode.Range;
/// <summary>
/// Get or set selection mode for worksheet.
/// </summary>
[DefaultValue(WorksheetSelectionMode.Range)]
public WorksheetSelectionMode SelectionMode
{
get
{
return selectionMode;
}
set
{
if (selectionMode != value)
{
if (this.IsEditing)
{
this.EndEdit(EndEditReason.NormalFinish);
}
var oldSelectionMode = this.selectionMode;
this.selectionMode = value;
switch (oldSelectionMode)
{
case WorksheetSelectionMode.None:
switch (value)
{
case WorksheetSelectionMode.Cell:
case WorksheetSelectionMode.Range:
#region None -> Cell/Range
SelectRange(new RangePosition(0, 0, 1, 1));
#endregion // None -> Cell/Range
break;
}
break;
default:
switch (value)
{
case WorksheetSelectionMode.None:
#region Any -> None
this.selectionRange = RangePosition.Empty;
this.focusPos = CellPosition.Empty;
RequestInvalidate();
#endregion // Any -> None
break;
case WorksheetSelectionMode.Cell:
#region Any -> Cell
SelectRange(this.selStart.Row, this.selStart.Col, 1, 1);
#endregion // Any -> Cell
break;
case WorksheetSelectionMode.Range:
SelectionRange = FixRangeSelection(this.selectionRange);
break;
}
break;
}
switch (this.selectionMode)
{
case WorksheetSelectionMode.Row:
case WorksheetSelectionMode.SingleRow:
#region Any -> Row
SelectRange(this.selectionRange.Row, 0, this.selectionRange.Rows, -1);
#endregion // None -> Row
break;
case WorksheetSelectionMode.Column:
case WorksheetSelectionMode.SingleColumn:
#region Any -> Column
SelectRange(0, this.selectionRange.Col, -1, this.selectionRange.Cols);
#endregion // None -> Column
break;
}
if (SelectionModeChanged != null)
{
SelectionModeChanged(this, null);
}
}
}
}
private WorksheetSelectionStyle selectionStyle = WorksheetSelectionStyle.Default;
/// <summary>
/// Get or set the selection style for worksheet.
/// </summary>
[DefaultValue(WorksheetSelectionStyle.Default)]
public WorksheetSelectionStyle SelectionStyle
{
get
{
return selectionStyle;
}
set
{
if (selectionStyle != value)
{
selectionStyle = value;
RequestInvalidate();
SelectionStyleChanged?.Invoke(this, null);
}
}
}
private SelectionForwardDirection selectionForwardDirection;
/// <summary>
/// Get or set focus cell moving direction.
/// </summary>
[DefaultValue(SelectionForwardDirection.Right)]
public SelectionForwardDirection SelectionForwardDirection
{
get
{
return this.selectionForwardDirection;
}
set
{
if (this.selectionForwardDirection != value)
{
this.selectionForwardDirection = value;
this.SelectionForwardDirectionChanged?.Invoke(this, null);
}
}
}
#endregion // Mode & Style
#region Mouse Select
internal void SelectRangeStartByMouse(Point location)
{
if (this.viewportController == null || this.viewportController.View == null)
{
return;
}
#if WINFORM || WPF
if (!Common.Toolkit.IsKeyDown(unvell.Common.Win32Lib.Win32.VKey.VK_SHIFT))
{
#endif // WINFORM || WPF
var viewport = this.viewportController.View.GetViewByPoint(location) as IRangeSelectableView;
if (viewport == null)
{
viewport = this.viewportController.FocusView as IRangeSelectableView;
}
if (viewport != null)
{
Point vp = viewport.PointToView(location);
var pos = CellsViewport.GetPosByPoint(viewport, vp);
this.selEnd = this.selStart = pos;
}
#if WINFORM || WPF
}
#endif // WINFORM || WPF
this.SelectRangeEndByMouse(location);
}
internal void SelectRangeEndByMouse(Point location)
{
if (this.viewportController == null || this.viewportController.View == null)
{
return;
}
var viewport = this.viewportController.View.GetViewByPoint(location) as IRangeSelectableView;
if (viewport == null)
{
viewport = this.viewportController.FocusView as IRangeSelectableView;
}
if (viewport != null)
{
Point vp = viewport.PointToView(location);
var startpos = this.selStart;
var endpos = this.selEnd;
#region Each Operation Status
switch (this.operationStatus)
{
case OperationStatus.FullColumnSelect:
{
int col = -1;
this.FindColumnByPosition(vp.X, out col);
if (col > -1)
{
startpos = new CellPosition(0, startpos.Col);
endpos = new CellPosition(this.rows.Count, col);
}
}
break;
case OperationStatus.FullRowSelect:
{
int row = -1;
this.FindRowByPosition(vp.Y, out row);
if (row > -1)
{
startpos = new CellPosition(startpos.Row, 0);
endpos = new CellPosition(row, this.cols.Count);
}
}
break;
default:
endpos = CellsViewport.GetPosByPoint(viewport, vp);
break;
}
#endregion // Each Operation Status
this.ApplyRangeSelection(startpos, endpos);
}
}
#endregion // Mouse Select
#region Select API
/// <summary>
/// Select specified range.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="range">Specified range to be selected</param>
private RangePosition FixRangeSelection(RangePosition range)
{
if (range.IsEmpty) return RangePosition.Empty;
#if DEBUG
Stopwatch stop = Stopwatch.StartNew();
#endif
RangePosition fixedRange = FixRange(range);
int minr = fixedRange.Row;
int minc = fixedRange.Col;
int maxr = fixedRange.EndRow;
int maxc = fixedRange.EndCol;
switch (this.selectionMode)
{
case WorksheetSelectionMode.Cell:
maxr = minr = range.Row;
maxc = minc = range.Col;
break;
case WorksheetSelectionMode.Row:
minc = 0;
maxc = this.cols.Count - 1;
break;
case WorksheetSelectionMode.Column:
minr = 0;
maxr = this.rows.Count - 1;
break;
}
if ((this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.Cell
|| this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.Range)
&& ((fixedRange.Cols < this.cols.Count
&& fixedRange.Rows < this.rows.Count)
|| this.cols.Count == 1 || this.rows.Count == 1)
)
{
#region Check and select the whole merged region
//#if DEBUG
// if (!Toolkit.IsKeyDown(unvell.Common.Win32Lib.Win32.VKey.VK_CONTROL))
// {
//#endif
//
// if there are any entire rows or columns selected (full == -1)
// the selection bounds of merged range will not be checked.
// any changes to the selection will also not be appiled to the range.
//
RangePosition checkedRange = CheckMergedRange(new RangePosition(minr, minc, maxr - minr + 1, maxc - minc + 1));
minr = checkedRange.Row;
minc = checkedRange.Col;
maxr = checkedRange.EndRow;
maxc = checkedRange.EndCol;
//#if DEBUG
// }
//#endif
#endregion
}
int rows = maxr - minr + 1;
int cols = maxc - minc + 1;
#if DEBUG
stop.Stop();
if (stop.ElapsedMilliseconds > 25)
{
Debug.WriteLine("select range takes " + stop.ElapsedMilliseconds + " ms.");
}
#endif
return new RangePosition(minr, minc, rows, cols);
}
private void MoveRangeSelection(CellPosition start, CellPosition end, bool appendSelect, bool scrollToSelectionEnd = true)
{
if (!appendSelect)
{
start = end;
}
this.ApplyRangeSelection(start, end, scrollToSelectionEnd: scrollToSelectionEnd);
}
private void ApplyRangeSelection(CellPosition start, CellPosition end, bool scrollToSelectionEnd = true)
{
bool processed = false;
switch (this.operationStatus)
{
case OperationStatus.HighlightRangeCreate:
{
var fixedRange = FixRangeSelection(new RangePosition(start, end));
if (this.focusHighlightRange == null)
{
// no focus highlight range, create one
var refRange = AddHighlightRange(fixedRange);
this.FocusHighlightRange = refRange;
}
else if (this.focusHighlightRange.Position != fixedRange)
{
// update size for current focus highlight range
this.focusHighlightRange.Position = fixedRange;
this.RequestInvalidate();
}
}
processed = true;
break;
default:
ChangeSelectionRange(start, end);
processed = true;
break;
}
if (processed)
{
if (this.HasSettings(WorksheetSettings.Behavior_ScrollToFocusCell)
//commented out before the case of entire row or column
//is checked inside NormalViewportController.ScrollToRange method
//issue #179
//&& (this.selectionRange.Rows != this.rows.Count
//&& this.selectionRange.Cols != this.cols.Count)
&& scrollToSelectionEnd
)
{
// skip to scroll if entire worksheet is selected
if (!(start.Row == 0 && start.Col == 0
&& selEnd.Row == this.rows.Count - 1 && selEnd.Col == this.cols.Count - 1))
{
this.ScrollToCell(selEnd);
}
}
}
}
private void ChangeSelectionRange(CellPosition start, CellPosition end)
{
var range = FixRangeSelection(new RangePosition(start, end));
// compare to current selection, only do this when selection was really changed.
if (this.selectionRange != range)
{
if (this.BeforeSelectionRangeChange != null)
{
var arg = new BeforeSelectionChangeEventArgs(start, end);
this.BeforeSelectionRangeChange(this, arg);
if (arg.IsCancelled) return;
if (start != arg.SelectionStart || end != arg.SelectionEnd)
{
start = arg.SelectionStart;
end = arg.SelectionEnd;
range = FixRangeSelection(new RangePosition(start, end));
}
}
this.selectionRange = range;
this.selStart = start;
this.selEnd = end;
//if (!range.Contains(selStart)) selStart = range.StartPos;
//if (!range.Contains(selEnd)) selEnd = range.EndPos;
// focus pos validations:
// 1. focus pos must be inside selection range
// 2. focus pos cannot stop at invalid cell (any part of merged cell)
if (this.focusPos.IsEmpty
|| !range.Contains(this.focusPos)
|| !IsValidCell(this.focusPos))
{
var focusPos = selStart;
// find first valid cell as focus pos
for (int r = range.Row; r <= range.EndRow; r++)
{
for (int c = range.Col; c <= range.EndCol; c++)
{
var cell = this.cells[r, c];
if (cell != null && (cell.Colspan <= 0 || cell.Rowspan <= 0)) continue;
focusPos.Row = r;
focusPos.Col = c;
goto quit_loop;
}
}
quit_loop:
if (focusPos.Col < this.cols.Count
&& focusPos.Row < this.rows.Count)
{
FocusPos = focusPos;
}
}
// update focus return column
this.focusReturnColumn = end.Col;
if (this.operationStatus == OperationStatus.RangeSelect)
{
this.SelectionRangeChanging?.Invoke(this, new RangeEventArgs(this.selectionRange));
#if EX_SCRIPT
// comment out this if you get performance problem when using script extension
RaiseScriptEvent("onselectionchanging");
#endif
}
else
{
this.SelectionRangeChanged?.Invoke(this, new RangeEventArgs(this.selectionRange));
#if EX_SCRIPT
RaiseScriptEvent("onselectionchange");
#endif
}
RequestInvalidate();
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Select speicifed range on spreadsheet
/// </summary>
/// <param name="address">address or name of specified range to be selected</param>
public void SelectRange(string address)
{
// range address
if (RangePosition.IsValidAddress(address))
{
SelectRange(new RangePosition(address));
}
// named range
else if (RGUtility.IsValidName(address))
{
NamedRange refRange;
if (registeredNamedRanges.TryGetValue(address, out refRange))
{
SelectRange(refRange);
}
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Select speicifed range on spreadsheet
/// </summary>
/// <param name="pos1">Start position of specified range</param>
/// <param name="pos2">End position of specified range</param>
public void SelectRange(CellPosition pos1, CellPosition pos2)
{
SelectRange(new RangePosition(pos1, pos2));
}
/// <summary>
/// Select specified range
/// </summary>
/// <param name="row">number of row</param>
/// <param name="col">number of col</param>
/// <param name="rows">number of rows to be selected</param>
/// <param name="cols">number of columns to be selected</param>
public void SelectRange(int row, int col, int rows, int cols)
{
SelectRange(new RangePosition(row, col, rows, cols));
}
/// <summary>
/// Select speicifed range on spreadsheet
/// </summary>
/// <param name="range">range to be selected</param>
public void SelectRange(RangePosition range)
{
if (range.IsEmpty || this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None) return;
range = this.FixRange(range);
// submit to select a range
ApplyRangeSelection(range.StartPos, range.EndPos, false);
}
/// <summary>
/// Select entire sheet
/// </summary>
public void SelectAll()
{
if (IsEditing)
{
this.controlAdapter.EditControlSelectAll();
}
else
{
SelectRange(new RangePosition(0, 0, RowCount, ColumnCount));
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Select entire rows of columns form specified column
/// </summary>
/// <param name="col">number of column start to be selected</param>
/// <param name="columns">numbers of column to be selected</param>
public void SelectColumns(int col, int columns)
{
SelectRange(new RangePosition(0, col, this.rows.Count, columns));
}
/// <summary>
/// Select entire column of rows from specified row
/// </summary>
/// <param name="row">number of row start to be selected</param>
/// <param name="rows">numbers of row to be selected</param>
public void SelectRows(int row, int rows)
{
SelectRange(new RangePosition(row, 0, rows, this.cols.Count));
}
#endregion // Select API
#region Keyboard Move
private void OnTabKeyPressed(bool shiftKeyDown)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
var backupReturnCol = this.focusReturnColumn;
if (!shiftKeyDown)
{
var endCol = this.selectionRange.Cols > 1 ? this.selectionRange.EndCol
: this.cols.Count - 1;
if (this.focusPos.Col < endCol)
{
MoveFocusRight();
}
else
{
var endRow = this.selectionRange.Rows > 1 ? this.selectionRange.EndRow
: this.rows.Count - 1;
if (this.focusPos.Row < endRow)
{
var startCol = this.selectionRange.Cols > 1 ? this.selectionRange.Col : 0;
this.focusPos.Col = startCol;
MoveFocusDown();
}
}
}
else
{
var startCol = this.selectionRange.Cols > 1 ? this.selectionRange.Col : 0;
if (selEnd.Col > startCol)
{
MoveSelectionLeft();
}
else
{
var startRow = this.selectionRange.Rows > 1 ? this.selectionRange.Row : 0;
if (selEnd.Row > startRow)
{
var endCol = this.selectionRange.Cols > 1 ? this.selectionRange.EndCol
: this.cols.Count - 1;
this.focusPos.Col = endCol;
MoveSelectionUp();
}
}
}
this.focusReturnColumn = backupReturnCol;
}
private void OnEnterKeyPressed(bool shiftKeyDown)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
if (!shiftKeyDown)
{
MoveSelectionForward();
}
else
{
MoveSelectionBackward();
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Move focus position rightward.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="autoReturn">Determines whether or not move to next column if reached end row.</param>
public void MoveFocusRight(bool autoReturn = true)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
this.FocusPos = this.FindNextMovableCellRight(this.focusPos,
this.RangeIsMergedCell(this.selectionRange) ? this.FixRange(RangePosition.EntireRange) : this.selectionRange,
autoReturn);
}
/// <summary>
/// Move focus position downward.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="autoReturn">Determines whether or not move to next row if reached end column.</param>
public void MoveFocusDown(bool autoReturn = true)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
this.FocusPos = FindNextMovableCellDown(this.focusPos,
this.RangeIsMergedCell(this.selectionRange) ? this.FixRange(RangePosition.EntireRange) : this.selectionRange,
autoReturn);
}
#region Move Utility
private CellPosition FindNextMovableCellUp(CellPosition pos, int firstRow)
{
int row = pos.Row;
// find next movable cell upward
while (row > firstRow)
{
row--;
var cell = this.cells[row, pos.Col];
if (cell != null && !cell.MergeEndPos.IsEmpty
&& row < cell.MergeEndPos.Row
&& row >= cell.MergeStartPos.Row)
{
continue;
}
if (this.rows[row].InnerHeight > 0)
{
break;
}
}
return new CellPosition(row, pos.Col);
}
private CellPosition FindNextMovableCellLeft(CellPosition pos, int firstCol)
{
int col = pos.Col;
// find next movable cell leftward
while (col > firstCol)
{
col--;
var cell = this.cells[pos.Row, col];
if (cell != null && !cell.MergeEndPos.IsEmpty
&& col < cell.MergeEndPos.Col
&& col >= cell.MergeStartPos.Col)
{
continue;
}
if (this.cols[col].InnerWidth > 0)
{
break;
}
}
return new CellPosition(pos.Row, col);
}
private CellPosition FindNextMovableCellRight(CellPosition pos, RangePosition moveRange, bool autoReturn = true)
{
int col = pos.Col;
var endCol = this.selectionRange.Cols > 1 ? this.selectionRange.EndCol : this.cols.Count - 1;
if (col >= endCol)
{
var newpos = FindNextMovableCellDown(new CellPosition(pos.Row, moveRange.Col), moveRange, false);
if (pos == newpos) return pos;
pos = newpos;
}
int row = pos.Row;
// find next movable cell rightward
while (col < moveRange.EndCol)
{
col++;
var cell = this.cells[row, col];
if (cell != null && !cell.MergeEndPos.IsEmpty
&& col <= cell.MergeEndPos.Col
&& col > cell.MergeStartPos.Col)
{
continue;
}
if (this.cols[col].InnerWidth > 0)
{
break;
}
}
return new CellPosition(pos.Row, col);
}
private CellPosition FindNextMovableCellDown(CellPosition pos, RangePosition moveRange, bool autoReturn = true)
{
int row = pos.Row;
// find next movable cell downward
while (row < moveRange.EndRow)
{
row++;
var cell = this.cells[row, pos.Col];
if (cell != null && !cell.MergeEndPos.IsEmpty
&& row <= cell.MergeEndPos.Row
&& row > cell.MergeStartPos.Row)
{
continue;
}
if (this.rows[row].InnerHeight > 0)
{
break;
}
}
return new CellPosition(row, pos.Col);
}
#endregion // Move Utility
/// <summary>
/// Move forward selection
/// </summary>
public void MoveSelectionForward()
{
if (SelectionMovedForward != null)
{
var arg = new SelectionMovedForwardEventArgs();
SelectionMovedForward(this, arg);
if (arg.IsCancelled)
{
return;
}
}
#if EX_SCRIPT
var scriptReturn = RaiseScriptEvent("onnextfocus");
if (scriptReturn != null && !ScriptRunningMachine.GetBoolValue(scriptReturn))
{
return;
}
#endif
switch (selectionForwardDirection)
{
case SelectionForwardDirection.Right:
{
if (this.selEnd.Col < this.cols.Count - 1)
{
MoveSelectionRight();
}
else
{
if (this.selEnd.Row < this.rows.Count - 1)
{
this.selEnd.Col = 0;
MoveSelectionDown();
}
}
}
break;
case SelectionForwardDirection.Down:
{
if (this.selEnd.Row < this.rows.Count - 1)
{
this.selEnd.Col = this.focusReturnColumn;
MoveSelectionDown();
}
else
{
if (this.selEnd.Col < this.cols.Count - 1)
{
this.selEnd.Row = 0;
MoveSelectionRight();
}
}
}
break;
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Move backward selection
/// </summary>
public void MoveSelectionBackward()
{
if (SelectionMovedBackward != null)
{
var arg = new SelectionMovedBackwardEventArgs();
SelectionMovedBackward(this, arg);
if (arg.IsCancelled)
{
return;
}
}
#if EX_SCRIPT
var scriptReturn = RaiseScriptEvent("onpreviousfocus");
if (scriptReturn != null && !ScriptRunningMachine.GetBoolValue(scriptReturn))
{
return;
}
#endif
switch (selectionForwardDirection)
{
case SelectionForwardDirection.Right:
{
if (selEnd.Col > 0)
{
MoveSelectionLeft();
}
}
break;
case SelectionForwardDirection.Down:
{
if (selEnd.Row > 0)
{
MoveSelectionUp();
}
}
break;
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Upward to move focus selection
/// </summary>
/// <param name="appendSelect">Decide whether or not perform an appending select (same as Shift key press down)</param>
public void MoveSelectionUp(bool appendSelect = false)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
int row = selEnd.Row;
// downward to find next movable cell
while (row > 0)
{
row--;
var cell = this.cells[row, selEnd.Col];
if (cell != null && !cell.MergeEndPos.IsEmpty
&& row < cell.MergeEndPos.Row
&& row >= cell.MergeStartPos.Row)
{
continue;
}
if (this.rows[row].InnerHeight > 0)
{
MoveRangeSelection(selStart, new CellPosition(row, selEnd.Col), appendSelect);
break;
}
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Downward to move focus selection
/// </summary>
/// <param name="appendSelect">Decide whether or not perform an appending select (same as Shift key press down)</param>
public void MoveSelectionDown(bool appendSelect = false)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
int row = selEnd.Row;
// downward to find next movable cell
while (row < this.rows.Count - 1)
{
row++;
var cell = this.cells[row, selEnd.Col];
if (cell != null && !cell.MergeEndPos.IsEmpty
&& row <= cell.MergeEndPos.Row
&& row > cell.MergeStartPos.Row)
{
continue;
}
if (this.rows[row].InnerHeight > 0)
{
MoveRangeSelection(this.selStart, new CellPosition(row, selEnd.Col), appendSelect);
break;
}
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Leftward to move focus selection
/// </summary>
/// <param name="appendSelect">Decide whether or not perform an appending select (same as Shift key press down)</param>
public void MoveSelectionLeft(bool appendSelect = false)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
int col = selEnd.Col;
// downward to find next movable cell
while (col > 0)
{
col--;
var cell = this.cells[selEnd.Row, col];
if (cell != null && !cell.MergeEndPos.IsEmpty
&& col < cell.MergeEndPos.Col
&& col >= cell.MergeStartPos.Col)
{
continue;
}
if (this.cols[col].InnerWidth > 0)
{
//selEnd.Col = col;
MoveRangeSelection(this.selStart, new CellPosition(selEnd.Row, col), appendSelect);
break;
}
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Rightward to move focus selection
/// </summary>
/// <param name="appendSelect">Decide whether or not perform an appending select (same as Shift key press down)</param>
public void MoveSelectionRight(bool appendSelect = false)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
int col = selEnd.Col;
// downward to find next movable cell
while (col < this.cols.Count - 1)
{
col++;
var cell = this.cells[selEnd.Row, col];
if (cell != null && !cell.MergeEndPos.IsEmpty
&& col <= cell.MergeEndPos.Col
&& col > cell.MergeStartPos.Col)
{
continue;
}
if (this.cols[col].InnerWidth > 0)
{
MoveRangeSelection(selStart, new CellPosition(this.selEnd.Row, col), appendSelect);
break;
}
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Move selection to first cell of row or column which is specified by <code>rowOrColumn</code>
/// </summary>
/// <param name="rowOrColumn">specifies that move selection to first cell of row or column</param>
/// <param name="appendSelect">Decide whether or not perform an appending select (same as Shift key press down)</param>
public void MoveSelectionHome(RowOrColumn rowOrColumn, bool appendSelect = false)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
//bool selectionChanged = false;
CellPosition endpos = this.selEnd;
if ((rowOrColumn & RowOrColumn.Row) == RowOrColumn.Row)
{
endpos.Row = 0;
}
if ((rowOrColumn & RowOrColumn.Column) == RowOrColumn.Column)
{
endpos.Col = 0;
}
if (endpos != this.selEnd)
{
MoveRangeSelection(this.selStart, endpos, appendSelect);
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Move selection to last cell of row or column which is specified by <code>rowOrColumn</code>
/// </summary>
/// <param name="rowOrColumn">specifies that move selection to the cell of row or column</param>
/// <param name="appendSelect">Determines that whether or not to expand the current selection.</param>
public void MoveSelectionEnd(RowOrColumn rowOrColumn, bool appendSelect = false)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
//bool selectionChanged = false;
var endpos = this.selEnd;
if ((rowOrColumn & RowOrColumn.Row) == RowOrColumn.Row)
{
endpos.Row = this.rows.Count - 1;
}
if ((rowOrColumn & RowOrColumn.Column) == RowOrColumn.Column)
{
endpos.Col = this.cols.Count - 1;
}
if (endpos != this.selEnd)
{
MoveRangeSelection(this.selStart, endpos, appendSelect);
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Move selection to cell in next page vertically.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="appendSelect">When this value is true, the selection will be expanded to the cell in next page rather than moving it.</param>
public void MoveSelectionPageDown(bool appendSelect = false)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
int row = selEnd.Row;
NormalViewportController nvc = viewportController as NormalViewportController;
if (nvc != null)
{
IViewport viewport = nvc.FocusView as IViewport;
if (viewport != null)
{
row += Math.Max(viewport.VisibleRegion.Rows - 1, 1);
}
}
var pos = this.FixPos(new CellPosition(row, selEnd.Col));
var cell = this.cells[pos.Row, pos.Col];
if (cell != null)
{
cell = GetMergedCellOfRange(pos.Row, selEnd.Col);
pos = cell.Position;
}
MoveRangeSelection(this.selStart, pos, appendSelect);
}
/// <summary>
/// Move selection to cell in previous page vertically.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="appendSelect">When this value is true, the selection will be expanded to the cell in previous page rather than moving it.</param>
public void MoveSelectionPageUp(bool appendSelect = false)
{
if (this.selectionMode == WorksheetSelectionMode.None)
{
return;
}
int row = selEnd.Row;
NormalViewportController nvc = viewportController as NormalViewportController;
if (nvc != null)
{
IViewport viewport = nvc.FocusView as IViewport;
if (viewport != null)
{
row -= Math.Max(viewport.VisibleRegion.Rows - 1, 1);
}
}
var pos = this.FixPos(new CellPosition(row, selEnd.Col));
var cell = this.cells[pos.Row, pos.Col];
if (cell != null)
{
cell = GetMergedCellOfRange(pos.Row, selEnd.Col);
pos = cell.Position;
}
MoveRangeSelection(this.selStart, pos, appendSelect);
}
#endregion // Keyboard Move
#region Events
/// <summary>
/// Event raised before selection range changing
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler<BeforeSelectionChangeEventArgs> BeforeSelectionRangeChange;
/// <summary>
/// Event raised on focus-selection-range changed
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler<RangeEventArgs> SelectionRangeChanged;
/// <summary>
/// Event raised on focus-selection-range is changing by mouse move
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler<RangeEventArgs> SelectionRangeChanging;
/// <summary>
/// Event raised on Selection-Mode change
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler SelectionModeChanged;
/// <summary>
/// Event raised on Selection-Style change
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler SelectionStyleChanged;
/// <summary>
/// Event raised on SelectionForwardDirection change
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler SelectionForwardDirectionChanged;
/// <summary>
/// Event raised when focus-selection move to next position
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler<SelectionMovedForwardEventArgs> SelectionMovedForward;
/// <summary>
/// Event raised when focus-selection move to previous position
/// </summary>
public event EventHandler<SelectionMovedBackwardEventArgs> SelectionMovedBackward;
#endregion // Events
}
}
```
|
Yesaya Nickhanor Desnam or Yesaya Desnam is an Indonesian former footballer.
His natural position is defender. He is the first Asmat to play for Indonesia. He was in the squad for 2010 AFF Championship.
References
External links
1985 births
Living people
Indonesian Christians
Indonesian men's footballers
Indonesia men's international footballers
People from Merauke Regency
Men's association football central defenders
Persiwa Wamena players
Bhayangkara Presisi Indonesia F.C. players
Perseru Serui players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Indonesian Premier Division players
Footballers from Papua
|
Megalonotini is a tribe of dirt-colored seed bugs in the family Rhyparochromidae. There are about 19 genera and more than 80 described species in Megalonotini.
Genera
These 21 genera belong to the tribe Megalonotini:
Afralampes Slater, 1998
Allocentrum Bergroth, 1894
Anepsiocoris Puton, 1886
Anepsiodes Reuter, 1882
Dermatinoides Slater & Sweet, 1973
Hadrocnemis Jakovlev, 1881
Hispanocoris Costas & Vázquez, 1999
Icus Fieber, 1861
Lamprodema Fieber, 1861
Lasiocoris Fieber, 1861
Leptomelus Jakovlev, 1881
Megalonotus Fieber, 1861
Metastenothorax Reuter, 1884
Microthisus Lindberg, 1958
Pezocoris Jakovlev, 1875
Piezoscelis Fieber, 1870
Polycrates Stal, 1865
Proderus Fieber, 1861
Sphragisticus Stal, 1872
Tempereocoris Pericart, 1995
Tethallotrum Scudder, 1962
References
Further reading
External links
Rhyparochromidae
Articles created by Qbugbot
|
Yoo Gun-hyung (Hangul: 유건형; born February 14, 1979) is a South Korean recording artist and record producer, best known for his work with PSY, and, in particular, their international hit Gangnam Style.
Biography
Yoo Gun-Hyung was introduced to the world of K-pop in 1996 as one-half (along with Suh Jung-Hwan) of the Korean hip hop duo Untitle. Yoo and Suh were both still in high school, and gained particular recognition in the Korean music industry because they were already writing their own songs. Their second album, entitled The Blue Color was released in 1997. Untitle disbanded in 1999.
Yoo's collaboration with PSY goes back at least to 2006, with Yoo writing music and PSY writing lyrics for songs on the 2006 album PSY – We Are The One. They have also co-written songs for IVY, Kim Jin Pyo, and Ulala Session.
It has also been reported that Yoo and former Untitle co-member Suh have been working with Jang Woo Hyuk (formerly of H.O.T.) on a solo project.
"Gangnam Style", the lead single of PSY 6 (Six Rules), Part 1, which Yoo co-wrote with PSY, was released on July 15, 2012, and the music video was uploaded to YouTube the same day. Within weeks, the video had made it to No. 3 on YouTube's music video list. Then in August, the video went viral outside of the Korean-speaking world, and by September had become the most "liked" video in the history of YouTube.
References
Living people
South Korean musicians
South Korean record producers
South Korean songwriters
1979 births
|
Walala Tjapaltjarri (born Walala Tjapangati) is an Australian Aboriginal artist.
Early life
Tjapaltjarri was born in the late 1960s or early 1970s. He was born at Marua, near Lake Mackay. He grew up living a nomadic, traditional way of life in the desert. His family had never come into contact with modern, Euro-Australian society. He had never seen a white person, and his family always thought the aeroplanes they saw flying overhead were ghosts or spirits. Before Tjapaltjarri was born, his father Lanti had lived for a short time at the mission in Balgo. But he had run away after getting into trouble for stealing food. It was his decision to stay in the desert, and kept his family far away from the towns. Tjapaltjarri's mother was named Watjunka, and he was Watjunka's only child. He also had two other mothers, Papunya and Nanu, who were his father's secondary wives (and his mother's sisters). His father and Watjunka both died when he was young. The family finally came into contact with outsiders in October 1984, and were settled at Kiwirrkurra. He and his family became known as the last Aborigines living a traditional nomadic way of life in Australia.
He is now married with two children, and lives between Kiwirrkura, Alice Springs, and Yuendumu, where his wife is from. He paints at Hoppy's Camp, outside Alice Springs.
Painting
Tjapaltjarri began painting in December 1987, a few years after settling at Kiwirrkurra. He was introduced to painting by his cousin Warlimpirrnga. He taught Tjapaltjarri about using paints and canvas. Tjapaltjarri joined the Papunya Tula artists, and he, Thomas and Warlimpirrnga eventually gained fame internationally as the Tjapaltjarri Brothers. Although he normally paints using Tjapaltjarri as a surname, Tjapaltjarri's skin name is Tjapangati. He now works on paper with a mixture of paint and traditional pigments.
His paintings depict scenes from the Tingari cycle (sacred and secret songs about the ancestors of the Pintupi). He uses only four colours at most, sticking to earthy, ochre colours to reflect the desert landscape. The places he depicts in his paintings are part of his traditional country, including Marruwa, Mintarnpi, Wanapatangu, Mina Mina, Naami, Yarrawangu and Wilkinkarra (Lake Mackay). These were places where the ancestors stopped for ceremonies when travelling across the country.
Tjapaltjarri uses acrylic paintings on canvas. His early work was in the flowing "dot" style of painting typical of the Papunya Tula artists. His style became different during the late 1990s, and began to paint rigid rectangles, replacing dotted lines with thick, solid lines.
His first exhibition was in 1997, for the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Award in Darwin. Most of his work is shown in exhibitions alongside the works of other Aboriginal artists. He has paintings in permanent collections in Australia, Europe and the United States. Tjapaltjarri paints the most out of the three Tjapaltjarri brothers. When painting regularly, he earns up to AU$2000 a day. His paintings often sell for many thousands of dollars.
References
Indigenous Australian artists
Living people
Australian painters
1970s births
Pintupi
|
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