It’s just a joke. NAND isn’t a software, it’s a bit operation (Not And) so 1001 NAND 1010 = 0111
It’s technically a “piece” of a software and is necessary for any addition and more.
It’s just a joke. NAND isn’t a software, it’s a bit operation (Not And) so 1001 NAND 1010 = 0111
It’s technically a “piece” of a software and is necessary for any addition and more.
NAND gate
Well, good decisions aren’t his forte, so what else is left there?
Mainz baby!
where as before people where like ‘wtf is Kazakhstan?’
Maybe US Americans
(ノಠ益ಠ)ノ彡┻━┻
Deer can’t see orange, so one colour fits all ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Those Belgian researchers must be some foxes to develop such a theory!
O = n^n
Yeah, but I tried to stick to the presently used alphabet.
To fully heal English, a bigger operation is in order.
And thru and tuff are sometimes used in American English, but mostly on signage and branding
That means, they are sensible ways to spell those words, doesn’t it? Like “open alnite”.
German natively, English, French and Spanish.
Norse is old Norwegian/Danish kinda.
Norman is old French.
The Normans were northmen (aka Scandinavians) that were allowed to settle in the Normandy (north west France). (They were the ruling class, the inhabitants from before continued to live there).They then adopted the French language.
Out of the languages I know, non have the nonsensical letter-sound pairings that English has. French has some combinations you wouldn’t expect (like eaux= o) but they are consistent in every word they appear. Irish also has some wild letter combinations, but I know to little about that to know, if it’s as confusing as English.
To illustrate, I would say you could write the words above a lot easier and understandably:
Taut, thou, thaut, thru, thruout, thorou, tuff
Grammatically, English is pretty easy. But the pronunciation is so inconsistent, that it is necessary to hold spelling bees in school. My language doesn’t need spelling bees for example.
What’s the programming language that allows emojis as variable names?
Looked it up a little: it’s all languages that support extended characters and not only ASCII. But it looks pretty unreadable.
Well, it’s not cardboard, but I am absolutely fascinated by euroboxes.
A europallet is 1200x800mm.
Then there are euroboxes of 800x600mm, 600x400mm, 300x400mm etc.
They are stackable, reusable and recyclable and come in different types. Fully enclosed, with lid, with grid walls etc.
Machinists use them as toolboxes, bakers to transport bread and veggie vendors stack have their products on the market in euroboxes.
Yep, replace edge with isOnGround or something
Calm down, Adolf.
In the cited study with buckets, it was shown that striped and spotted surfaces attract fewer flies.
That makes me think if Nguni cattle have an easier time with those pests.
If yes, that would be another plus for hardy landraces in place of overengineered, capitalmaxxed breeds.