@El'endiaStarman One possible transformation for any sturdy rectangle is to swap a row/column with any row/column that's an even distance away from it.
I've been thinking of writing a program that finds cycles in sturdy squares. As in, you apply one transformation to get from A to B, and the same transformation goes from B to C, to ... to A.
This would highlight an element of the group because all elements will be equivalent to the identity if applied often enough in succession.
@feersum You can do this too for odd sizes; you just have to flip a row/column.
In 2006, a branding issue developed when Mike Connor, representing the Mozilla Corporation, requested that the Debian Project comply with Mozilla standards for use of the Thunderbird trademark when redistributing the Thunderbird software. At issue were modifications not approved by the Mozilla Foundation, when the name for the software remained the same.
The Debian Project subsequently rebranded the Mozilla Firefox program, and other software released by Mozilla, so that Debian could distribute modified software without being bound by the trademark requirements that the Mozilla Foundation had invoked...
I never would of thought how difficult it was to come up with spin-off names to JavaScript. The best I've thought of is KavaScript (K comes after J) which sounds horrible.
> This challenge is to lift the spirits of our mod Alex A., who is usually wrong. Suppose you have a friend named Alex who needs help with basic logic and math