You can extend the VSlider and add a method that reports the reverse of the slider value.
public function getReverseSliderValue() : Number {
return Math.abs(this.value - this.maximum) + this.minimum;
//Adding minimum is necessary when minimum != 0
}
You can probably type faster than you can clean up images and install OCR engines:
#!/usr/bin/perl
(my$d=q[AA GTCAGTTCCT
CGCTATGTA ACACACACCA
TTTGTGAGT ATGTAACATA
CTCGCTGGC TATGTCAGAC
AGATTGATC GATCGATAGA
...
I always thought that I should use "an" if the next word starts with a vocal. But recently I read the sentence:
In order to find a object-oriented
system, ...
So am I wrong or is this a spelling error?
Honky Château is the fifth studio album by British singer/songwriter Elton John, released in 1972. In 2003, the album was ranked number 357 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. This was the final Elton John album on the Uni label in the US and Canada before the Music Corporation of America consolidated all of its various labels under the MCA brand. This and Elton's earlier Uni albums were later reissued on MCA Records.
Music
This is the first album since John's debut (Empty Sky) not to feature strings on any songs, except for violinist Jean-Luc Ponty o...
In the following example, is it appropriate to use "a" or "an" as the indefinite article, and why?
He ate [insert here] green apple.
I know that in the case of just "apple", it would be "an apple," but I've heard conflicting answers for "green apple," where the noun is separated from the ar...
A basic grammar rule is to use an instead of a before a vowel sound. Given that historic is not pronounced with a silent h, I use “a historic”. Is this correct? What about heroic? Should be “It was a heroic act” or “It was an heroic act”?
I remember reading somewhere that the h is sometimes sile...
99% of the time, I'm clear on when I should use "a" versus "an." There's one case, though, where people & references I respect disagree.
Which of the following would you precede with "a" or "an," and why?
FAQ
FUBAR
SCUBA
[Note: I've read the questions "A historic..." or "An historic…"? a...
On some forum today I referred to myself as a English nerd. Now I'm wondering whether maybe I'm an English nerd.
My gut feeling tells me that there is a slight nuance in meaning between the two phrases and that even though the general rule is to use an in front of a word starting with a vowel, I...
The word Year when pronounced starts with a phonetic sound of e which is a vowel sound making it eligible for being preceded by An. Yet, we tend to write A year. Why?
When a/an precedes a parenthetical aside (sometimes seen in informal/conversational writing), should the vowel rule depend on the first word in parentheses, or the next word in the "regular" flow of the sentence?
I need a (memorable) idiom (preceding an m word; use a)
or
I need an (memo...
Possible Duplicate:
Use of “a” versus “an”
Which is correct — “A Year” or “An Year”?
I noticed an ad on Stack Overflow featuring another StackExchange site and the title of the question had this in it:
Allow an user to...
But shouldn't it be
Allow a ...
@Cerberus the problem is very acute with [ji], since [j] is merely the non-syllabic version of [i]. non-natives (not just Romanians) take the difference between [ji] and [ɂi] to be extremely subtle
I am @RegDwight's unspoken id; I say the things he is too afraid to say. Fear me! For as I speak, so he thinks; and as he thinks, so I speak! You are all doomed!
@JSB: Right, oo- is the only thing that comes to mind. But it would be interesting to see whether the same phenomenon strikes in other languages, which do have [u-].
(The reason why Greek ypsilon/upsilon only increases my confusion is because minuscule upsilon looks like u, not y, even though we use Latin minuscule y in IPA.)
IPA [y] corresponds to Latin y, that's probably it. But I can't possibly remember something so confusing.
The close central unrounded vowel is a type of vowel sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is . The IPA symbol is the letter i with a horizontal bar. Both the symbol and the sound are commonly referred to as "barred-i".
There is also a near-close central unrounded vowel in some languages.
Features
* Its vowel height is close, which means the tongue is positioned as close as possible to the roof of the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant.
* Its vowel backness is central,...
It is so difficult to hear distinctions that one is used to considering insignificant variations of the same phoneme in the languages one knows... argg...
Proposed Q&A site for all, young and old, that have questions regarding building tricks, missing instructions sets, want to find particular part, exchange on their great creations.
@Martha: Putting stuff in one's mouth can be satisfying, I can see that, though to be honest it doesn't quite appeal so much to me now, if adults do it.
Hello guys,
I have recently heard the term "Acme developer of IPhone." I was just wondering what it stands for?
I think I know the meaning: Is it when a developer goes to a client and presents his/her ideas for the app?
Thanks for your help.
@Cerberus Yeah. (BTW I would really appreciate a spelling of my name as Billare.) I'm not sure whether or not Acme is being used as in the Wile E. Coyote sense or as a reference to "any generic company."
This is kind of tricky, let's see if I can explain...
As Claudiu pointed out already, gerund is the term. However, expanding on what he said, "a verb ending in -ing" is not necessarily a gerund; it could be a present participle. A gerund is an -ing form used as a noun (more precisely, as the hea...
2×4:
From Wikipedia.
Edit: Oh, and the sentence as a whole means that the observation was a big surprise or a great shock; an aha experience or a eureka moment; an eye-opener.
A rock is bigger, possibly immovable, you couldn't throw it with one hand, at a pinch you might be able to with two.
Above, a Google Image result for "Rock", below, for "Stone"
Note that a boulder is probably bigger than a rock1.
Below, a boulder
Oh, also note that rocks and boulders are...
@RegDwight @Robusto, actually, i did downvote, b/c though the answer was cute, i didn't think it answered the question. i also downvoted the question itself. i like my downvotes -- i make no apologies