I am working with Microsoft Visual Studio.Net 2003 at home. I need to create a Visual C# project using the template ASP.NET web application. I do not know what to state in the location.
I understand that it should be a URL but what exactly should it be?
Can a geocities or a free web hosting website do?
If so, how do I do it?
What do I enter in the location when working with ASP.NET web application in order to save my work?
If you want to host the application on the same machine, it should be http://localhost/%26lt;Virtual Directory%26gt;. You can also use %26lt;Virtualhttp://127.0.0.1/%26lt;Virtual Directory%26gt;
If you want to host on a machine within your local area network, you can use the name of the machine or the ip address of the machine. Type ipconfig from commadline to get the ip address of any machine.
%26lt;Virtual Directory%26gt; is the folder you creat for your application.
If you want to host it somewhere else, you need to FTP the files to the server then you can use the website's name.
I did not clearly understand your question. But I hope this helps.
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Is sexual violence against indigenous women in the USA more widespread?
Native American and Alaska Native women are more than 2.5 times more likely to be raped or sexually assaulted than other women in the USA?
http://takeaction.amnestyusa.org/siteapp...
Is sexual violence against indigenous women in the USA more widespread?
I think these men's "fixation on social chains of command" is a part of the problem, but the root of the issue is far more complicated than that. And what's worse, it's a vicious cycle.
Indigenous people in American society have been marginalized, stereotyped, and stripped of the land and power that they once held. The poverty rate among Native American people is 25.9%, compared to the national rate of 11.3%. Along with this of course comes lack of decent healthcare, lack of affordable housing, substandard education, etc. Add in an American society where Native American men are marginalized and stereotyped, and their heritage is either mocked or glamorized, and what you get is a large group of people who feel helpless and demoralized.
And then if you add in the fact that this society demands that a man provide for and protect his family, you've created a situation of desperation, frustration, and ultimately violence.
So some men take their anger out on their wives' or other women's heads, and then when their sons grow up in the same culture, under the same demands, and having seen their own father figures abusing women? It's self-perpetuating, and the only way to stop it is to overcome our stereotypes of what Native American culture is, and to lift these people out of the poverty that our society bestowed upon them.
Fixing these problems isn't about taking responsibility for other people's offenses from so long ago. It's about validating and then remedying the fact that these offenses occurred in the first place, especially in light of the fact that some of us are still feeling the aftermath, sometimes quite physically.
Thank you for the action links, and for initiating this discussion.
Reply:idk
but is sexual asult like when ur bf starts pulling ur hair while ur doin it?
Reply:I know nothing about this so have no right to comment, but it would be in character for males anywhere - with their fixation on social chains of command. They arbitrarily decide on human values, and bully those with a lower status, but grovel before the powerful with sickening routine.
Native Indian women have no Police prepared to protect them or imprison those who abuse them as a result it's open season on anyone unprotected. A cowardly plundering of the helpless. Nothing new there.
Reply:In those parts of the world there is more abundance of men then women ergo Rape, which should not be permitted and something should be done about it
Reply:If that's true, then that's a problem all over the world, i wouldn't be sorprised if that same situation happens in Mexico with indigenous women.
But an important problem here is that many of this women are so marginated that they even don't report those cases.
Reply:This is native peoples, both on and off the reservation. That is the problem, really.
From the summary:
"The Federal Government has also undermined the authority of tribal governments to respond to crimes committed on tribal land. Women who come forward to report sexual violence are caught in a jurisdictional maze that federal, state and tribal police often cannot quickly sort out. Three justice systems -- tribal, state and federal -- are potentially involved in responding to sexual violence against Indigenous women. Three main factors determine which of these justice systems has authority to prosecute such crimes:
- whether the victim is a member of a federally recognized tribe or not;
- whether the accused is a member of a federally recognized tribe or not; and
- whether the offence took place on tribal land or not.
The answers to these questions are often not self-evident and there can be significant delays while police, lawyers and courts establish who has jurisdiction over a particular crime. The result can be such confusion and uncertainty that no one intervenes and survivors of sexual violence are denied access to justice.
Tribal prosecutors cannot prosecute crimes committed by non-Native perpetrators. Tribal courts are also prohibited from passing custodial sentences that are in keeping with the seriousness of the crimes of rape or other forms of sexual violence. The maximum prison sentence tribal courts can impose for crimes, including rape, is one year. At the same time, the majority of rape cases on tribal lands that are referred to the federal courts are reportedly never brought to trial.
As a consequence Indigenous women are being denied justice. And the perpetrators are going unpunished.
In failing to protect Indigenous women from sexual violence, the USA is violating these women’s human rights. Indigenous women’s organizations and tribal authorities have brought forward concrete proposals to help stop sexual violence against Indigenous women – but the federal government has failed to act. "
So rapists get off because the Res doesn't have authority to take action, and the Fed does not persecute. And because the punishment is light, if it happens AT ALL, native women are victimized at higher rates then that of non-native women.
I heard this on NPR a while back, and I cried when I heard about Pretty Bird Woman house.
The idea of one of the few shelters available for these women, one named in honor of a woman who was killed like an animal through this injustice, was so terrible.
I hated that Amnesty International was taking our nation to task for such a shameful practice.
You can still donate to the shelter for native women and children here:
http://prettybirdwomanhouse.chipin.com/p...
Reply:we have to ask them only
Reply:Violence against indigenous peoples around the world is higher than that toward other populations. You have the issues of isolation, substance abuse, poverty, poor educations, unemployment, cultural confusion and so on that are rampant in such cultures. I grew up in a largely native area, and I can tell you that it is like a war zone there. All people currently living on reservations (in Canada, at least) are suffering. The housing is substandard, the drinking water is poison, the fish are toxic--there are very few things that are positive in those communities. Young Native men in Canada have the highest suicide and murder rate in the world. Domestic abuse is extremely prevalent--children are having children in these communities, and rape is a fact of life. Violence against indigenous people is an enormous problem, but I don't see the rape of these cultures as being a male/female issue. Yes, native girls and women are routinely abused sexually and otherwise. I grew up seeing things like 3 men goading 1 woman with alcohol, and demanding certain sexual acts in return for a drink. This was during the day, in public. There are definite problems there, but I truly do not see it as being an issue for women only. Native men are suffering a great deal, and they are killing each other daily. There are a lot of deeply rooted problems within indigenous communities, with sexual violence being very widespread, but with violence in general being even more widespread. In my opinion, the UN will always be a farce as long as nothing continues to be done for an entire group of people that is systematically being destroyed through neglect based in discrimination. These are human beings living in the richest continent in the world, and they are living in third-world conditions. It is wrong, and the UN needs to step in and try to rectify what has been done to these people.
Reply:Can you be more specific? Is this violence on or off the reservation? Is it native on native or other race on native violence?
gift
http://takeaction.amnestyusa.org/siteapp...
Is sexual violence against indigenous women in the USA more widespread?
I think these men's "fixation on social chains of command" is a part of the problem, but the root of the issue is far more complicated than that. And what's worse, it's a vicious cycle.
Indigenous people in American society have been marginalized, stereotyped, and stripped of the land and power that they once held. The poverty rate among Native American people is 25.9%, compared to the national rate of 11.3%. Along with this of course comes lack of decent healthcare, lack of affordable housing, substandard education, etc. Add in an American society where Native American men are marginalized and stereotyped, and their heritage is either mocked or glamorized, and what you get is a large group of people who feel helpless and demoralized.
And then if you add in the fact that this society demands that a man provide for and protect his family, you've created a situation of desperation, frustration, and ultimately violence.
So some men take their anger out on their wives' or other women's heads, and then when their sons grow up in the same culture, under the same demands, and having seen their own father figures abusing women? It's self-perpetuating, and the only way to stop it is to overcome our stereotypes of what Native American culture is, and to lift these people out of the poverty that our society bestowed upon them.
Fixing these problems isn't about taking responsibility for other people's offenses from so long ago. It's about validating and then remedying the fact that these offenses occurred in the first place, especially in light of the fact that some of us are still feeling the aftermath, sometimes quite physically.
Thank you for the action links, and for initiating this discussion.
Reply:idk
but is sexual asult like when ur bf starts pulling ur hair while ur doin it?
Reply:I know nothing about this so have no right to comment, but it would be in character for males anywhere - with their fixation on social chains of command. They arbitrarily decide on human values, and bully those with a lower status, but grovel before the powerful with sickening routine.
Native Indian women have no Police prepared to protect them or imprison those who abuse them as a result it's open season on anyone unprotected. A cowardly plundering of the helpless. Nothing new there.
Reply:In those parts of the world there is more abundance of men then women ergo Rape, which should not be permitted and something should be done about it
Reply:If that's true, then that's a problem all over the world, i wouldn't be sorprised if that same situation happens in Mexico with indigenous women.
But an important problem here is that many of this women are so marginated that they even don't report those cases.
Reply:This is native peoples, both on and off the reservation. That is the problem, really.
From the summary:
"The Federal Government has also undermined the authority of tribal governments to respond to crimes committed on tribal land. Women who come forward to report sexual violence are caught in a jurisdictional maze that federal, state and tribal police often cannot quickly sort out. Three justice systems -- tribal, state and federal -- are potentially involved in responding to sexual violence against Indigenous women. Three main factors determine which of these justice systems has authority to prosecute such crimes:
- whether the victim is a member of a federally recognized tribe or not;
- whether the accused is a member of a federally recognized tribe or not; and
- whether the offence took place on tribal land or not.
The answers to these questions are often not self-evident and there can be significant delays while police, lawyers and courts establish who has jurisdiction over a particular crime. The result can be such confusion and uncertainty that no one intervenes and survivors of sexual violence are denied access to justice.
Tribal prosecutors cannot prosecute crimes committed by non-Native perpetrators. Tribal courts are also prohibited from passing custodial sentences that are in keeping with the seriousness of the crimes of rape or other forms of sexual violence. The maximum prison sentence tribal courts can impose for crimes, including rape, is one year. At the same time, the majority of rape cases on tribal lands that are referred to the federal courts are reportedly never brought to trial.
As a consequence Indigenous women are being denied justice. And the perpetrators are going unpunished.
In failing to protect Indigenous women from sexual violence, the USA is violating these women’s human rights. Indigenous women’s organizations and tribal authorities have brought forward concrete proposals to help stop sexual violence against Indigenous women – but the federal government has failed to act. "
So rapists get off because the Res doesn't have authority to take action, and the Fed does not persecute. And because the punishment is light, if it happens AT ALL, native women are victimized at higher rates then that of non-native women.
I heard this on NPR a while back, and I cried when I heard about Pretty Bird Woman house.
The idea of one of the few shelters available for these women, one named in honor of a woman who was killed like an animal through this injustice, was so terrible.
I hated that Amnesty International was taking our nation to task for such a shameful practice.
You can still donate to the shelter for native women and children here:
http://prettybirdwomanhouse.chipin.com/p...
Reply:we have to ask them only
Reply:Violence against indigenous peoples around the world is higher than that toward other populations. You have the issues of isolation, substance abuse, poverty, poor educations, unemployment, cultural confusion and so on that are rampant in such cultures. I grew up in a largely native area, and I can tell you that it is like a war zone there. All people currently living on reservations (in Canada, at least) are suffering. The housing is substandard, the drinking water is poison, the fish are toxic--there are very few things that are positive in those communities. Young Native men in Canada have the highest suicide and murder rate in the world. Domestic abuse is extremely prevalent--children are having children in these communities, and rape is a fact of life. Violence against indigenous people is an enormous problem, but I don't see the rape of these cultures as being a male/female issue. Yes, native girls and women are routinely abused sexually and otherwise. I grew up seeing things like 3 men goading 1 woman with alcohol, and demanding certain sexual acts in return for a drink. This was during the day, in public. There are definite problems there, but I truly do not see it as being an issue for women only. Native men are suffering a great deal, and they are killing each other daily. There are a lot of deeply rooted problems within indigenous communities, with sexual violence being very widespread, but with violence in general being even more widespread. In my opinion, the UN will always be a farce as long as nothing continues to be done for an entire group of people that is systematically being destroyed through neglect based in discrimination. These are human beings living in the richest continent in the world, and they are living in third-world conditions. It is wrong, and the UN needs to step in and try to rectify what has been done to these people.
Reply:Can you be more specific? Is this violence on or off the reservation? Is it native on native or other race on native violence?
gift
Have you considered Gastric Bypass Surgery for weight loss? Here's some tips!?
Gastric bypass: Is this weight-loss surgery for you?
Are you a candidate for gastric bypass surgery? Find out what to expect and the benefits and risks involved.
It's always best to lose weight through a healthy diet and regular physical activity. But if you're among those who have tried and can't lose the excess weight that's causing your health problems, weight-loss (bariatric) surgery may be an option.
Gastric bypass, which changes the anatomy of your digestive system to limit the amount of food you can eat and digest, is the favored bariatric surgery in the United States. Most surgeons prefer this procedure because it's safer and has fewer complications than other available weight-loss surgeries. It can provide long-term, consistent weight loss if accompanied with ongoing behavior changes.
Gastric bypass isn't for everyone with obesity, however. It's a major procedure that poses significant risks and side effects and requires permanent changes in your lifestyle.
Who is gastric bypass surgery for?
Generally, gastric bypass surgery is reserved for people who are unable to achieve or maintain a healthy weight through diet and exercise, are severely overweight, and who have health problems as a result. Gastric bypass may be considered if:
·Your body mass index (BMI) is 40 or higher (extreme obesity).
·Your BMI is 35 to 39.9 (obesity), and you have a serious weight-related health problems such as diabetes or high blood pressure.
Gastric bypass surgery doesn't replace the need for following a healthy diet and regular physical activity program. In fact, the success of the surgery depends in part on your commitment to following the guidelines given to you about diet and exercise. As you consider weight-loss surgery, make sure that you make every effort to exercise, change your eating habits and adjust any other lifestyle factors that have contributed to your excess weight
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/gastric...
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/gastric...
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/gastric...
I had gastric bypass surgery in April 2005. I started out at 268, now I’m 180 and holding, after 1 year and 7 months. These links will help you in many ways to make a decision if this is for you or not. I vote yes, because it made such a difference in my life. I was taking 8 pills a day, and after my surgery, I lost my diabetes. The way they do the surgery, takes your diabetes away. I no longer have to take glucophage, and I no longer have high Cholesterol or high blood pressure. I’m down to 2 pills a day. I went from a size 26-28 to a 16-18.
Most people struggle with paying for the surgery. Go to this site, it is a great support system for you, because it’s only people who have had gastric bypass. Every insurance program has been rated, and you’ll get tips on how to deal with your insurance company, as well as, surgery tips, food tips, and just support. http://www.obesityhelp.com/
There is a very good web site by a guy named Basil White. He’s a govt. worker and a comedian. He walks you through everything. Very interesting. He had the surgery and did well.
http://www.basilwhite.com/gastric/
Some other helpful links…
http://dir.yahoo.com/Health/Diseases_and...
http://www.stapleclub.com/general_info.h...
http://www.locateadoc.com/articles.cfm/1...
http://www.dhmc.org/webpage.cfm?site_id=...
http://www.mygastricbypass.com/
http://www.gwdocs.com/health/eHA-eHA_Con...
Good luck with your surgery and new life!
Have you considered Gastric Bypass Surgery for weight loss? Here's some tips!?
My Dr. and I just discusses this last week. Not all people who go through that are going through it due to being lazy. I have limited things i can do as of exercise as i was a passenger in a car accident that almost broke my neck. My feet are bad and i can't walk much or use a tread mill.
Dr. talked about this due to trying to help me lower my blood pressure, diabetes, high cholestrol, ect.
I will review all the info here and all the sites you listed and talk to my Dr. again. Thank you Ziggy for your information.
Reply:http://health2000.net/gastric/ Report It
Reply:Yes, but then my cousin's husband died two days after he had it done and all my friends that had it starting gaining the weight back about 18 months to 2 years after they had the surgery, so I decided to forget it and go low calorie low fat
Reply:Thank you for providing some relevant information on a widely misunderstood topic. I have been giving thought to gastric bypass, after our third baby my weight has been hovering "much higher" than is healthy. I have been doing absolutly everything I can think of to try and take some of it off (I'm not asking to be supermodel thin, I'd just love to get to a healthier weight)
Your "question" has not swayed my decision one way or the other...but has simply given me more to think about.
This "question" actually isn't spam...if it were spam it would be flogging the miracle of one company, website or individual (spam is used generally to generate some type of income...whether it be actual sales or web traffick or whatever...this doesn't, it simply informs and offers far too many and to broad a spectrum of websites to be "working" for the good of any "one" except the good done for the "one" who posted the question, feeling a little better for a little bit after offering their P.O.V. for something that is obviously very personal and of value to them...if it's not of value to you...keep browsing...plenty of other questions in Yahoo, if it is...take it for what it's worth, weigh it against your own personal opinions %26amp; values and move on with whatever you learn from that.
Reply:wow i think i am glad i dont need gastric bypass surgery but best of luck to you.
Reply:I had a Gastric Bypass with a gastrostomy back in 1984. I presently weigh 125 lbs. I went from 261lbs.,down to 112 lbs., too skinny ! I love my weight now, after 22 years, I only gained back weight to 186, but I was on medication, that causes weight gain. I soon took it back off after going off my med. I am 5'4" tall and I wear a size 6, and some 4/5"s. I still can't eat ice-cream, and sweetened drinks of any kind. I do have bouts of diarrhea, and some medications hurt my stomach, but over all, it was the best thing I ever did. Now if I could afford to have all my loose skin removed. I can't work because it sags so on my legs, I get edema and severe muscle and feet cramps, and I have osteoarithis, so I really need to do something soon. Healthy otherwise. :)
Reply:I'm sure you mean well, but you are doing a very dangerous thing by touting a very dangerous surgery! Bariatric surgery doesn't need an ad agent to get business. And, the decision to have bariatric surgery is strictly up to the individual and their Dr. I have had the surgery and I, too, know the ins and outs of it. But I would never suggest to someone they should have it. It should be a last ditch effort before death and a decision not to be made lightly. We Americans have gotten so used to a "quick fix" for everything that we have forgotten how to really WORK to achieve an end. I include myself here. Obesity is unhealthy, for sure, but encouraging others to undergo a very risky and potentially deadly procedure based on your success is careless, to say the least. Shame on you.
Reply:Gastric Bypass is a very dangerous surgery, You could die from this!
Reply:i love how the answer can't be spam. yet the question is.
Gastric bypas is dangerous, and if people wern't so lazy they wouldn't get so fat.
-something i find ironic about the whole gastric bypass situation: If you are not lazy and choose to loose all the wieght on your own, your insurance company will not cover for your extra skin to be removed, but if you have gastric bypass they will. How messed up is that?
Are you a candidate for gastric bypass surgery? Find out what to expect and the benefits and risks involved.
It's always best to lose weight through a healthy diet and regular physical activity. But if you're among those who have tried and can't lose the excess weight that's causing your health problems, weight-loss (bariatric) surgery may be an option.
Gastric bypass, which changes the anatomy of your digestive system to limit the amount of food you can eat and digest, is the favored bariatric surgery in the United States. Most surgeons prefer this procedure because it's safer and has fewer complications than other available weight-loss surgeries. It can provide long-term, consistent weight loss if accompanied with ongoing behavior changes.
Gastric bypass isn't for everyone with obesity, however. It's a major procedure that poses significant risks and side effects and requires permanent changes in your lifestyle.
Who is gastric bypass surgery for?
Generally, gastric bypass surgery is reserved for people who are unable to achieve or maintain a healthy weight through diet and exercise, are severely overweight, and who have health problems as a result. Gastric bypass may be considered if:
·Your body mass index (BMI) is 40 or higher (extreme obesity).
·Your BMI is 35 to 39.9 (obesity), and you have a serious weight-related health problems such as diabetes or high blood pressure.
Gastric bypass surgery doesn't replace the need for following a healthy diet and regular physical activity program. In fact, the success of the surgery depends in part on your commitment to following the guidelines given to you about diet and exercise. As you consider weight-loss surgery, make sure that you make every effort to exercise, change your eating habits and adjust any other lifestyle factors that have contributed to your excess weight
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/gastric...
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/gastric...
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/gastric...
I had gastric bypass surgery in April 2005. I started out at 268, now I’m 180 and holding, after 1 year and 7 months. These links will help you in many ways to make a decision if this is for you or not. I vote yes, because it made such a difference in my life. I was taking 8 pills a day, and after my surgery, I lost my diabetes. The way they do the surgery, takes your diabetes away. I no longer have to take glucophage, and I no longer have high Cholesterol or high blood pressure. I’m down to 2 pills a day. I went from a size 26-28 to a 16-18.
Most people struggle with paying for the surgery. Go to this site, it is a great support system for you, because it’s only people who have had gastric bypass. Every insurance program has been rated, and you’ll get tips on how to deal with your insurance company, as well as, surgery tips, food tips, and just support. http://www.obesityhelp.com/
There is a very good web site by a guy named Basil White. He’s a govt. worker and a comedian. He walks you through everything. Very interesting. He had the surgery and did well.
http://www.basilwhite.com/gastric/
Some other helpful links…
http://dir.yahoo.com/Health/Diseases_and...
http://www.stapleclub.com/general_info.h...
http://www.locateadoc.com/articles.cfm/1...
http://www.dhmc.org/webpage.cfm?site_id=...
http://www.mygastricbypass.com/
http://www.gwdocs.com/health/eHA-eHA_Con...
Good luck with your surgery and new life!
Have you considered Gastric Bypass Surgery for weight loss? Here's some tips!?
My Dr. and I just discusses this last week. Not all people who go through that are going through it due to being lazy. I have limited things i can do as of exercise as i was a passenger in a car accident that almost broke my neck. My feet are bad and i can't walk much or use a tread mill.
Dr. talked about this due to trying to help me lower my blood pressure, diabetes, high cholestrol, ect.
I will review all the info here and all the sites you listed and talk to my Dr. again. Thank you Ziggy for your information.
Reply:http://health2000.net/gastric/ Report It
Reply:Yes, but then my cousin's husband died two days after he had it done and all my friends that had it starting gaining the weight back about 18 months to 2 years after they had the surgery, so I decided to forget it and go low calorie low fat
Reply:Thank you for providing some relevant information on a widely misunderstood topic. I have been giving thought to gastric bypass, after our third baby my weight has been hovering "much higher" than is healthy. I have been doing absolutly everything I can think of to try and take some of it off (I'm not asking to be supermodel thin, I'd just love to get to a healthier weight)
Your "question" has not swayed my decision one way or the other...but has simply given me more to think about.
This "question" actually isn't spam...if it were spam it would be flogging the miracle of one company, website or individual (spam is used generally to generate some type of income...whether it be actual sales or web traffick or whatever...this doesn't, it simply informs and offers far too many and to broad a spectrum of websites to be "working" for the good of any "one" except the good done for the "one" who posted the question, feeling a little better for a little bit after offering their P.O.V. for something that is obviously very personal and of value to them...if it's not of value to you...keep browsing...plenty of other questions in Yahoo, if it is...take it for what it's worth, weigh it against your own personal opinions %26amp; values and move on with whatever you learn from that.
Reply:wow i think i am glad i dont need gastric bypass surgery but best of luck to you.
Reply:I had a Gastric Bypass with a gastrostomy back in 1984. I presently weigh 125 lbs. I went from 261lbs.,down to 112 lbs., too skinny ! I love my weight now, after 22 years, I only gained back weight to 186, but I was on medication, that causes weight gain. I soon took it back off after going off my med. I am 5'4" tall and I wear a size 6, and some 4/5"s. I still can't eat ice-cream, and sweetened drinks of any kind. I do have bouts of diarrhea, and some medications hurt my stomach, but over all, it was the best thing I ever did. Now if I could afford to have all my loose skin removed. I can't work because it sags so on my legs, I get edema and severe muscle and feet cramps, and I have osteoarithis, so I really need to do something soon. Healthy otherwise. :)
Reply:I'm sure you mean well, but you are doing a very dangerous thing by touting a very dangerous surgery! Bariatric surgery doesn't need an ad agent to get business. And, the decision to have bariatric surgery is strictly up to the individual and their Dr. I have had the surgery and I, too, know the ins and outs of it. But I would never suggest to someone they should have it. It should be a last ditch effort before death and a decision not to be made lightly. We Americans have gotten so used to a "quick fix" for everything that we have forgotten how to really WORK to achieve an end. I include myself here. Obesity is unhealthy, for sure, but encouraging others to undergo a very risky and potentially deadly procedure based on your success is careless, to say the least. Shame on you.
Reply:Gastric Bypass is a very dangerous surgery, You could die from this!
Reply:i love how the answer can't be spam. yet the question is.
Gastric bypas is dangerous, and if people wern't so lazy they wouldn't get so fat.
-something i find ironic about the whole gastric bypass situation: If you are not lazy and choose to loose all the wieght on your own, your insurance company will not cover for your extra skin to be removed, but if you have gastric bypass they will. How messed up is that?
How do I fix compling error 2209?
I'm learning C++ and I'm using a compiler called borland. Error 2209 reads as this:
Error E2209 c:\coding\template.cpp 2: Unable to open include file 'iostream.h'
*** 1 errors in Compile ***
I need some help asap. I'm a hobby programmer and this is putting my learning on hold.
How do I fix compling error 2209?
Make sure the line reads: #include %26lt;iostream.h%26gt;
The angled brackets denote that the compiler should look in the project's common include folder(s) for the file being specified. If you were you using ("" - quotation marks), you would be required to specify the location of the file relative to the main project file/directory.
I suggest you use Visual Studio as your compiler, it is far better supported and much better equipped to handle newer programmers. It is available free - see source link (scroll-down and click C++ version [yellow]).
Error E2209 c:\coding\template.cpp 2: Unable to open include file 'iostream.h'
*** 1 errors in Compile ***
I need some help asap. I'm a hobby programmer and this is putting my learning on hold.
How do I fix compling error 2209?
Make sure the line reads: #include %26lt;iostream.h%26gt;
The angled brackets denote that the compiler should look in the project's common include folder(s) for the file being specified. If you were you using ("" - quotation marks), you would be required to specify the location of the file relative to the main project file/directory.
I suggest you use Visual Studio as your compiler, it is far better supported and much better equipped to handle newer programmers. It is available free - see source link (scroll-down and click C++ version [yellow]).
Where can I find birthday templates that work on Microsoft word?
I cant seem to find Microsoft works on my p.c. so i need templates that work on Microsoft word.
Thanx!!
Where can I find birthday templates that work on Microsoft word?
online at microsoft.com. that wont be very hard and it will be in templates. that is the most easy site to navigate. good luck!
Reply:Microsoft maintains a website of templates for a wide range of uses.
Birthday template search: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/templa...
Thanx!!
Where can I find birthday templates that work on Microsoft word?
online at microsoft.com. that wont be very hard and it will be in templates. that is the most easy site to navigate. good luck!
Reply:Microsoft maintains a website of templates for a wide range of uses.
Birthday template search: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/templa...
Here is a dna sequence?
here is a dna sequence Tacctcttcgctaatatc. suppose the second c in the original template mutates to t write down the predicted template dna sequence. if i am asked this question on a test i would basicly take out the c and replace it with t right ? like this Tacttcttcgctaatatc. what would be the affect on the protein ?
Here is a dna sequence?
Tac ctc ttc gct aat atc
to
Tac ttc ttc gct aat atc
Assuming these are codons following the AUG start codon and thus part of the sequence coding the protein, the likely result is a change in the amino acid the codon specifies.
CTC - Leucine
TTC - Phenylalanine
Phenylalanine is a much larger AA than leucine, and could change the way the protein folds, or disrupt its ability to bind a substrate or regulator.
garden
Here is a dna sequence?
Tac ctc ttc gct aat atc
to
Tac ttc ttc gct aat atc
Assuming these are codons following the AUG start codon and thus part of the sequence coding the protein, the likely result is a change in the amino acid the codon specifies.
CTC - Leucine
TTC - Phenylalanine
Phenylalanine is a much larger AA than leucine, and could change the way the protein folds, or disrupt its ability to bind a substrate or regulator.
garden
Core Java Doubts?
1. what is the impact of private constructor?
2. what r static initializers?
3. can we assign parent objects to child objects?
4. what r singleton classes?
5. can applets be embedded in any graphical java application?
6. in use of applets having main() ?
7. how is the template concept of C++ implemented in Java?
8. can main() have only void as its return type?
plz answer them with the ques nos.
Core Java Doubts?
1. Instances of the class with only private constructors can only be created from within that class itself.
2. Static initializer is a piece of code enclosed in static { } that is executed when the class is loaded (referenced) for the first time.
3. No, you can't assign parent objects to child objects. Parent objects are not compatible with child objects and may not have all required methods/variables.
4. Singleton class is the class that only allows existense of one and only instance of itself.
5. Applets can be embedded into web browser and viewed in applet viewer - yes. Any graphical Java application - no.
6. Didn't get this question. Applets don't normally have main() method - they have init() method which performs similar function.
7. Semantics of templates in Java are almost the same as as in C++. Templates are classes that know how to deal with other classes, without knowing their specifics. Templates in Java are mostly intended to avoid clumsiness of typecasts.
8. Yes, main() can only be void if you want it to be program's entry point. If you make it not void, Java just won't recognize it as entry point function.
Reply:adding to the above answer:
1. See this for explanation
http://www.javapractices.com/topic/Topic...
6. You can have a main() method in an applet. It would imply that you plan to run your program an application as well.
7. It is implemented via "generics" introduced with Java 5
http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5/pdf/generic...
2. what r static initializers?
3. can we assign parent objects to child objects?
4. what r singleton classes?
5. can applets be embedded in any graphical java application?
6. in use of applets having main() ?
7. how is the template concept of C++ implemented in Java?
8. can main() have only void as its return type?
plz answer them with the ques nos.
Core Java Doubts?
1. Instances of the class with only private constructors can only be created from within that class itself.
2. Static initializer is a piece of code enclosed in static { } that is executed when the class is loaded (referenced) for the first time.
3. No, you can't assign parent objects to child objects. Parent objects are not compatible with child objects and may not have all required methods/variables.
4. Singleton class is the class that only allows existense of one and only instance of itself.
5. Applets can be embedded into web browser and viewed in applet viewer - yes. Any graphical Java application - no.
6. Didn't get this question. Applets don't normally have main() method - they have init() method which performs similar function.
7. Semantics of templates in Java are almost the same as as in C++. Templates are classes that know how to deal with other classes, without knowing their specifics. Templates in Java are mostly intended to avoid clumsiness of typecasts.
8. Yes, main() can only be void if you want it to be program's entry point. If you make it not void, Java just won't recognize it as entry point function.
Reply:adding to the above answer:
1. See this for explanation
http://www.javapractices.com/topic/Topic...
6. You can have a main() method in an applet. It would imply that you plan to run your program an application as well.
7. It is implemented via "generics" introduced with Java 5
http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5/pdf/generic...
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