In the long-awaited outcome of negotiations involving the copyright protraction laws recently enacted, the Disseminary has obtained permission to distribute Evelyn Underhill’s essay for pacifism, “The Church and War.” We now have an official, legal sample for our publication series — and it’s a timely, theologically-rich tract.
Swing by the Disseminary and look over Underhill’s essay. We have a line on a strong dissertation which the author may assign to our ministrations, and Dorothea indicated that Egeria might be marked-up and ready by the end of the year. Progress!
Posted by AKMA at November 29, 2003 04:31 PM | TrackBackThis will allow us to use a few functions we didn't have access to before. These lines are still a mystery for now, but we'll explain them soon. Now we'll start working within the main function, where favoriteNumber is declared and used. The first thing we need to do is change how we declare the variable. Instead of
Posted by: Harry at January 13, 2004 09:59 AMWhen compared to the Stack, the Heap is a simple thing to understand. All the memory that's left over is "in the Heap" (excepting some special cases and some reserve). There is little structure, but in return for this freedom of movement you must create and destroy any boundaries you need. And it is always possible that the heap might simply not have enough space for you.
Posted by: Christian at January 13, 2004 09:59 AMWhen Batman went home at the end of a night spent fighting crime, he put on a suit and tie and became Bruce Wayne. When Clark Kent saw a news story getting too hot, a phone booth hid his change into Superman. When you're programming, all the variables you juggle around are doing similar tricks as they present one face to you and a totally different one to the machine.
Posted by: Mable at January 13, 2004 09:59 AM