2,062,488 research outputs found

    Mastering Pascal and Delphi programming.

    No full text
    This work provides an introduction to programming with Pascal and extends this to show how Borland Delphi is used to develop Microsoft Windows programs. It provides real life applications and splits into three main sections: Pascal programming, Pascal applications, and Delphi programming. Practical applications include: software interrupts, hardware interrupts, graphics, date and time, system commands, RS 232 and parallel ports. This work is intended for GNVQ, A Level, further and adult education, first year undergraduate students, and for professionals and computing enthusiasts

    A Pascal- és Brianchon tétel alkalmazásai

    No full text
    A projektív síkgeometria alapjai, másodrendű görbék jellemzése, osztályozása, tulajdonságai. A Pascal- és Brianchon tétel kimondása, bizonyítása, a tételek alkalmazása speciális esetekben, szerkesztési feladatok a tételekre.gjMatematikarégi képzé

    Normalni reper nivelmanske mreže

    No full text
    Normalni reper nivelmanske mreže

    Turbo Pascal 7.0.

    No full text
    Selamat datang ke turbo pascal 7.0 Turbo pascal adalah bahasa pemrograman tingkat tinggi yang terkenal dengan pemrograman terstruktur dan bernaung di bawah sistem operasi MS-DOSix + 367 hlm; 14.5 x 20.3 C

    DEPASCALISATION OF SMARANDACHE PASCAL DERIVED SEQUENCES AND BACKWARD EXTENDED FIBONACCI SEQUENCE

    No full text
    We call the process of extracting the base sequence from the Pascal derived sequence as Depascalisation. The interesting observation is that this again involves the Pascal's triangle though with a difference

    UNE “NOUVELLE” PENSEE DE PASCAL

    No full text
    International audienceA close examination of the first edition (1670) of Pascal's Thoughts shows that a text written by Pascal has been confounded with a commentary. This short but important text must now be added to the corpus.Un nouvel examen attentif de la 1ère édition des Pensées de Blaise Pascal (1670) et les progrès accomplis dans la compréhension du travail mené par le comité de Port-Royal, ont permis de mettre à jour un court texte de Pascal, qui est omis dans les principales éditions modernes. Cette "nouvelle" pensée, concernant la personne du Messie dans la Bible, doit être dorénavant ajoutée au corpus pascalien

    Normalni reper nivelmanske mreže

    No full text
    Normalni reper nivelmanske mreže

    Fundamentalni reper "Ruše" kod Maribora

    No full text
    Fundamentalni reper "Ruše" kod Maribora

    Fundamentalni reper "Ruše" kod Maribora

    No full text
    Fundamentalni reper "Ruše" kod Maribora

    Samuel Beckett and the Writers of Port-Royal

    No full text
    It has been observed that ‘the literary influences on Beckett have been far more important than has been acknowledged, and more important indeed, than the philosophical influences’ (Smith 2002: 3). The truth of this statement is evidenced by the description that scholars have given of Samuel Beckett’s relationship to seventeenth century French classicism. To date, critical interest has been limited for the most part to the figure of the philosopher René Descartes on the (fragile) grounds that Beckett was exclusively concerned with the Cartesian imperative of clarity and order, the fundamental dualism between body and mind, and Nominalism. Together with the assumption that Beckett’s vision was essentially Cartesian, his literary filiation with Pascal was suggested by critics, but only in terms of Beckett’s formal approach to the theatre. In his short article on En attendant Godot in 1953, the playwright Jean Anouilh was among the first reviewers to suggest that Beckett’s drama synthesizes the encounter between ‘classicism’ and a ‘modern’ form of art. It is well known that Beckett retained a lifelong admiration for Pascal – indeed, Pascal was one of his ‘old chestnuts’ (Knowlson 1997: 653). Little attention has been paid, however, to the originality of Pascal’s thought, the specific nature of his prose, and the impact these might have had upon Beckett’s mature work, especially the trilogy and the subsequent short prose. Yet, in the literary and philosophical context of post-war France, Beckett’s filiation with Pascal, their corresponding preoccupations, were evident to his contemporaries, who identified Pascal as an underlying presence in his works
    corecore