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Puck
The Texan


Joined: 05 Jan 2004
Posts: 5596

PostTue Mar 23, 2004 10:39 pm    

its a 3D figure..such as a pyramid or cone, with its top cut off......besides that I have noooo friggin clue what the FCUK I am doing!

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Kate Janeway
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Joined: 11 Mar 2002
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PostTue Mar 23, 2004 10:47 pm    

Sorry, I can't help you with that.

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Puck
The Texan


Joined: 05 Jan 2004
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PostTue Mar 23, 2004 10:50 pm    

ah thats cool..its just hw

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Kate Janeway
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PostTue Mar 23, 2004 10:52 pm    

There's no such thing as a cover-upper, is there?

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Oliver
Thought Maker


Joined: 28 Feb 2004
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PostWed Mar 24, 2004 4:34 am    

JanewayIsHott wrote:
Does anyone know how to find the volume of a frustrum?


I've looked up frustrum but couldn't find it; however, I've found frustum. This is:

...the part of a solid cone or pyramid next to the base that is formed by cutting off the top by a plane parallel to the base.

I could help you with it. If your 3D object is a cone, then the total volume is:

PI x H
------------ x (R2� - R1�)
3(R2 - R1)

where PI = 3.1415...
H is the height of the cone
R2 is the radius of the base
R1 is the radius if the top

For the formula of a pyramid, I need to know the shape of the base. Is it a triangle, a square, a pentagon, ...


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harrykims#1fan
Fan Girl Muskateer


Joined: 08 Feb 2002
Posts: 2916
Location: Leicester UK

PostWed Mar 24, 2004 6:16 am    

ok i need help does anyone here know how to get my program to work out overtime on Visual Basic
my code at the moment is


employeename = InputBox("Please Type in your Employee name")
employeenumber = InputBox("Please type in your employee number")
payrate = InputBox("Please type in your rate of pay per hour")
overtime = InputBox("Have you done any overtime Yes Or No")


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Sam Kenobi
Not a Duke


Joined: 13 Jun 2003
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Location: The 'Verse

PostSat Apr 17, 2004 2:41 pm    

can anyone give me a short summary of Shakespear's King Lear? Just a character soap opera thing... like who took who to their bed and why Gloucester got his eyes stepped out for adultry? Sorry, I jsut don't feel like going back and finding it.

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ILoveHarry
Admiral


Joined: 14 Jan 2004
Posts: 7909
Location: Houston

PostSat Apr 17, 2004 3:35 pm    

Here you go, Sam.! I have no idea if this will have your answers, I did not read it... I just picked a summary at random and copied it for you. If you need more go to www.google.com and do a search for King Lear/summary. Have fun!!!
King Lear
by William Shakespeare (1564 - 1616)
Type of Work:
Tragic drama
Setting
Medieval England
Principal Characters
Lear, King of Britain
Cordelia, his faithful daughter
Regan and Goneril, his two mean-spirited daughters
The Dukes of Cornwall and Albany, their husbands
The Earl of Gloucester
Edmund, the Earl's treacherous son
Edgar, the Earl's true son (later disguised as a madman)
The Duke of Kent, Cordelia's loyal helper
Lear's Fool, a comical character
Story Overview
England's aged King Lear had chosen to renounce his throne and divide the kingdom among his three daughters. He promised the greatest portion of the empire to whichever daughter proved to love him most. Goneril lavished exaggerated praise on her father; Regan even outdid her sister with a wordy show of hollow affection Cordelia, however, refused to stoop to flattery, and insisted that she loved her father no more and no less than was his due. Lear exploded at what seemed to him her untenderness and immediately disowned her. Moreover, Lear banished the Duke of Kent from the castle for defending Cordelia.

Two suitors had come to the British court to seek Cordelia's hand: the Duke of Burgundy and the King of France. After Lear had disinherited Cordelia, Burgundy suddenly lost interest in her he aspired to a wealthy bride. The King of France, however, was delighted by Cordelia's honesty and immediately asked for her hand. They departed for France, without Lear's blessing, and Cordelia's part of the kingdom was divided between Goneril and Regan, who were all too happy at their sister's fall from grace. Furthermore, these two daughters decided that Lear had succumbed to a sort of senility, and they set upon a plan to exploit his weakness to their own advantage.

Meanwhile, in the Earl of Gloucester's castle, Edmund, Gioucester's bitter and cunning illegitimate son, was fretting over his father's preference toward the legitimate brother, Edgar. Edmund now forged a letter in which Edgar supposedly expressed his intent to murder their father. Gloucester immediately believed the letter and fled in distress from the palace. Then Edmund, in mock concern, went and warned his brother that someone had turned Gloucester against him. Edgar, too good at heart to suspect his brother's treachery' accepted the story and escaped to the forest. Thus, with two clever strokes, Edmund had managed to supplant his brother in his father's affections.

After dividing his kingdom, Lear decided to lodge for a time at Goneril's palace. Now that she had her half of his kingdom, however, she no longer feigned love for him. In fact, she so distained her father that she ordered her servants to mistreat and insult him. Accordingly, her servants began to deal with him as a senile old man rather than as a king.

In the meantime, the banished Duke of Kent disguised himself and presented himself to the king at Goneril's palace. Lear failed to recognize the disguise and hired Kent as a servant. Then, with the help of the King's Fool (whose biting jibes and puns provide some of the finest moments in all literature), Kent began hinting to Lear that he had acted unwisely in dealing with Cordelia, until the King began to perceive his folly. As Gonerit continued to humiliate him, Lear, bemoaning his fate ("How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is / To have a thankless child!"), determined to move on to Regan's household. He did not know that Regan was at that moment on her way to visit Gloucester. (In fact, all of the characters were now converging on Gloucester's castle).

Near Gloucester, Edgar, still convinced that his life was in peril from his father, lingercd in a local wood, disguised as a madman - Tom o' Bedlam.

Soon Regan and her husband, the Duke of Cornwall, arrived at Gloucester. They were followed by King Lear not long after. When Goneril and her household also appeared, the two sisters united to disgrace their father, ordering him to dismiss all his servants. But this humiliation proved too much for the old King, who, in a fit of anger and shame, rushed out of the castle into a furious storm, where he wandered about madly, screaming and cursing. Their plan having succeeded, the daughters locked the doors behind him.

Then follows a most famous and stirring scene: Lear raged and cursed in the midnight storm, with his frightened Fool cowering beside him, uttering the most biting and ironic jokes, while Kent watched in disbelief.

Fortunately, Gloucester found them and led them to a little hovel, where they encountered Edgar, still disguised as Tom O'Bedlam and pretending derangement. Lear, now half mad himself, set about conducting a bizarre mock trial of his daughters, with Kent, the Fool, and Edgar all serving in his "court." (The mixture of Lear's denunciations, Edgar's incoherent chatter, the Fool's punning and ironic commentary, and Kent's astonished silence, create a superb scene of absurdity and despair).

Meanwhile, Kent had heard that Cordelia, back in France, was preparing to ship a small army across the English Channel to rescue Lear. But Edmund, who had also got wind of this news, hinted to Regan's husband, the Duke of Cornwall, that Gloucester planned to side with Lear and the French army against Regan and Goneril. Cornwall was furious, and agreed to avenge himself on innocent Gloucester. (Very convenient for Edmund, of course, as he would inherit his father's earldom!)

It was now a race against time: could Gloucester, Edgar, Kent and Lear hold out against the treachery of Edmund, Regan, Goneril and Cornwall until help arrived from France? They devised a plan to flee to Dover, there to await the coming of Cordelia and the French troops. King Lear managed to make his escape in time, drawn by Kent in a litter, but Gloucester was not so lucky Cornwall caught him, jabbed out both his eyes, then thrust him through the castle gates to "let him smell his way to Dover." Crawling about blindly, the earl bumped into none other than his own son, Edgar, still pretending to be insane. Edgar agreed to lead his father - who remained unapprised of his true identity - to Dover, though and Gloucester bitterly complained: "Tis the time's plague when madmen lead the blind."

While Kent with Lear and Edgar with Gloucester were making their separate ways to Dover, a love affair brewed among the villains. Goneril had become infatuated with the diabolical Edmund, who returned with her to her palace. There she fell into a bitter argument with her husband, the Duke of Albany, who vehemently chastised Goneril for her mistreatment of Lear. Albany also informed his wife that Cornwall had been killed - struck down by one of Gioucester's servants. Suddenly a frightening thought paralyzed Goneril: now that her sister was a widow, would she too pursue Edmund and his rising star? This fear was soon confirmed when Regan sent a message to the castle professing her love for Edmund, followed by an invitation to join forces with her. Since Albany's sympathies were now with Lear, Goneril was forced to watch in frustrated rage as her sister and Edmund set out together with their cohorts against the expected invasion.

In the mean time, at Dover, Kent met with the French officials while Cordelia sent doctors to treat her father, who, by that time, was mentally and physically spent. But Lear refused to meet with Cordelia; he had come to understand his injuries against his loyal daughter and now felt too ashamed to see her.

On his journey to Dover, the blind Gloucester had grown more and more distressed. At last he implored Edgar to guide him to the brink of a cliff so that he could throw himself off. But Edgar fooled him into thinking the level ground was actually the top of a ridge. And when Gloucester fell forward onto the ground, as if jumping from a cliff, Edgar changed his voice, pretending to be a passerby at the cliff's base. He assured his father that he had seen him fall from the dizzy height and survive he'd seen a miracle! Gloucester believed the tale and accepted the "miracle" as a sign that he was meant to live.

Now Lear, who had been delirious before he was finally rescued by Cordelia, fell into a deep sleep. On awakening, he found himself purged of his madness and begged Cordelia's forgiveness. Their reconciliation complete, they were ready to join with Kent and the French army against Edmund and his forces.

But Cordelia's troops were defeated, and Edmund sent orders that Lear and his daughter be executed.

Meanwhile, Regan had collapsed in death, poisoned by her own jealous sister. (Goneril herself would later die by suicide.) Just at that moment Edgar burst in on the scene, engaged his brother Edmund in combat, and dealt him a mortal wound. He then cast off his disguise and revealed his true identity to his dying brother, also reporting that Gloucester, their father, had died a few hours before. Edmund, apparently touched by the news of his father's death, confessed that he had ordered the executions of Lear and Cordelia, and dispatched a messenger to stop them. It was, alas, too late - Lear entered, carrying the body of his beloved daughter, then he too fell and died, broken-hearted. Only Albany, Kent, and Edgar survived. It fell to these last two to jointly rule the shattered nation.

Commentary
Since King Lear's setting is pre-Christian Britain, some readers chafe under the sort of nihilistic fatalism that colors the characters' thinking ("As flies to wanton boys we are to the gods. . . "). And truly, it's hard to think of any other play so vast, passionate and bitter as this. The work is unusually demanding on the reader or spectator, with so many prominent figures suffering so much for so long, only, in the end, to find so little redemption.

True, there is a good deal of humor throughout the play, especially in the lightning-fast wisecracks and puns of the Fool and in the cryptic babble of Edgar masquerading as a madman. But even the humor has a steady, grim undertone.

The main plot is marvelously conceived. Just as Lear mistakenly believes that Cordelia has wronged him and his other daughters have served him, so Gloucester jumps to the conclusion that Edgar opposes him and Edmund defends him when in both cases precisely the opposite is true. The horrific consequences of these misjudgments intertwine and drive the action along



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Sam Kenobi
Not a Duke


Joined: 13 Jun 2003
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PostSat Apr 17, 2004 4:12 pm    

*jumps in the air with a very sarcastic "woohoo!"* Thanks Caroline. and now to write the essay....:p

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Sam Kenobi
Not a Duke


Joined: 13 Jun 2003
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PostTue Aug 24, 2004 4:11 pm    

hey you math whizzes... could you do me a favor and simplify (1/2(a^-6)(b^4))(1/8(a^6)(b^-4)) (no negative exponents in answer)



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Delta Quad 2003
Section 31 Guardian


Joined: 29 Jun 2004
Posts: 3164
Location: Earth

PostTue Aug 24, 2004 4:14 pm    

Triam_Paris wrote:
hey you math whizzes... could you do me a favor and simplify (1/2(a^-6)(b^4))(1/8(a^6)(b^-4)) (no negative exponents in answer)



had to be a simplification question huh. well, I can try and get back to you, but i am not too good at those.


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Starbuck
faster...


Joined: 19 Feb 2003
Posts: 8715
Location: between chaos and melody

PostWed Aug 25, 2004 6:14 am    

I could tell you how to simplify it if it would help.

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Oliver
Thought Maker


Joined: 28 Feb 2004
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Location: Antwerp, Belgium

PostWed Aug 25, 2004 11:34 am    

Triam_Paris wrote:
(1/2(a^-6)(b^4))(1/8(a^6)(b^-4))


this is:

1/2 * a^-6 * b^4 * 1/8 * a^6 * b^-4

which is:

b^4 * a^6
--------------
2 * a^6 * 8 * b^4

which is:

1/(2* = 1/16 = 0.0625


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Starbuck
faster...


Joined: 19 Feb 2003
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PostWed Aug 25, 2004 1:01 pm    

/\ you beat me to it. I had forgotten what the ^ was. I had to look it up. Cal really isn't my thing anyways, but in all maths equal terms cancel one another out.

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superwoman
Vice Admiral


Joined: 25 May 2004
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Location: Sweden

PostWed Aug 25, 2004 2:40 pm    

I need help too!!!

It's about logic maths, ok the question is:

(A --> B) --> B
ok and then simplify that one fore me. The arrows means implikation (I really don't know the word for that, but it's something like "if A then B")



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We will never run out of oil, because no one will afford to use the last litre.

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Starbuck
faster...


Joined: 19 Feb 2003
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PostWed Aug 25, 2004 3:21 pm    

someting along the lines of "A is to B as B is to..."?

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superwoman
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PostWed Aug 25, 2004 4:00 pm    

no that's not the answer. I should just simplify: (A --> B) --> B
It should be something like... non-A -->B or something... I really don't know.
I guess I have to ask my teacher for help, I dont want to cuz we should have done this til tomorrow... Ah well thanks anyway.


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Starbuck
faster...


Joined: 19 Feb 2003
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PostWed Aug 25, 2004 4:07 pm    

It could be (A --> B) --> B --> A but I'm not sure.

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superwoman
Vice Admiral


Joined: 25 May 2004
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Location: Sweden

PostWed Aug 25, 2004 4:41 pm    

That's not simplifying, that's adding more letters

well I guess I just have to study more. GAH! I don't like studying
And this is only one of the two courses I take in maths ... the other one is more difficult too.
Oh well, it could have been worse... it could have been history or some other crap subject... and I do like maths.
Thanks anyway, I will be back


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1/1
Rear Admiral


Joined: 12 Apr 2002
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PostWed Aug 25, 2004 4:42 pm    

What type of maths is it? (praying its not statistics.)

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superwoman
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PostWed Aug 25, 2004 4:58 pm    

It's called logic maths... we'll be counting endlessness
and no it's NOT statistics


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1/1
Rear Admiral


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PostWed Aug 25, 2004 5:02 pm    

YAY!!!. I'm not happy at your pain. It's just I'm taking statistics and I was wondering if it was as complicated as that.

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Pan13
Lieutenant Commander


Joined: 22 Apr 2004
Posts: 338
Location: Belgium

PostThu Aug 26, 2004 4:26 am    

can somebody give me a summary of the book "the outsiders"? we have to read it @ school, and i don't like reading english books for school, because they're so boring (i only read harry potter and star trek in english )

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Oliver
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Joined: 28 Feb 2004
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PostFri Aug 27, 2004 1:29 pm    

superwoman wrote:
(A --> B) --> B


The arrow means an implication. I had this as well in my first year of university. It's been sooo long ago so I'm not sure if this is right but I think it's just:

A --> B

If A occurs, then B occurs. If that happens, then B occurs but we already had that so nothing chances after B occurs.

If you know the answer, please post it here; I'd really like to know.


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Sam Kenobi
Not a Duke


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PostFri Aug 27, 2004 2:34 pm    

Pan13 wrote:
can somebody give me a summary of the book "the outsiders"? we have to read it @ school, and i don't like reading english books for school, because they're so boring (i only read harry potter and star trek in english )


I'll have to find the one I wrote recently for my mom for her graduate class on Young Adult Lit... or something. Anyway... it's only two paragraphs, and not very deep... but the prof liked it and it got an A. I'll post it once I find it. Do you want character bios too?


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