But that doesn't cover picking between two valid words. It doesn't seem to work out that *this* is how you enter "they're" and this is what swyping "there" looks like. For you.
Exactly, yes.
Simon ,'Safe'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
But that doesn't cover picking between two valid words. It doesn't seem to work out that *this* is how you enter "they're" and this is what swyping "there" looks like. For you.
Exactly, yes.
Any of the math peeps around? -t, you're usually pretty good at this. (Football? What football?)
The problem is:
Solve for h: 2A-hb1=hb2
Augh, coding. The 1 and the 2 are subscript.
My sister tossed Swype ASAP.
I hate it. I don't get it, and I sometimes turn it on accidentally and panic. Do not like.
h = 2A / (b1 + b2).
h=2 A/(b1+b2)
And what does the subscript mean? (Look, math classes were a long time ago, don't judge me.)
But that doesn't cover picking between two valid words. It doesn't seem to work out that *this* is how you enter "they're" and this is what swyping "there" looks like. For you.
Mine does. If I type ill, it gives me "I'll" as a choice; same with there, they're and their.
I am so glad the mathy people got the same answer.
Football blackout rules are nutty. CBS switched to a different game right before the field goal, and Sunday Ticket had the game blacked because it was "locally available" until after...
Subscripts don't really have a set meaning, they're just labels. Usually it's two instances of the same measurement. That looks like maybe geometry, so maybe the lengths of the top and bottom sides of a trapezoid?
Eta: it's a relief to me, flea! Algebra, it works.
Man, these refs are terrible.