Also: in Spain, do beginning CS students have an easier time dealing with linked lists? That's a beautiful approach -- no need to keep the queue encoded physically.
Nothing broken. Things should be fine in about a week, when the inflammation should go away.
Yes, besides the gendered-ness of the Latin languages. Did you know there are laws here that prohibit gender-ambiguous names? An excerpt from a recent law of names that restates a point from a 1957 law of names:
Quedan prohibidos los nombres que objetivamente perjudiquen a la persona, así como los diminutivos o variantes familiares y coloquiales que no hayan alcanzado sustantividad, los que hagan confusa la identificación y los que induzcan en su conjunto a error en cuanto al sexo.
They remain prohibited those names that would objectively damage the person, like diminutives or familiar variants or colloquialisms that have not achieved permanence, those that would make confusing the identification (of said person), and those that would lead to an error with account of the sex (of the person).
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Also: in Spain, do beginning CS students have an easier time dealing with linked lists? That's a beautiful approach -- no need to keep the queue encoded physically.
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Will you go out with me?
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Also, until now I never thought about how, in Spanish, even the "Doctor" title is gendered.
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Yes, besides the gendered-ness of the Latin languages. Did you know there are laws here that prohibit gender-ambiguous names? An excerpt from a recent law of names that restates a point from a 1957 law of names:
LEY 40/99, de 5 de Noviembre sobre NOMBRE Y APELLIDOS
http://procuradores-alicante.com/ley%20NOMBRE%20Y%20APELLIDOS.htm
Quedan prohibidos los nombres que objetivamente perjudiquen a la persona, así como los diminutivos o variantes familiares y coloquiales que no hayan alcanzado sustantividad, los que hagan confusa la identificación y los que induzcan en su conjunto a error en cuanto al sexo.
They remain prohibited those names that would objectively damage the person, like diminutives or familiar variants or colloquialisms that have not achieved permanence, those that would make confusing the identification (of said person), and those that would lead to an error with account of the sex (of the person).
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