Capt. of Italian shipwreck hears evidence in court [getdailynow.blogspot.com]
Warcraft - Goblin Starting Area Level 11-12: A woman scorned is a woman respawnedSimon and Lewis strap rockets onto their bodies and resume exploration of the goblin starting area, interfering with gobliny business and continuing to generally annoy the crap out of everyone.
Published October 15, 2012
Associated Press
GROSSETO, Italy â" Â The former captain of the shipwrecked Costa Concordia cruise liner has come to an Italian court to hear the evidence against him, while passengers who survived the Jan. 13 collision in which 32 died have come to look him in the eye.
Francesco Schettino used a back entrance Monday to slip into a theater that is serving as a courtroom. More than 1,000 survivors, victims' relatives and their lawyers are attending a closed-door hearing to discuss the evidence against him and eight other defendants.
Wearing dark glasses, Schettino made no comments as he arrived. Hearings this week will help decide whether a judge will order trial for Schettino, who is charged with manslaughter, causing the shipwreck and abandoning ship while passengers and crew were still aboard. He denies the charges.

Question by xinnybuxlrie: How come whenever you learn programming, lesson one always has "Hello World!"? Why "Hello World!" and not "Hi Everybody!" or "I like apples!"? Best answer for How come whenever you learn programming, lesson one always has "Hello World!"?:
Answer by Bruce
Tradition. Send Beer.
Answer by Adam
It is tradition. Just like when you learn a foreign language, usually the first thing you learn is "Hello", then "How are you?" then "What's your name?" etc.
Answer by Cubbi
Because that example was used in the first tutorials for the programming languages B and C written by Brian Kernighan in the early 70's. C influenced a number of languages afterwards, including, most likely, whatever you were learning.
Answer by Colin K
It started with the C programming language. The language was developed by Bell Laboratories in the early 70's, and one of the first tutorials provided internally to Bell Labs employees used "Hello World!" as an example. It was later included in the very famous book "The C Programming Language." As other languages were developed, many of which were based on C (such as Java, C+, C++, C#, Objective-C, etc...), they simply followed this early example and used "Hello World!" as the first example.
Yoshi's Island - Part: 13Welcome to the 2nd KeyAthon! Find me on other social networks: Twitter: twitter.com Facebook: www.facebook.com
0 comments:
Post a Comment