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thread deleted
Topic has been removed . You missed it I guess
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bummer .I had so much to add on subject . :lolabove:
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Can we guess?
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Was it about a better gun?
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This thread deserves Semi's girlfriend.... :)
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Sorry Shaprsshooter, but I can't agree with you. If you persist in doing it that way you will never get satisfactory results. I'm surprised someone with your experience would even attempt a backasswards procedure like that. Try reversing the order. You might also try it left handed and facing south (but that, of course, would be a last resort).
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Semi, I am trying to figure out who's being circular here.
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delete
[dih-leet] Spell Syllables • Synonyms • Examples • Word Origin verb (used with object), deleted, deleting. 1. to strike out or remove (something written or printed); cancel; erase; expunge. Origin Expand Latin 1485-1495 1485-95; < Latin dēlētus (past participle of dēlēre to destroy), equivalent to dēl- destroy + -ē- thematic vowel + -tus past participle suffix Related forms Expand deletable, adjective redelete, verb (used with object), redeleted, redeleting. undeleted, adjective Synonyms Expand eradicate. See cancel. Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2015. Cite This Source Examples from the web for delete Expand • Click the delete key to remove the current information. • Once they appear here, they're here until you delete them. • Citing the school's honor code, he instructed them to delete the test immediately. British Dictionary definitions for delete Expand delete /dɪˈliːt/ verb 1. (transitive) to remove (something printed or written); erase; cancel; strike out Word Origin C17: from Latin dēlēre to destroy, obliterate Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012 Cite This Source Word Origin and History for delete Expand v. late 15c., "destroy, eradicate," from Latin deletus, past participle of delere "destroy, blot out, efface," from delevi, originally perfective tense of delinere "to daub, erase by smudging" (as of the wax on a writing table), from de- "from, away" (see de- ) + linere "to smear, wipe" (see lime (n.1)). In English, specifically of written matter, from c.1600. Related: Deleted ; deleting. Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2010 Douglas Harper Cite This Source delete in Technology Expand 1. (Or "erase") To make a file inaccessible. Usually this operation only deletes information from the tables the file system uses to locate named files; the file's contents still exist on disk and can sometimes be recovered by scanning the whole disk for strings which are known to have been in the file. Files created subsequently on the same disk are quite likely to reuse the same blocks and thus overwrite the deleted file's data permanently. 2. The control character with ASCII code 127. Usually entering this character from the keyboard deletes the last character typed from the input buffer. Sadly there is great confusion between operating systems and keyboard manufacturers as to whether this function should be assigned to the delete or backspace key/character. The choice of code 127 (binary 1111111) is not arbitrary but dates back to the use of paper tape for input. The delete key rewound the tape by one character and punched out all seven holes, thus obliterating whatever character was there before. The tape reading software ignored any delete characters in the input. (1996-12-01) The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, © Denis Howe 2010 http://foldoc.org Cite This Source Just in case ya wanted to know :) |
This stuff always happens when I go away for a while!!!
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Originally Posted by rafsob
(Post 4186020)
This stuff always happens when I go away for a while!!!
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