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From: Evertjan. on 19 Jan 2006 11:47 Matt Silberstein wrote on 19 jan 2006 in comp.lang.javascript: > Which makes me wonder what is the verifiably objectively wrong > statement with the largest number of Google hits? "True" <http://www.google.com/search?q=true> 777,000,000 hits. [some of which are true, methinks] -- Evertjan. The Netherlands. (Please change the x'es to dots in my emailaddress)
From: Randy Webb on 19 Jan 2006 17:47 Evertjan. said the following on 1/19/2006 11:47 AM: > Matt Silberstein wrote on 19 jan 2006 in comp.lang.javascript: >> Which makes me wonder what is the verifiably objectively wrong >> statement with the largest number of Google hits? > > "True" "Not" :) > <http://www.google.com/search?q=true> > > 777,000,000 hits. [some of which are true, methinks] > <URL: http://www.google.com/search?q=not > 10,470,000,000 hits. <URL: http://www.google.com/search?q=true > Shows me 1,190,000,000 hits. -- Randy comp.lang.javascript FAQ - http://jibbering.com/faq & newsgroup weekly Javascript Best Practices - http://www.JavascriptToolbox.com/bestpractices/
From: Evertjan. on 19 Jan 2006 18:28 Randy Webb wrote on 19 jan 2006 in comp.lang.javascript: > Evertjan. said the following on 1/19/2006 11:47 AM: >> Matt Silberstein wrote on 19 jan 2006 in comp.lang.javascript: >>> Which makes me wonder what is the verifiably objectively wrong >>> statement with the largest number of Google hits? >> >> "True" > > "Not" :) > >> <http://www.google.com/search?q=true> >> >> 777,000,000 hits. [some of which are true, methinks] >> > > <URL: http://www.google.com/search?q=not > > 10,470,000,000 hits. > > <URL: http://www.google.com/search?q=true > > Shows me 1,190,000,000 hits. > However Not is an unary operator and not a statement in itself, it needs true or false for completion. -- Evertjan. The Netherlands. (Please change the x'es to dots in my emailaddress)
From: Randy Webb on 20 Jan 2006 07:38 Evertjan. said the following on 1/19/2006 6:28 PM: > Randy Webb wrote on 19 jan 2006 in comp.lang.javascript: > >> Evertjan. said the following on 1/19/2006 11:47 AM: >>> Matt Silberstein wrote on 19 jan 2006 in comp.lang.javascript: >>>> Which makes me wonder what is the verifiably objectively wrong >>>> statement with the largest number of Google hits? >>> "True" >> "Not" :) >> >>> <http://www.google.com/search?q=true> >>> >>> 777,000,000 hits. [some of which are true, methinks] >>> >> <URL: http://www.google.com/search?q=not > >> 10,470,000,000 hits. >> >> <URL: http://www.google.com/search?q=true > >> Shows me 1,190,000,000 hits. >> > > However Not is an unary operator and not a statement in itself, it needs > true or false for completion. > Why? http://www.google.com/search?q=why 2,760,000,000 hits But you are right about Not. -- Randy comp.lang.javascript FAQ - http://jibbering.com/faq & newsgroup weekly Javascript Best Practices - http://www.JavascriptToolbox.com/bestpractices/
From: Evertjan. on 20 Jan 2006 09:08
Randy Webb wrote on 20 jan 2006 in comp.lang.javascript: > Why? > > http://www.google.com/search?q=why > 2,760,000,000 hits > > But you are right about Not. > A negative expression, Randy. Or was it ment to be: "But you are right about Knot" ? -- Evertjan. The Netherlands. (Please change the x'es to dots in my emailaddress) |