Because DD's a lesbian.
Because DD's a lesbian.
Ain't that right?![]()
All my comics hold my deepest feelings in them.
...![]()
I am no longer a lesbian. Rejoice!
Laaaaaaaame!
<!--damn it i forgot to save the panties pic while i had the chance-->
I already miss the panties. ;_;
Lovely skin colour.
I would fear for the future of my profession if that were the case. I once told one of the female engineers in my class that vectorized force components didn't have an i-hat, j-hat, or k-hat when you put them into the matrix to take the cross product. My professor almost spazzed on us. It was great, because they believed me (this was part of my campaign to show the girls that I am, in fact, intellectually superior to them). Another time, I told them that you can take the cross product of a point about itself. As you should know, that will result in vector components of (0i, 0j, and 0k). Yeah. Fear.
To fully explain, we would have to take everything in your statement and comic literally and at the base level. Start from the statement "all my comics," which would mean that the comic holds your feelings. Treat it like a term, and put it in brackets. In the comic, your feelings are that you wanted to kill Fonzie; put that in brackets. But it's a dream, which is the core of your feelings. So basically, you wind up looking something like (a(b(c))) where the term "c" is your feelings. The terms "b" and "a" are outside of that.
Two iterations, a and b away from c. Outside of the brackets are reality.
I got your meaning the first time, but that's not the correct way to use iteration. An iteration is the act of repeating. For example, when you have a large and bulky formula, and you need to know when it is zero(let's say graphical, numerical and computer-generated answers cannot be used), you would fill in a number, check the answer, fill in a higher or lower, check that answer, and thus get closer to the point (or error margin) you want. You repeat a certain process.
That is called iteration, at least how I was taught it.
If your thing is called iteration as well, then my apologies.
Also, just get a sense of humour, this talk is scientifically correct and all, but boring as hell.
Speak for yourself AK. I've got a massive boner over this iteration jargon.