Encapsulation, inheritance and polymorphism
Mark Lawrence
breamoreboy at yahoo.co.uk
Fri Jul 20 05:00:59 EDT 2012
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Fri Jul 20 05:00:59 EDT 2012
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On 19/07/2012 22:13, Ian Kelly wrote: > On Thu, Jul 19, 2012 at 3:01 PM, John Gordon <gordon at panix.com> wrote: >> In <mailman.2317.1342730879.4697.python-list at python.org> Dennis Lee Bieber <wlfraed at ix.netcom.com> writes: >> >>>> Sure it terminates...If you don't run out of RAM to represent the >>>> number "i" in question, there's also this "heat death of the >>>> universe" limit I keep hearing about ;-) >>>> >>> Since the current evidence indicates the universe will just keep >>> expanding, it's more of a "deep freeze death..." >> >> Heat death means *lack* of heat. > > Actually actually it means *uniformity* of heat, i.e. that the entire > universe is in thermodynamic equilibrium and so it is impossible to > perform work. So heat death is expected regardless of whether the > universe ultimately collapses or expands indefinitely. > All of this will pale into complete insignificance provided that England beat South Africa in the current cricket test match series and retain their world no.1 ranking. Of course if they lose the universe will collapse immediately or expand so far that it tears itself to tiny little pieces. Even The Ashes won't survive, something I should perhaps take up with the MCC. -- Cheers. Mark Lawrence.
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