X-Nico

unusual facts about The Variable


The Variable

The hundredth episode milestone was celebrated by cast and crew on location in Hawaii.



see also

Augmented assignment

This last was the basis of the similar feature in the ALGOL compilers offered via the Burroughs B6700 systems, using the tilda symbol to stand for the variable being assigned to, so that

Fisher information metric

Again, the variable \theta is understood as a coordinate on the Riemann manifold.

Gun data computer

It was composed of computers and remote devices such as the Variable Format Message Entry Device (VFMED), the Digital Message Device (DMD) and the Firefinder Field Artillery target acquisition radar system linked by digital communications using existing radio and wire communications equipment.

Henry Selby Hele-Shaw

He was the inventor of the variable-pitch propeller, which contributed to British success in the Battle of Britain in 1940, and he experimented with flows through thin cells.

Holding Monex

In 2010 Holding Monex became listed on the Mexican Stock Exchange with an initial public offering of 391.11 million shares worth a total of 2.198 million pesos, with 50,000 Series A shares representing the capital fixed minimum and 399 million retired 950,000 shares of Series B corresponding to the variable.

Negative amortization

: The variable, such as the COFI; COSI; CODI or often MTA, which determines the adjustment as an increase or decrease in the interest rate.

Prediction interval

Alternatively, in Bayesian terms, a prediction interval can be described as a credible interval for the variable itself, rather than for a parameter of the distribution thereof.

Single-chain variable fragment

These fragments can often be purified or immobilized using Protein L, since Protein L interacts with the variable region of kappa light chains.

V. gouldii

Vertigo gouldii, the variable vertigo, an air-breathing land snail species

Vysochanskij–Petunin inequality

In probability theory, the Vysochanskij–Petunin inequality gives a lower bound for the probability that a random variable with finite variance lies within a certain number of standard deviations of the variable's mean, or equivalently an upper bound for the probability that it lies further away.