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Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saterday
Sunday
Anything wrong here?
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محمد م. محمد wrote: Saterday
It is called Saturday.
Veni, vidi, caecus
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Everyone speaking correct english.
Proof[^]
Veni, vidi, caecus
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The word listed above (Saturday) is probably the correct spelling for the word that you entered (Saterday). This is just an educated guess based on commonly misspelled words. To double check that this is the correct word you can use the resources below to find the definition of Saturday, antonyms for Saturday, synonyms for Saturday, quotes relating to Saturday and other information about Saturday.
Veni, vidi, caecus
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"Saterday" may have a meaning, but it is not the name of the day of the week (in English).
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محمد م. محمد wrote: Who said so?
The Romans:
The Romans named Saturday dies Saturni ("Saturn's Day") ...
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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so do you have the meanings of the remaining days?
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No, but Wikipedia does:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day_of_week[^]
For English, most of the days are named after Norse gods:
- Monday
- Moon's day;
- Tuesday
- Tiw's day - a one-handed Norse god associated with single combat and pledges;
- Wednesday
- Wodan's day (aka Odin);
- Thursday
- Thor's day;
- Friday
- Frige's day;
- Saturday
- Saturn's day - the only day which retains it's Roman name in English;
- Sunday
- Sun's day;
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Brilliant answer. One bonus point for you.
My plan is to live forever ... so far so good
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You've got it all wrong
First Monday
Second Monday
Third Monday
Last Monday
Friday
Saturday
Day before Monday(elephant)
Microsoft ... the only place where VARIANT_TRUE != true
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I don't get the point you are trying to make here.
For me this post and your different replies just seem to be some kind of odd spam.
Are you trying to up your reputation by posting some trivial questions?
A gentleman is someone who can play the bag-pipe, and who does not.
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It was a spelling issue which now is resolved.
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I got it; I did not have the whole story as the other part was in the Lounge.
Cheers.
Women are composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen; men are also composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen, but in such proportions that force respect.
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No problem. I hope you didn't report me or something
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No; I was just reacting at the reading of the post.
Women are composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen; men are also composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen, but in such proportions that force respect.
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No, he was just unsure because of the weekdays since OG told him that SatErday isn't after Friday, but SatUrday is
Read all answers[^]
Veni, vidi, caecus
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OK I see now
Thanks for your clarification.
Women are composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen; men are also composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen, but in such proportions that force respect.
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Message Closed
modified 21-Nov-20 21:01pm.
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'twas Griff-Is-Bored-Day
Veni, vidi, caecus
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The post below reminded me of an instance a few years ago.
Existing database, mainframe system, all working well. I was a short term contractor.
Sales chap from "a reporting tool" company had been in and shown the MD and sales manager the wonderful real-time data their product could present them - lovely graphs and charts etc.
Of course, he showed them on his local database on his laptop.
Having bought the software, they employed me to implement the changes necessary to their database in order to use this new, magic, tool.
Performance-wise it wasn't possible for the tool to query the existing database, so a form of data warehouse was necessary. It was decided that an overnight process would update the data warehouse, rather than real-time updating, as the transaction volume was high enough that benchmarking showed a potential significant decrease in overall performance.
So no real-time reporting - but the MD was happy that yesterday's data would be up-to-date enough.
So (with guidance from the reporting company) I developed a bunch of stored procedures to run overnight to collate the day's transactions into a format acceptable by the tool. And let me tell you, the tool was very fussy about its data types; e.g. if you wanted to summarise by date, then the date column had to be a date column in a specific format - preferably text in yyyymmdd format - with no time component. Any codes to be summarised on also had to be specific formats (I don't recall exactly, but from memory, numerics needed to be in text fields, right justified with leading spaces)
So I spent a few weeks writing and tweaking stored procs.
First live run on a day's transactions to about 25 hours to run.
Not so good.
Optimisation and more tweaking - fastest we got it down to was about 15 hours - which meant if we kicked it off bang on 5pm it might be ready for the MD in the morning.
Unfortunately, when we pointed the reporting tool at it, it just sat there. We never saw any results from the full data warehouse - the tool just appeared to hang.
In the end, we had to create a summary database and a 'this week' database just for the tool to be able to display anything, and the MD had to print stuff out so he could compare week by week.
MVVM # - I did it My Way
___________________________________________
Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011
.\\axxx
(That's an 'M')
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_Maxxx_ wrote: date column in a specific format - preferably text in yyyymmdd format
Was the reporting tool built as a school assignment?
Politicians are always realistically manoeuvering for the next election. They are obsolete as fundamental problem-solvers.
Buckminster Fuller
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