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)Het was leuk om kennis met je gemaakt te hebben. ( If it was the first time because "kennismaken" you only do once because afterwards you know each other.)Het was fijn (or prettig) om je weer eens gesproken te hebben.
Het is fijn dat we weer even bijgepraat hebben.The last two translate more or less that you appreciated having spoken to them again or appreciated the chance of catching up with them.I hope this is helpful.How do you say "It was nice to meet you" in Dutch?.
Related Questions
Christians, how do you respond if someone asks if Christianity is true?I'm not a fellow Christian, but I don't think that's relevant.You should show some intellectual humility and admit that you don't know. After all, a key christian virtue is humility.
Of course having faith is of the utmost importance. Specifically having faith in Jesus Christ and his resurrection. Since this is the defining feature of a Christian, I assume you honestly believe in the gospels, so you probably truly believe christianity is true.
But let's be honest, ones faith, or belief, in something is not an indication of the truth. Faith is the belief in something without proof, or as its said, "believing without seeing." Another way of putting it is that faith is pretending to know something that you don't actually know.
So by saying you know because of your faith is synonymous to saying you're pretending to know. To admit this would take some intellectual humility and by saying "you don't know" you would be showing intellectual honesty, both of which are virtues in logic. Logic and reason are traits of a good epistemology leading to rational conclusions, whereas faith and dogma are bad examples of epistemology leading to irrational conclusions/beliefs.
Fellow Christians, how do you respond if someone asks if Christianity is true?
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How did you learn to write your first Hello World program?
I copied it from a book I found in the library when I was 8, but the book was too old for the instructions to get the compiler to work, so I wrote a few other programs without understanding how to compile them.Later when I'd turned 10, I found a book on my lifelong enemy, C, and the Hello World! program I copied from that was my first Hello World. However, the book was very unclear about why I needed to learn about Objects (it was the edition of C for Dummies that came out around 1999 or early 2000) and so I gave up after learning to write functions (badly.
)I then ended up writing a lot of GML scripts in Game Maker and then my next Hello World was in Python, which I've been mainly using ever since. I don't think I ever bothered with Hello World in C or Haskell, the other languages I like.I haven't been programming as much lately since I left the profession, but I actually just did a Hello World in Kotlin.
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Is it true that Dutch people would talk to you back in English although you can speak Dutch? I have never been to the Netherlands before; is this true?
As an American who has been living in the Netherlands for almost five years, my experience is that it definitely depends on how your Dutch sounds. In the beginning, I often had people switch to English because it was clear I wasnt Dutch. But now people often dont even realize Im not Dutch. I dont know what its like to speak fluent Dutch with an American accent, but working on a good Dutch accent has been a huge benefit for me. It definitely takes work and _very_ careful listening, but it is possible. The most important thing you can do when learning Dutch is ask a _lot_ of questions. And not just about the meaning of words, but also about pronunciation and accent. And try to go to the extreme when practicing pronunciation. Otherwise, a proper accent will always feel strange and foreign to your face muscles. If you can manage to focus on accent as much as (or more than) the language itself, you should be able to reach the point where you can pass as Dutch, and then no one will ever switch to English (as long as they dont already know youre not Dutch). Good luck!
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Why is there no const ref equivalent in Java?
I miss that feature, too.Heres my guess (until a Java Language Spec designer answers).Java was designed as a simpler alternative to C. It took the best features of C and its approach to OOP, and simplified them, adding both memory management and some keywords. It drew from other languages and approaches of its day, like inheriting everything from Object, but overall, it was a simpler C for many of us.I used constness a lot in C. But I noticed it was easy to get wrong. Missing copy constructors, methods with a missing const qualifier at the end. C gained a const_cast
My guess is Java took the view that for what you gained, and the potential for error, it wasnt worth it.Java added a superficially similar final keyword, but then chose not to use it in the same way as C const. There is no way to specify you can only call read-only methods in Java, as you say. Even in Java 8.
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How do you say "Him/Her" in Hungarian?
This will vary a little depending on which case it us used in. The good news is, Hungarian has no grammatical gender so there is only one word meaning both "he" and "she" and this word is "u00f5"."Him/her" as a direct object (as in "I can see him/her") is "u00f5t".
In the indirect object (as in "I gave him/her a book") is "neki" or sometimes a different preposition like "ru00e1" or the like depending on the specific phrase in question.Prepositions in Hungarian (which are actually mostly postpositions, usually take endings which would be translated as "on him/her", "in him/her", "around him/her" etc. Thus we get words like "tu00f5le, belu00f5le, arrol, erre, arra, benne" etc.
Long story short; you need to know Hungarian in order to know how to express pronouns as they do not work the way they do in English
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How are you? How are you doing today? How do you feel?
Thankyou for askingI am feeling binded and fettered by the everyday expenditures which are failing to help me save any cash whatsoever so that i can start something of my own. Yes, My own business. I have so much going on, working on my brain to get started, but the commitments i have towards the family plus debt arrears thats stopping me to start something of my own.I want to say good bye to jobs and own a few businesses which i can run on my own, managing my own way. Business is taking a risk and working towards it with full determination to succeed and be profitable. That requires lots of cash or atleast i should have 50% cash so i can borrow the other 50%. But even to save that 50% looks like a never ending saga of daily life expenditures.
Every single time, i try saving, any emergency situation props up forcing me to just shell out the savings if any or just again get into a debt.I have realized SAVING money is an art. It requires great skills, lots and lots of patience, determination, loads of Discipline.More or less i am getting there and probably would and achieve what i want to. Its just that i cant stop trying. But, this edgy way of going through difficulties in itself is an enjoyment which one can cherish and remember once you have reached that pinnacle of success. I believe
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Is it worth doing cybersecurity degree?
It's a great idea, however let me give you some advice after my experience with the degree.I would recommend you do computer science over cyber security degree. The problem with the cyber security degree is it lacks a lot of the coding aspects required by employers. You will get your hands wet with a little bit of coding but nothing too extreme. The cyber security degree mostly teaches you how cryptography works, what ciphers are used and how for certain communications, how to defend against an attack, etc. These are all good to know, however companies only care that you can implement them through coding. I know this because when I went to the job market, ever cyber security position preferred a CS degree over cyber security or Computer info tech. Cyber security is more coding than you think it is. It is not an entry level friendly position so it is hard to acquire a job without coding experience. I did like the degree and all that it taught me. You do learn how to monitor network attacks on an IDS and implement firewalls, it's really cool. At the end of the day, it is up to you. Cyber security ties in with any position in IT so its a win win for both degrees.
Should I go to college and get a cyber security degree? Is it worth it?
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How do I say, "take care" in Assamese?
Being an Assamese guy I can answer what you have asked but the problem is that framing sentences in Assamese & English is not same in pattern. So, it means that you can't translate the sentences as it is from English to Assamese or vice versa. However, you can translate the same conveying the same meaning although there will be little variation in the sentences structure. Coming to the answer:-English:-"take care"Assamese:- " Vaaldore thakiba" or " vaaldore jatno loba" or " nijor jatno loba" etc.....Notes:- So many ways are there to convey the same message. Also, in this modern era what I have observed is people are biased towards using English language in day to day life. I won't point out other languages, if I consider my own mother tongue I can see that practically. Finally, Very people will say in pure Assamese. Good bye, take care etc are common words which are spoken mainly in English only. I hope you have got the answer & I have said little elaborately too just for your reference. Thanks for reading"