Certain government programs, such as SBA loan programs and contracting opportunities, are reserved for small businesses. In order to qualify, businesses must satisfy SBA's definition of a small business concern, along with the size standards for small business.
For more information about size standards, contact the size standards specialist at your nearest SBA Government Contracting Area Office. You also can contact the Office of Size Standards by email at sizest...@sba.gov or by phone at 202-205-6618.
Businesses registered in the System for Award Management (SAM.gov) must update their SAM registration in order to have their small business status updated based on the new size standards effective March 17, 2023. Until the SAM registration is updated, the SAM profiles will continue to display the small business status under the old size standards.
You can also use variant modifiers to target media queries like responsive breakpoints, dark mode, prefers-reduced-motion, and more. For example, use md:text-base to apply the text-base utility at only medium screen sizes and above.
You can also specify a default line height using the object syntax, which allows you to also provide default letter-spacing and font-weight values. You can do this using a tuple of the form [fontSize, lineHeight?, letterSpacing?, fontWeight? ].
szdim = size(A,dim) returns the length of dimension dim when dim is a positive integer scalar. You can also specify dim as a vector of positive integers to query multiple dimension lengths at a time. For example, size(A,[2 3]) returns the lengths of the second and third dimensions of A in the 1-by-2 row vector szdim.
Queried dimensions, specified as a positive integer scalar, a vector of positive integer scalars, or an empty array of size 0-by-0, 0-by-1, or 1-by-0. If an element of dim is larger than ndims(A), then size returns 1 in the corresponding element of the output. If dim is an empty array, then size returns a 1-by-0 empty array.
List of queried dimensions, specified as positive integer scalars separated by commas. If an element of the list is larger than ndims(A), then size returns 1 in the corresponding element of the output.
If A is a character vector of type char, then size returns the row vector [1 M] where M is the number of characters. However, if A is a string scalar, size returns [1 1] because it is a single element of a string array. For example, compare the output of size for a character vector and string:szchar = size('mytext')szchar = 1 6szstr = size("mytext")szstr = 1 1To find the number of characters in a string, use the strlength function.
Dimension lengths, returned as a nonnegative integer scalar when dim is a positive integer scalar, a row vector of nonnegative integer scalars when dim is a vector of positive integers, or a 1-by-0 empty array when dim is an empty array. If an element of the specified dimension argument is larger than ndims(A), then size returns 1 in the corresponding element of szdim.
When dim is not specified and fewer than ndims(A) output arguments are listed, then all remaining dimension lengths are collapsed into the last argument in the list. For example, if A is a 3-D array with size [3 4 5], then [sz1,sz2] = size(A) returns sz1 = 3 and sz2 = 20.
SBA business size standard(s) found in 13 CFR part 121 appropriate to the type(s) of work the firm seeks to perform in DOT-assisted contracts, including the primary industry classification of the applicant.
*Affiliation has the same meaning the term has in the Small Business Administration (SBA) regulations, except that the provisions of SBA regulations concerning affiliation in the context of joint ventures (13 CFR 121.103(h)) do not apply to this part.
Scales the image as large as possible within its container without cropping or stretching the image. If the container is larger than the image, this will result in image tiling, unless the background-repeat property is set to no-repeat.
Scales the image (while preserving its ratio) to the smallest possible size to fill the container (that is: both its height and width completely cover the container), leaving no empty space. If the proportions of the background differ from the element, the image is cropped either vertically or horizontally.
Stretches the image in the corresponding dimension to the specified percentage of the background positioning area. The background positioning area is determined by the value of background-origin (by default, the padding box). However, if the background's background-attachment value is fixed, the positioning area is instead the entire viewport. Negative values are not allowed.
Note: In Gecko, background images created using the element() function are currently treated as images with the dimensions of the element, or of the background positioning area if the element is SVG, with the corresponding intrinsic proportion. This is non-standard behavior.
Note: Background sizing for vector images that lack intrinsic dimensions or proportions is not yet fully implemented in all browsers. Be careful about relying on the behavior described above, and test in multiple browsers to be sure the results are acceptable.
Let's consider a large image, a 2982x2808 Firefox logo image. We want to tile four copies of this image into a 300x300-pixel element. To do this, we can use a fixed background-size value of 150 pixels.
\n The background-size CSS property sets the size of the element's background image.\n The image can be left to its natural size, stretched, or constrained to fit the available space.\n
\n Scales the image as large as possible within its container without cropping or stretching the image.\n If the container is larger than the image, this will result in image tiling, unless the background-repeat property is set to no-repeat.\n
\n Scales the image (while preserving its ratio) to the smallest possible size to fill the container (that is: both its height and width completely cover the container), leaving no empty space.\n If the proportions of the background differ from the element, the image is cropped either vertically or horizontally.\n
\n Stretches the image in the corresponding dimension to the specified percentage of the background positioning area.\n The background positioning area is determined by the value of background-origin (by default, the padding box).\n However, if the background's background-attachment value is fixed, the positioning area is instead the entire viewport.\n Negative values are not allowed.\n
\n Note: Background sizing for vector images that lack intrinsic dimensions or proportions is not yet fully implemented in all browsers.\n Be careful about relying on the behavior described above, and test in multiple browsers to be sure the results are acceptable.\n
\n Let's consider a large image, a 2982x2808 Firefox logo image. We want to tile four copies of this image into a 300x300-pixel element.\n To do this, we can use a fixed background-size value of 150 pixels.\n
Provisions in MAP-21, the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (P.L. 112-141), require the USDOT to conduct a Comprehensive Truck Size and Weight Limits Study (MAP-21 32801) addressing differences in safety risks, infrastructure impacts, and the effect on levels of enforcement between trucks operating at or within federal truck size and weight (TSW) limits and trucks legally operating in excess of federal limits; comparing and contrasting the potential safety and infrastructure impacts of alternative configurations (including configurations that exceed current federal TSW limits) to the current Federal TSW law and regulations; and, estimating the effects of freight diversion due to these alternative configurations.
It is hard to represent our spherical world on flat piece of paper. Cartographers use something called a "projection" to morph the globe into 2D map. The most popular of these is the Mercator projection.
Every map projection introduces distortion, and each has its own set of problems. One of the most common criticisms of the Mercator map is that it exaggerates the size of countries nearer the poles (US, Russia, Europe), while downplaying the size of those near the equator (the African Continent). On the Mercator projection Greenland appears to be roughly the same size as Africa. In reality, Greenland is 0.8 million sq. miles and Africa is 11.6 million sq. miles, nearly 14 and a half times larger.
This app was created by James Talmage and Damon Maneice. It was inspired by an episode of The West Wing and an infographic by Kai Krause entitled "The True Size of Africa". We hope teachers will use it to show their students just how big the world actually is.
Total length (TL) is measured from tip of snout with mouth closed to top of compressed tail. Fork length (FL) is measured from tip of snout to middle of fork in tail. Lower jaw fork length (LJFL) is measured from lower jaw to middle of fork in tail. Curved fork length (CFL) is the measurement of the length taken in a line tracing the contour of the body from the tip of the upper jaw to the fork of the tail. (Diagram)
This document is a public record under chapter 132 of the North Carolina General Statutes. Anyone who alters, defaces, mutilates or destroys it shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction subject to fines.
THIS DOCUMENT IS EFFECTIVE March 4, 2024 AND IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES AND HAS NO LEGAL FORCE OR EFFECT. FISHERY RULES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE. THESE RESTRICTIONS APPLY TO FISH TAKEN FOR RECREATIONAL PURPOSES AND INCLUDE HOOK AND LINE.
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