Everything between the /* and */ is ignored by the Arduino when it runs the sketch (the * at the start of each line is only there to make the comment look pretty, and isn't required). It's there for people reading the code: to explain what the program does, how it works, or why it's written the way it is. It's a good practice to comment your sketches, and to keep the comments up-to-date when you modify the code. This helps other people to learn from or modify your code.
A variable is a place for storing a piece of data. It has a name, a type, and a value. For example, the line from the Blink sketch above declares a variable with the name ledPin, the type int, and an initial value of 13. It's being used to indicate which Arduino pin the LED is connected to. Every time the name ledPin appears in the code, its value will be retrieved. In this case, the person writing the program could have chosen not to bother creating the ledPin variable and instead have simply written 13 everywhere they needed to specify a pin number. The advantage of using a variable is that it's easier to move the LED to a different pin: you only need to edit the one line that assigns the initial value to the variable.
Often, however, the value of a variable will change while the sketch runs. For example, you could store the value read from an input into a variable. There's more information in the Variables tutorial.
A function (otherwise known as a procedure or sub-routine) is a named piece of code that can be used from elsewhere in a sketch. For example, here's the definition of the setup() function from the Blink example:
You can call a function that's already been defined (either in your sketch or as part of the Arduino language). For example, the line pinMode(ledPin, OUTPUT); calls the pinMode() function, passing it two parameters: ledPin and OUTPUT. These parameters are used by the pinMode() function to decide which pin and mode to set.
There are two special functions that are a part of every Arduino sketch: setup() and loop(). The setup() is called once, when the sketch starts. It's a good place to do setup tasks like setting pin modes or initializing libraries. The loop() function is called over and over and is heart of most sketches. You need to include both functions in your sketch, even if you don't need them for anything.
I created a sketch note this morning and the note exists but the sketch is entirely missing. Strange thing is that the note "preview" thumbnail shows the sketch notes I took. My iPad, Android and computer all show the preview picture but nothing is in the note itself.
Have had similar issue multiple times since February -- seems to happen if I have the Sketch function open and my device goes to sleep -- when I wake it up, its reverted back to the Home Screen and the sketch is missing. Can't seem to find where to file a ticket on the Evernote website.
I think there's something to this, I just had a similar experience. Started a sketch and saved it due to the prior problem. Opened it back up to continue taking notes but put it to sleep before saving. When I turned it back on the full sketch was still on the screen, but when I went to save, nothing after the first save took - I had lost all of my handwritten notes from the meeting.
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NSF requires a biographical sketch for each individual identified as senior personnel. See PAPPG Chapter II.D.2.h(i) for complete coverage on the content and formatting requirements for the biographical sketch.
NSF has partnered with the National Institutes of Health to use SciENcv: Science Experts Network Curriculum Vitae as the NSF-approved format for use in preparation of the biographical sketch section of an NSF proposal. Adoption of a single, common researcher profile system for federal grants reduces administrative burden for researchers.
I must not be doing something right because every time i start a new sketch the previous sketch activates and it is added to it instead of a new sketch. in the video you can see that it puts the new sketch on Sketch plane 01 even if it is hidden.
The new sketch you are making is still on the same plane as the old one. When you start to make a new sketch on a plane that already has a sketch on it, Shapr just adds that new sketch to what was there before. It turns on that layer (even if hidden), which is what appears to happen in your video the moment you start drawing the circle.
A biographical sketch (also referred to as biosketch) documents an individual's qualifications and experience for a specific role in a project.
NIH requires submission of a biosketch for each proposed senior/key personnel and other significant contributor on a grant application. Some funding opportunities or programs may also request biosketches for additional personnel (e.g., Participating Faculty Biosketch attachment for institutional training awards).
Applicants and recipients are required to submit biosketches
NIH staff and peer reviewers utilize the biosketch to ensure that individuals included on the applications are equipped with the skills, knowledge, and resources necessary to carry out the proposed research.
NIH biosketches must conform to a specific format. Applicants and recipients can use the provided format pages to prepare their biosketch attachments or can use SciENcv , a tool used to develop and automatically format biosketches according to NIH requirements.
I served on a Grand Jury this year, for 4 weeks, and through all the days of the trials, I sketched everything that I saw and heard into a sketchbook I knew I could never photograph or take out of court. I have no evidence to show for it, but I can tell you it was quite eye-opening to look at my portraits of people on the stand and see how much of my thoughts could be read in them.
It was another year in which my sketching family turned up for me, keeping me on track , reminding me it was time to go sketch the iris before they were gone, or spending days together experimenting with new materials.
And this is the year a bunch of you joined me for monthly sketching sessions on zoom where we made art together and learned so much from each other. I am looking forward to so much more of that in 2024!
Every year, creatives from all over the city apply for this post. To do that, they present a public-facing project that they will work on during the year. Mine was San Jose Sketchwalks, aimed at taking people to parts of the city they might not regularly visit, to look more deeply at them through a narrator who brought the place alive while I helped people look and draw what they noticed. Each participant got an accordion-fold sketchbook to keep and a supplies to use during the walk.
What a wonderful experience it has been: I loved seeing first-time sketchers realize that they can draw, met many interesting people, collaborated with some of the best creative minds in San Jose, attended arts and culture events through the year, and created visual reportage around them.
The pieces below are a subset of my sketches from a Drawing Marathon held by the Bay Area Models Guild. Nothing compares to these fabulous sessions: the models are amazing, there are so many of them posing in one room, there are long poses and short ones, models posing in pairs and alone, and just such great energy in the room.
Here are Sparky with Recycle Bot and Nick with Marauder. I sketched the robots and their human friends as they wandered up and down this wide walkway. Whihc might account for the extra-loopy linework.
GIFTS FROM ME
Here is a list of workshops, sketching sessions, prints, and books you can buy directly from me, with discount codes, freebies, and early bird pricing wherever applicable.
Sketch comedy comprises a series of short, amusing scenes or vignettes, called "sketches", commonly between one and ten minutes long, performed by a group of comic actors or comedians. The form developed and became popular in vaudeville, and is used widely in variety shows, comedy talk shows, and some sitcoms and children's television series. The sketches may be improvised live by the performers, developed through improvisation before public performance, or scripted and rehearsed in advance like a play. Sketch comedians routinely differentiate their work from a "skit", maintaining that a skit is a (single) dramatized joke (or "bit")[1] while a sketch is a comedic exploration of a concept, character, or situation.[2]Sketch comedy is a genre within American television that includes a multitude of schemes and identities.
While separate sketches historically have tended to be unrelated, more recent groups have introduced overarching themes that connect the sketches within a particular show with recurring characters that return for more than one appearance. Examples of recurring characters include Mr. Gumby from Monty Python's Flying Circus; Ted and Ralph from The Fast Show; The Family from The Carol Burnett Show; the Head Crusher from The Kids in the Hall; Martin Short's Ed Grimley, a recurring character from both SCTV and Saturday Night Live; The Nerd from Robot Chicken; and Kevin and Perry from Harry Enfield and Chums. Recurring characters from Saturday Night Live have notably been featured in a number of spinoff films, including The Blues Brothers (1980), Wayne's World (1992) and Superstar (1999).
The idea of running characters was taken a step further with shows like The Red Green Show and The League of Gentlemen, where sketches centered on the various inhabitants of the fictional towns of Possum Lake and Royston Vasey, respectively. In Little Britain, sketches focused on a cast of recurring characters.
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