1. District Courts (among/in the states)
2. Courts or Appeal (In the middle)
3. Supreme Court (Highest - These cases take place in Washington DC)
Basically, three levels to the federal court system: the district level, the circuit level and the supreme court. The country is split up into thirteen different circuits, two of which are located in Washington D.C. New York City, for example, sits in the Second Circuit. Chicago, the Seventh Circuit. Los Angeles, the Ninth Circuit, and so forth. Within each circuit there are district courts. States vary in how they split up their districts. Illinois, for example, has three districts, the Northern, Central, and Southern Districts. Some states may have more, others may have only one. Within each district there may be divisions where different courts are located in different cities. In some districts there is only one division. All district level courts are trial level courts, which appeal to the circuit level courts. Then, only with permission, can you appeal from the circuit level courts to the Supreme Court.
It gets more complicated when you get into the jurisdiction of administrative courts and the Federal Circuit, but, that's the basic jist of how the federal court system is set up.
Courts of Appeals / The Circuit Courts (In the middle)
District Courts (among/in the states)
It depends entirely on the country/state/province etc.
Don't arrange it at all. Call the first temperature in the list "lowest" and also "highest". Then go down the list. If a temperature is bigger than "highest", re-set "highest" to that temperature, so that further values will be compared with that. Equally, if a temperature is lower than "lowest", re-set "lowest" to that temperature, so that furher values will be also compared with that. Eventually you will reach the end of the data, with "highest" and "lowest" giving the values you want.
If they all have a common denominator, then list them from lowest to highest numerator.
Median means the middle. In mathematics, you take a list of numbers, list them from lowest to highest, and the median is whatever number is in the middle.
the number( or numbers) in the middle of a list of numbers in order of highest to lowest. eg. the median in the following list is 7 1,2,3,7,8,9,9
see the link ...... http://216.152.235.70/webdir.fwx
fling flog sum
Plasma, gas, liquid, solid.
I will list them from the highest energy to the lowest: -Plasma -Gas -Liquid -Solid -Bose-Einstien Condensate
The correct list of social classes in colonial Latin America from highest to lowest would typically be: peninsulares (those born in Spain), creoles (those of Spanish descent born in the Americas), mestizos (people of mixed European and indigenous descent), indigenous peoples, African slaves, and mulattos (people of mixed European and African descent).
To find the highest and lowest elements in a linked list, iterate the list and detect the highest and lowest elements. Details omitted ... list *head; /* pointer to first element */ list *temp; /* temp pointer list *high = null; /* pointer to high element */ list *low = null; /* pointer to low element */ for (temp=head; temp!=null; temp=temp->next) { /* iterate all elements */ if (temp == head ) { /* initial case */ high = low = temp; /* start accumulating results } else { /* otherwise */ if (higher(temp, high) high = temp; /* choose higher */ if (lower(temp, low) low = temp; /* choose lower */ } }
The range of is 70, which is the difference between the highest and lowest numbers in the list.
The easiest way to find the top ten values in a list is to sort the list from highest to lowest and select the top ten cells.