s1p
E-S-P- - 1958 Tales of E-S-P- 1-4 was released on: USA: 1 August 1958
E-S-P- - 1958 Tales of E-S-P- 1-5 was released on: USA: 8 August 1958
E-S-P- - 1958 Tales of E-S-P- 1-6 was released on: USA: 15 August 1958
C-O-P-S- - 1988 The Case of C-O-P-S- File 1 Part 1 1-8 was released on: USA: 21 November 1988
p and s
E-S-P- - 1958 1-1 was released on: USA: 11 July 1958
If p = 2s + 5, then s = (p-5)/2 or 1/2 (p-5) --- p = 2s +5 p-5 = 2s (p-5)/2 = s
C-O-P-S- - 1988 The Case of C-O-P-S- File 1 Part 2 1-9 was released on: USA: 21 November 1988
There are 2 "m"s and 1 "p" in the phrase "How many m p's are there."
From 1-10 how s-t-u-p-i-d this website is i give it a 100 >:)
The equation "364 P equals 1 S" suggests a conversion between two units, where "P" could represent a smaller unit and "S" a larger one. In this context, it means that 364 units of "P" are equivalent to 1 unit of "S." Without additional context, it's unclear what "P" and "S" specifically refer to, but the relationship indicates a direct proportionality between the two units.
char *strdup (const char *s) { size_t len; char *p; if ( !s ) return NULL; len = strlen (s); p = malloc (len+1); if (p && len) { memcpy (p, s, len); p[len] = '\0'; } return p; }