Actually sitting on the earth we feel as if we are at rest. But relative to the pole star we are moving along a circular path. Also relative to the sun we are moving along an elliptical path around the sun. So actually speaking we are not at rest. In the same nothing is stationary. Everything is in motion. Rest means only a relative term.
Microscopes uses the same trick as refracting telescopes. They bend the light as it travels through the glass. In a microscope, the idea is to bend diverging lights into a parallel path, then focus that path into a light beam creating a spread out yet zoomed in image of what is on the microscope slide.
If the bus is moving at a constant horizontal velocity relative to you and the ball, there is no horizontal acceleration and therefore no horizontal force. The only force acting on the ball is gravity, which is vertical, so the ball will just fall straight down next to you.
The path of electricity is called a circuit.
The "loudness" with which you perceive a sound is determined by -- the amplitude of the sound as it leaves the source -- the distance between you and the source -- obstacles or absorptive media in the path between the source and your ear -- reflective surfaces near the path, leading to multipath interference, constructive or destructive at the frequencies that comprise the sound -- the relative amplitude response of your ear at the frequencies that comprise the sound.
Absolute path: Path from root directory (it is the same place, wherever the current path is) Relative path: Relative to the current path.
In Microsoft Word, hyperlinks are created by default whenever you type a hyperlink or network path. To disable this feature:Click the FILE tabClick OptionsClick the Proofing optionClick the AutoCorrect Options... buttonSelect the AutoFormat As You Type tabClick to clear the checkmark against the Internet and network paths with hyperlinks optionClick the OK button
What detects charged particles by creating a visible path of droplets?
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Absolute path contains full name of file including the source, for instance, c:\Windows\Temp\log.txt. Relative path contains only the path relativaly to a certain folder, for instance, relative path of log.txt relativaly to the folder Windows is Temp\log.txt.
Hyperlink is selectable object which points to another object with the help of path information of that object. This another object is the webpage. Hyperlinks on the different web page, will help visitors to move from one place to another place for finding specific things on the website very easily.
absolute path is an exact road to go in and path is just a relative path, for example the path is near the river - for a path and for an absolute path you can say the path is on green lake street on the intersection of green lake street and Burnside street.
Say your current working directory is /home/rama If there is sub-dir called scripts here then the absolute path for the sub-dir is /home/rama/scripts and relative path is scripts or ./scripts (relative to /home/rama)
The earth's axis of rotation is tilted relative to the earth's path around the sun. As a result we are tilted towards the sun in the summer and away from the sun in the winter.
An absolute path refers to the path to a file on a computer. For example, on a Unix system, an absolute path begins with a '/' and on a Microsoft Windows machine, it will begin with a drive letter, a ':' and a backslash (eg 'C:\') or a '\\' indicating a path to another computer. A relative path is the path to a file from the current directory. On a unix system this path will begin with a character other than a '/' (any other character could begin a relative path). For example, if one is currently in the directory /home/user42/ and there is a directory named /home/user42/mail/ then the relative path to mail is simply 'mail/'. If there is a directory /home/user41/songs/ then the relative path is '../user41/songs/'. If one is in the directory /home/ then the relative paths are user42/mail/ and user41/songs/, respectively.
Most relative directories are preceded by a period (.)
By specifying either the absolute or relative path to file.Example 1 (absolute path; works from anywhere):rm /etc/shadowExample 2 (relative patch; will only work if you are in /usr):rm ./bin/viExample 3 (relative path; removing file from home directory, works from anywhere):rm ~/mystuff/importantfile