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The general rule that is mostly true a lot of the time is that "caliber" is the diameter of the bore (the hole inside the barrel through which the bullet passes) as expressed in decimals, using inch units of measure. So a "thirty caliber" rifle would have a bore of .30 inch or 30/100 inch. A "twenty two caliber" gun fires a .22" diameter bullet. But "caliber" also means a particular name of a specific cartridge of a certain height, weight, width, angle, and gunpowder charge. For example, a .22 "long rifle" bullet weighs 40 grains and moves at an initial velocity of 1000 feet per second. But a .220 Swift rifle cartridge fires a bullet of the same diameter, but longer and heavier, and at over 3,000 feet per second. Two different caliber cartridges, but in each case the hole in the rifle's barrel is about 22/100 inch. I was not the question.
The UL tag is the opening tag that creates an unordered list. An unordered list has items with different bullets before them, rather than being numbered or having letters before them. The LI tag is a list item. The following is a simple example of an unordered list. <ul> <li> First item <li> Second item <li> Third item </ul>
There were two major inventions that happened during the Renaissance era. The first was the mechanical clock that started measuring in hours. The second was glasses, that would help people with poor vision to see.
<li>Enter the text that you want to list here</li> <li>Enter the next item that you want to list here</li> And so on until all the items you want to list are listed.
#include<stdio.h> #include<string.h> main() { char a[24]; int i,count=0,j=0,stlen,k,substlen,sig=0; gets(a); for(i=0;i<strlen(a);i++) {if(a[i]==' ') break; else j++;} stlen=j; substlen=strlen(a)-j-1; for(i=0;i<=stlen-substlen;i++) {count=0; for(k=i+substlen-1;k>=i;k--) {if(a[k]!=a[k+stlen-i+1]) break; else count++;} if(count==substlen) {sig=1; break; } } printf("%d",sig); } input- 11100101 1001 110010 111 output- 1 0 note -give the main string and the substring(to be checked) seperated by a space.
started months already
Yes. The bullet is already moving at 900 fps before it is even fired. When the round leaves the barrel it will be traveling at 1,800 fps. Motion is all relative.
They already started another season of Suite Life on Deck.
See the related link for several free sample Magic Bullet 10 Second Recipes.
Depends on the speed of the bullet, and the length of the barrel. In the case of a .22 rifle, firing a bullet at 1200 feet per second, from a 16 inch barrel, it will take 1/75th of a second for the bullet to leave the barrel.
the speed of a bullet fired by g3 is approximately 3500km/second according to my knowledge regards malikhammad38@yahoo.com
Gravity adds 32.1 feet per second to the bullet's downward velocity every second after the shot is fired.
The highest speed i know for a bullet is the .50 Cal BMG bullet at about an average of 2800 Feet per second or 1901 M.P.H
Between 800 and over 4,000, depending on which bullet you had in mind.
Do not use any punctuation to introduce a sentence-style list that follows grammatically from words such as "including." Here is an example: There were several items on the grocery list, including ham, beans, onions, carrots, and celery. However, if you're talking about a bulleted list, various style guides give you your choice of punctuation from none to periods, commas, or semicolons. This list includes several styles of punctuation for bulleted lists: * Each bullet point ends without punctuation. * Each bullet point ends with a period (note that this is common if some or all entries are complete sentences). * All bullet points end with a comma or a semicolon except for the final entry, which ends with a period. * In the previous style, the second-to-last entry includes the word "and" (or "or") after the semicolon.
Do not use any punctuation to introduce a sentence-style list that follows grammatically from words such as "including." Here is an example: There were several items on the grocery list, including ham, beans, onions, carrots, and celery. However, if you're talking about a bulleted list, various style guides give you your choice of punctuation from none to periods, commas, or semicolons. This list includes several styles of punctuation for bulleted lists: * Each bullet point ends without punctuation. * Each bullet point ends with a period (note that this is common if some or all entries are complete sentences). * All bullet points end with a comma or a semicolon except for the final entry, which ends with a period. * In the previous style, the second-to-last entry includes the word "and" (or "or") after the semicolon.
The Answer Is: 4 feet per second.