Scanner is used to read characters from paper and to translate them into a computer image. This image in next step can be transformed to a text form using OCR (Optical Character Recognition) software.
(a) 240 characters (b) 255 characters (c) label does not have a caption property (d) unlimited
1000
in excel workbook these are symbols.
I believe it depends on the table you use, however it should be able to crack at least 12 characters.
Alphanumeric characters are lowercase a-z, uppercase A-Z, and numbers 0-9. It does not include any punctuation characters, special characters, etc. Aggie80 is certainly an alphanumeric address. Most systems recommend that you use at least three of the four character sets, lowercase letters, uppercase letters, numbers and symbols. Not all systems will take symbols, so Aggie80 would be a fair alphanumeric password, (No, I don't use it!) it would be considered 'stronger' if it had at least 8 characters. So WikiAggie80 would be pretty good. It sure wouldn't appear in any dictionary!
Pat Jiun-chang Lok has written: 'Recognition of printed Chinese characters' -- subject(s): Chinese characters, Chinese language, Computer programs, Machine translating
Google translate is good for Japanese kanji characters and you can change the kanji to romaji
The characters in the poem "How I Learned English" are the narrator, the narrator's siblings, and the English language teacher. The narrator's siblings play a role in the story by translating for the parents, and the English language teacher helps the narrator improve their English skills.
Sure, go for it. Lots of people use colors to name their characters. If you think it does lack originality, try translating the colors in another language. I have a character called Dakku, which is apparently «Dark» in Japanese. Hope this helps.
Huoping Chen has written: 'Chinese radicals' -- subject(s): Study and teaching, Chinese language, Translating, Transliteration, Chinese characters 'Simplified Chinese characters' -- subject(s): Chinese characters, Chinese language, Handbooks, manuals, Handbooks, manuals, etc, Simplified characters, Variation, Writing 'Fun with Chinese festivals' -- subject(s): Mid-autumn Festival, Festivals, Chinese New Year
Pinyin (拼音) is romanization of Chinese characters. Basically, it spells out the sound of the Chinese word. To translate from English to Pinyin, you would have to know what you are translating in English, the translation in Chinese, and then the romanization of the Chinese characters.
Should be 320 characters: Ref1: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/386294/maximum-length-of-a-valid-email-id Ref2: http://askville.amazon.com/maximum-length-allowed-email-address/AnswerViewer.do?requestId=1166932
The most common ways of translating Joseph to Chinese is: 約瑟 Yue1 se4 (in Mandarin pinyin pronunciation, traditional Chinese characters) 约瑟 (simplified Chinese characters) or 約瑟夫 Yue1 se4 fu1 约瑟夫 (simplified Chinese characters) Foreign names are phonetically translated into Chinese so there is no right or wrong way to translate a name. If you do not like the Chinese characters for your name, you can always replace it with a similar sounding Chinese character as long as it doesn't have an overall bad meaning.
Mostly Nickelodeon characters. Spongebob characters, Dora characters, shrek characters, etc.
No, "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" is a work of fiction written by Mark Twain. It is a novel that features fictional characters and events, not based on real-life occurrences.
Supporting characters or secondary characters.
The cast of Broaden Your Mind - 1968 includes: Colin Bean as Various Characters Carla Challoner as Various Characters Graham Chapman as Various Characters Virginia Courtney as Various Characters Amy Dalby as Various Characters Graeme Garden as Various Characters Barrie Gosney as Various Characters Jan Gummer as Various Characters Felicity Harrison as Various Characters David Hatch as Various Characters Tina Heath as Various Characters Terry Jones as Various Characters John Junkin as Various Characters Jo Kendall as Various Characters Annie Leake as Various Characters Sunny Leslie as Sue and Sunny Roland MacLeod as Various Characters Nicholas McArdle as Various Characters Bill Oddie as Various Characters Michael Palin as Various Characters Gillian Parsons as Various Characters Yutte Stensgaard as Various Characters John Watters as Various Characters