"Setup" is a noun. "Set up" is a verb phrase. Use "setup" when you're talking about a specific configuration. Use "set up" when you're talking about the act of configuring or arranging something.
Eg: "It was easy to set up Jim's Home Theater. It was almost exactly like my setup at home."
"Setup" is a noun referring to the way something is organized or arranged. "Set up" is a phrasal verb meaning to prepare or establish something. For example, you can have a good setup for a party, but you need to set up the decorations for it.
Express set-up usually makes most of the choices for you. Command-line set-up gives you more control to set different parameters.
The control variable is the thing you keep the same and is everything that is not the independent variable. The Control Setup is there for the sake of comparison.
A screened host set up has single network interface and a dual-homed host setup has two network interfaces
The past participle tense of "setup" is "set up."
There is no difference between a laptop or a desktop when setting up a router. You should use an Ethernet cable when setting up your router, and use the wireless only after it's setup.
No, "set-up" is typically spelled with a hyphen when used as an adjective (e.g., "set-up process"), but as a noun or verb, it is commonly written as "setup" without a hyphen.
The correct phrasing is "set up correctly."
ask.com search" how to set up a bibliography"
It was setup in 1935.
You can run windows network setup after following the hup setup directions.
In the context "this setup works great!", it is one word. In the context "I have to set up the table still", it is two words. In the context, "it was a set-up, I am innocent!", it is hyphenated.
Yes, you can set up your personal password