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Well in the comics it states that Bruce Wayne whas nigh-superhuman detective and reasoning prowess that (Should) allow him to be the spandex Sherlock of Gotham, so I would go for Bruce.
It would be a list of five programming languages.
If you're informing Bruce about some guy named Wayne, then after Bruce. If you're talking about Batman, then in some other sentence, because that one is fine as is.
Object-oriented programming is a category of programming languages. On a larger scale, OOP would belong under the imperative programming paradigm.
yes ofcourse!!
Batman's secret identity as Bruce Wayne would be his one weakness.
Batman is Bruce Wayne Superman is Clark Kent
I'm not certain Bruce Wayne is richer.If he is richer it is most likely because Wayne Enterprises (Which Bruce Wayne has complete ownership of) is more successful as a business than Queen Consolidated (Which in some versions of Green Arrow Oliver Queen has complete ownership of.)I have no proof but just making an educated guess based on comics, tv shows and movies I would estimate Bruce Wayne's net worth anywhere from $70 billion - $250 billion.Oliver Queen could quite possibly be richer, though especially given the amount of money he was able to waste and still remain a billionaire, even before inheriting billions from the death of his father.I would estimate Oliver Queen's net worth anywhere from $110 billion- $300 billion.
That would be Welsh actor Christian Bale.
Yes, MIT is just one of many technical schools that offer instruction in various programming languages, for a specific type of games, said friend would have to learn a select set of different programming languages in order to be able to build a game.
Low level languages, such as C/C++, are usually preferred for programming games because they are normally faster at graphics processing than other languages. If you mean online games, then something like Flash would be ideal.
It would be better to say that Bruce Wayne was greedy, not Batman. While Bruce Wayne bought out many companies, including Lexicorp shares, Batman was the epitome of selflessness, as quoted in 'no hope for crime alley': "To you (homeless man), the loss of a dollar is worth more than thousands to a banker." However, it could be argued that Batman was greedy, as the more he would help the needy, the more is alter ego (Wayne) compensated with fraudulent spending and selfish behavior. This relationship with himself would cause him to see Bruce Wayne as 'A daytime mask for the Batman,' and grow to hate his true identity, further pushing him into an obsession with vigilanteism.