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Copying information from a computers hardware to the internet is called utility programming. This can be done quickly.
A mistake made during copying of genetic information is called a
A graph, known as a chart in Excel, is a visual representation of data. There are different kinds of charts, used for different kinds of data. For some people seeing a chart is easier than looking at lots of numbers to help them understand the data. For an individual chart, you would have to see it to explain it. To help, charts have main labels and also ones on the axes, for charts that have them. A legend in a chart can explain what the specific colours that you see mean. If designed properly, a chart is a very useful tool in working with a spreadsheet.
That is copying information from DNA to mRNA. It takes place in nucleus
When you mate then your DNA attaches to your mate
Yes, copying materials is illegal. It is considered stealing because someone else created the information. Claiming it as your own means you can be sued.
For instance, revealing confidential information, stealing the ideas of others, copying software, and punching the time clock from home are unethical behaviors. Unauthorized copying of software--software piracy--is stealing.
No because you are only using the information to make your own assumptions. However, if you say the same thing as the source, then yes, in a way, you are copying.
memcpy is general purpose copy. and strcpy is specific for string copying. strcpy will copy the source string to destination string and terminate it with '\0' character but memcpy takes extra argument which specifies the number of bytes to copy.memcpy will not handle copying of overlapping memory. use memove instead.
To ensure the accuracy and reliability of the copied material(s)
It depends on the type of information, and the extent and use of the copying. While some copying might be a violation of copyright law, privacy law, or other laws, in many cases you might not be breaking any law at all.
Yes, the amount that was copied to the paper can impact the severity of the issue. Copying a small amount may be considered fair use, while copying a substantial portion could be a copyright infringement. It is important to consider the context and purpose of the copying.