you should probably see a doctor about that...
Gangrene.
Well, it's your own semen and you have STD. It won't makes you get worse since you produce it yourself...
It is best to go to the doctor and get checked for an STD because if you wait you can do permanent damage to your ovaries, and fallopian tubes.
If she had an STD then yes if not no you should not
AnswerIt totally depends how this makes you feel and will be a personal decision however, if you are in a committed relationship this is still a form of cheating regardless if the other person involved is gay. Ask her how she would feel if you did the same thing.Also, you have to careful with this multiple partner type of stuff with the transmission of STD's - although it may be only kissing there are many STD's that can be transmitted by mouth.Cheating is cheating, no matter who it is with. If you are in a comitted relationship your partner should not explore sexuality with anyone else, otherwise drop them like a bad habit and move on to someone you can put your trust into.
It is said that Brendon Urie may have gotten an STD from Audrey Kitching. Does this mean we love him any less? Never ever. Brendon Urie is what makes our day.-SMEXIHARLEQUIN
You need to have this checked out by a doctor; it could be a STD.
#include<iostream> int main() { std::cout << "sin(1) = " << std::sin(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "cos(1) = " << std::cos(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "tan(1) = " << std::tan(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "asin(1) = " << std::asin(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "acos(1) = " << std::acos(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "atan(1) = " << std::atan(1.0) << std::endl; } Output: sin(1) = 0.841471 cos(1) = 0.540302 tan(1) = 1.55741 asin(1) = 1.5708 acos(1) = 0 atan(1) = 0.785398
It is usually the STD trichomoniasis; go to the doctor and get antibiotics to get rid of the infection.
#include<iostream> #include<vector> #include<string> std::vector<std::string> parse (const std::string& s, const char delim) { std::vector<std::string> result {}; auto start = 0U; auto end = s.find (delim); while (end != s.npos) { result.push_back (s.substr(start, end - start)); start = ++end; end = s.find (delim, start); } result.push_back (s.substr (start, s.npos - start)); return result; } std::vector<std::string> parse (const std::string& s, const std::string& delim) { std::vector<std::string> result {}; auto start = 0U; auto end = s.find (delim); while (end != s.npos) { result.push_back (s.substr(start, end - start)); start = end + delim.length(); end = s.find (delim, start); } result.push_back (s.substr (start, s.npos - start)); return result; } int main() { std::string str1 = "This is a string that will be parsed by a single-space delimiter."; std::string str2 = "This==is==a==string==that==will==be==parsed==by==equal==operator."; std::string str3 = "This string has no delimiter."; std::cout << str1 << std::endl; std::vector<std::string> v1 = parse (str1, ' '); for (auto i : v1 ) std::cout << i << std::endl; std::cout << std::endl; std::cout << str2 << std::endl; std::vector<std::string> v2 = parse (str2, "=="); for (auto i : v2 ) std::cout << i << std::endl; std::cout << std::endl; std::cout << str3 << std::endl; std::vector<std::string> v3 = parse (str3, '\\'); for (auto i : v3 ) std::cout << i << std::endl; std::cout << std::endl; }
The following example demonstrates all 4 loop structures in C++. #include<iostream> int main() { int i; std::cout<<"For loop...\n"<<std::endl; for(i=0; i<10; ++i) std::cout<<i; std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; std::cout<<"While loop...\n"<<std::endl; i=0; while(i<10) std::cout<<i++; std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; std::cout<<"Do-while loop...\n"<<std::endl; i=0; do { std::cout<<i; }while( ++i<10 ); std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; std::cout<<"Goto loop...\n"<<std::endl; i=0; again: std::cout<<i; if(++i<10) goto again; std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; } Output: For loop... 0123456789 While loop... 0123456789 Do-while loop... 0123456789 Goto loop... 0123456789
No, the use of 'namespace std' is not compulsory. You can specifiy it on any object reference. Specifying 'namespace' simply provides a default value. Contrast ... using namespace std; cout << "Hello world!" << endl; ... with ... std::cout << "Hello world!" << std::endl;