You are obviously referring to the Scriptures. These help each of us learn God's truth (John 17:17), human history to help not repeat it ourselves, what our future holds for us if we repent, get baptized, and imitate (disciple) of Christ. Perhaps the Apostle Paul recorded the best reason for all to read The Bible:
2 Timothy 3:16-17New International Version (NIV)
16 All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, 17 so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work.
Judaism and Christianity.
I suggest you use a ruler.
You can use text to indicate raising a power through several means, depending on context. I will use "raise x to the power of y" as the example throughout this answer:If the environment supports rich text, you can and should use a superscript: xyIn plain-text environments, you can use x^yIn programming environments, it is commonly x**y
Use comma in a writing. Procedurel Text, Recounts Or others.
A ruler and a calculator. Or a math text book.
The Bible.
The Holy Bible, Dewey number 220 ( by the way the flash point of steam!)
Judaism is not a sacred text, it is a religion and that religion happens to have a sacred text. To learn more about Judaism's Sacred Text, read the Related Question.
Judaism and Christianity.
The Holy Bible is the sacred text for Christians.
the hindu sacred text is called a sakrit.
The jewish book of sacred texts is called the Torah
Internet Sacred Text Archive was created in 1999.
No. The Talmud is an explanatory legal treatise in Judaism. It is not a "sacred text" nor is it affiliated with Christianity in any way. (The Jewish sacred text is the Tanakh or Jewish Bible.)
The main sacred text is Iliad and the Odyssey which were a series of poems written by Homer
I believe the sacred text of the church of England is the King James edition of the Holy Bible.
The Anga