PULL UP THE TOILET AND SEE IF THERE IS A MINOR BLOCKAGE. SOMETIMES THOSE NEW WAX RINGS WITH THE FUNNEL REALLY BLOW IT. WATER PRESSURE MIGHT NOT BE GOOD. TAKE A SREW DRIVER AND OPEN IT UP COUNTERCLOCK WISE.(TAKE THE CAP OFF THE STOP) IF YOUR SIPHONE JET IS WALL MOUNTED YOU BETTER CALL A PLUMBER. TAKING IT OFF THE WALL IS NO PROBLEM. PUTTING IT BACK IS. YOU CAN ONLY SNUG THE LAST BOLT OR THE FIXTURE WILL BUST.
Cuss words weren't always bad, but people started using them in ways that made them become bad over time. For example, the guy that made the toilet was named John Crapper, which made people start saying "crap" in reference to body waste, and then eventually they started using it for other things to.
They way that you prepare an indicator using and onion and beetroot depends on what type of indicator you want to prepare (i.e.: Litmus, pH, redox or other). Generally, you will cut pieces off of the onion and beetroot and put them each in separate flasks adding ethanol or other liquid you want to use for your indicator project.
Blue whales are carnivores, technically, because they consume krill, tiny crustaceans related to shrimp. They siphon seawater through their jaws, using their baleen plates as sieves to extract their prey.
Proteins are transported to other parts of the cell by using which organelle
For maximum cleaniness, once a week is recommmended. However, one cleaning per month would be sufficient to keep it clean of germs. That would also depend on the types of accessories that you are using.
Toilets do not function on suction, they flush by using gravity to empty the water from the tank into the bowl, thereby causing the S-trap built into the toilet bowl to siphon. The only way to improve the flush is to cause it to flush with more water (which sometimes helps, sometimes doesn't), or buy a siphon-jet or other power assisted toilet. An older toilet may be to plugged up with mineral deposits to improve the flush much, the amount of deposit depends on what's in your water, how often you clean the toilet, and other factors beyond your control.
The toilet is 3 or 4 inch and the shower is 1 1/2 or 2 inch. You could reduce the toilet to 2 inch, but it would never flush correctly or be of much use. The current toilet drain has no trap in that section because one isn't needed. The toilet itself is the trap. If you are using existing waste lines, they should already be connected to the vent stack. If you are adding lines, connecting to the existing stack is fine as long as it is above the last drain.
You definitely do not want to do it as our fathers and grandfathers did--using a garden hose, sucking it and then quickly releasing the hose. That led to lung damage and other health issues.
Yes it is possible to implement stack and queue using linked list
Explain The merits of using a deque to implement a stack in data structure
poooda
You don't. A stack is a last in first out (LIFO) structure so you only have access to the top element in the stack. If you want to locate the smallest element in the stack, you need to pop everything off the stack in order to find it, at which point the stack is completely ruined. The only way to restore a stack is to push every element onto another stack as they are popped off. The other stack will then be the reverse of the original, so you just repeat the process to transfer the elements back to the original stack. You should really be asking why you are using a stack in the first place if the intent is to remove an element other than the top element. A forward list would be a much better option.
Sure, recursion can always be substituted with using a stack.
Using the toilet is better than the alternative.
What do you mean by stack-refreshing? Anyway, there are no stack handling functions in the standard C library.
// stack to contain content Stack sourceStack = new Stack(); // ... fill sourceStack with content // stack to contain reversed content Stack targetStack = new Stack(); while (!sourceStack.empty()) { targetStack.push(sourceStack.pop()); } // targetStack contains the reversed content of sourceStack
Amy Stack :)