Today we had a discussion over failed test cases which according to me was the right topic for the masses.
it depends on what kind of sentence it's in.
The correct way to write the sentence is: "Carlos has done his work correctly." In this sentence, "has done" is the present perfect tense of the verb "to do," indicating that the action was completed in the past and has relevance to the present. "Correctly" is the adverb that describes how Carlos completed his work.
That is the correct US spelling of "favorable" (the UK spelling is favourable).
I love you mom and dad! Is there anything else I can do?
There is no grammatical reason to capitalize every word in a sentence. It may sometimes be done as someone's attempt at emphasis, but it is never grammatically correct.
a masters.I have done a masters in English.But I think completed is a better verb than done and also add degree.I have completed a masters degree in English.
The correct version is"What you have done is wrong". In this form, "What" stands for "The thing that". The alternative "What have you done"... is a question.
Have done is correct. When using have as an auxiliary verb, it's paired with a past participle.
Yes! Is correct sentence
No, it's, "I wouldn't have done that."
yes
No. Depending on the context of the sentence it should be If you have had a consultation or if you have done so, with consultation, blah blah
Yes. The correct way to say this is "you are done with this book."
it depends on what kind of sentence it's in.
This will depend on the type of framing you would like to do. There are several different types of framing that can be done,and I would need your location.
The correct phrase is "I have done it." "Have done" is the present perfect tense of the verb "do," while "have did" is incorrect because "did" is the past tense of "do" and should not be used in conjunction with "have."
Framing is done at the Data Link layer (Layer 2). Routing is done at the Network layer (Layer 3).