Hexadecimal uses the digits 0-9 and the letters a-f (in either upper case A-F, or lower case a-f). You appear to have used a letter O in upper case and lower case (o). Neither is a valid [standard] hexadecimal digit; so 3EO and 3Eo both mean the same in hexadecimal: a non-valid number. 3E0 and 3e0 are both valid hexadecimal numbers that mean the same (as the decimal number 992). In C, to signify a hexadecimal number it is preceded by 0X or 0x (that is zero-letter X), as in 0x3E0, etc.
In a case citation, the numbers typically indicate the volume number, the reporter series, and the page number where the case can be found. For example, in "123 F.3d 456," "123" refers to the volume number of the Federal Reporter, "F.3d" signifies that it is from the third series of the Federal Reporter, and "456" indicates the specific page on which the case starts. This structured format helps in efficiently locating legal cases within published reports.
Sure. In the simplest case, a function, such as f(x), is simply a rule to determine a number, based on another number. You can define both the original number and the resulting number to be any type of number (or other object) you want.
If you mean the absolute value: the absolute value of a positive number is the number itself, in this case, 3.2.
I think you mean 109,999. in that case, the number after it is 110,000
Hexadecimal uses the digits 0-9 and the letters a-f (in either upper case A-F, or lower case a-f). You appear to have used a letter O in upper case and lower case (o). Neither is a valid [standard] hexadecimal digit; so 3EO and 3Eo both mean the same in hexadecimal: a non-valid number. 3E0 and 3e0 are both valid hexadecimal numbers that mean the same (as the decimal number 992). In C, to signify a hexadecimal number it is preceded by 0X or 0x (that is zero-letter X), as in 0x3E0, etc.
what this case number mean 9999999999
In a case citation, the numbers typically indicate the volume number, the reporter series, and the page number where the case can be found. For example, in "123 F.3d 456," "123" refers to the volume number of the Federal Reporter, "F.3d" signifies that it is from the third series of the Federal Reporter, and "456" indicates the specific page on which the case starts. This structured format helps in efficiently locating legal cases within published reports.
That phrase could mean MANY things. It could mean the case file number under which the court jacket is filed. It could mean the Police Report Number under wihich it is filed. It could mean that this case is referred to in another case. Etc, etc, etc..
Sure. In the simplest case, a function, such as f(x), is simply a rule to determine a number, based on another number. You can define both the original number and the resulting number to be any type of number (or other object) you want.
Statement of Charges
delivery marijuana
peanut butter
f
f you mean one million then as a number it is 1,000,000
"k", in this case, may mean "kilo", that is, "times thousand".
That phrase could mean MANY things. It could mean the case file number under which the court jacket is filed. It could mean the Police Report Number under wihich it is filed. It could mean that this case is referred to in another case. Etc, etc, etc..