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Offline gesunde  
#1 Posted : 15 January 2016 06:36:49(UTC)
gesunde

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Can someone maybe tell me how more than one line can be placed in a for-loop?

Thanks in advance

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Offline omorr  
#2 Posted : 15 January 2016 11:01:13(UTC)
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Hello,
Originally Posted by: gesunde Go to Quoted Post
Can someone maybe tell me how more than one line can be placed in a for-loop?

From "Programming" palette choose "line"

Regards,
Radovan
When Sisyphus climbed to the top of a hill, they said: "Wrong boulder!"
Offline Jean Giraud  
#3 Posted : 15 January 2016 15:21:51(UTC)
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Originally Posted by: gesunde Go to Quoted Post
Can someone maybe tell me how more than one line can be placed in a for-loop?

____________________

This way more friendly:
1. the for loop opens 1 place holder
2. on that place holder type ] from the keyboard
3. now you have 2 place holders
4. on the 2nd place holder down jut added
5. press coma (,) from keyboard coma wihtout bracket
6. each coma adds line down,down,down
7. you have too many: press backspace
8. you want to add comment wihtin the program
9. Shift+" you get the brown comment line " "
10. type the comment, as many lines as you want
11. the comment line does not take Greek caracters
12. in the comment line, you CAN'T use equal sign =
because it an arithmetic caracter
13. create arrows --> <--

Jean


thanks 2 users thanked Jean Giraud for this useful post.
on 15/01/2016(UTC),  on 15/01/2016(UTC)
Offline gesunde  
#4 Posted : 15 January 2016 21:14:56(UTC)
gesunde

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Thanks! I try to use it to map airports on a flat-earth map (because somehow the "official" maps are not really precise... I recently found out that the earth is indeed flat. Man - this is a huge lie that we have been told! Already the Experiment called Airys Failure proves that the earth is stationary... (Airys-Failure-Experiment) The whole of the heliocentric worldview is a fraud...

But anyway, thanks it helped, works perfectly! Would it be possible to mention those things somewhere in the wiki or on the site about programming in smath studio? It could be helpful.

Greetings
Offline Jean Giraud  
#5 Posted : 15 January 2016 23:38:54(UTC)
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There is a Society in UK called "Flat Earth Society".
No joke ! Good idea to drink friendly beer ...
floc·ci·nau·ci·ni·hil·i·pil·i·fi·ca·tion
and keep wifes home cooking flat pan cakes.

I have the overall earth flat data set, Smath won't
digest. The data set is so gigantic.

Jean
Offline gesunde  
#6 Posted : 16 January 2016 00:49:34(UTC)
gesunde

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Of course there is a flat earth society - but the flat earth society wiki you'll find on the internet - they have the "in veritate victoriae" slogan on their frontpage - they kinda are disinformants as they try to explain gravity as the earth rising up at 9.81m/s^2.

What data are you speaking of?
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