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That night the two were eating dinner, with Kuma remarking on how much of a big eater Ginny turned out to be. The two then broke down into tears of joy over their freedom and newfound happiness. Quick References[] Chapter Notes[] The Native Hunting Competition at God Valley begins. 200
World Nobles would participate against 100,000 Rabbits. Among said 100,000 Rabbits were also 150 Rare Rabbits and 13 Super Rare Rabbits. Ginny is shown utilizing a unique Den Den Mushi as an earpiece; this is the first time one has been used this way in the
main canon. Ginny used a stolen Den Den Mushi to
leak information about the competition and its prizes to the outside world. Kong requested Garp to head to God Valley to protect the World Nobles. Garp initially refused until he heard Roger was reported nearby. According to Garp, the World Nobles stole a certain treasure from Hachinosu, which
served as a motivation for the Rocks Pirates to attack the Nobles. The Rocks Pirates, Roger Pirates and Marines led by Garp all make landfall at God Valley, effectively starting the God Valley Incident.
Learn more about Labs Where does 'Hello world' come from? Ask Question Asked 15 years ago Modified 5 months ago Viewed 84k times 120 'hello, world' is usually the first example for any programming language. I've always wondered where this sentence came from and where was it first used. I've
once been told that it was the first sentence ever to be displayed on a computer screen, but I've not been able to find any reference to this. So my question is:
Where does the practice to use 'hello, world' as the first example for computer languages originate from?
Where was it first used? Update
Although the answers are quite interesting, I should have noted that I had read the Wikipedia article. It does answer the question about the first use in literature, but does not answer when 'hello world' was first used.
So I think that it is safe to conclude that it was not the first sentence ever to be displayed on a computer screen and that there is no record about when it was first used? language-agnostichistory Share Improve this question Follow edited Oct 3, 2023 at 8:48 community wiki
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Jacco 0 Add a comment | 7 Answers 7 Sorted by: Reset to default Highest score (default) Trending (recent votes count more) Date modified (newest first) Date created (oldest first) 111 Brian Kernighan actually wrote the first "hello, world" program as
part of the documentation for the BCPL programming language developed by Martin Richards. BCPL was used while C was being developed at Bell Labs a few years before the publication of Kernighan and Ritchie's C book in 1972. As part of the research for a book I was writing about the Alice programming environment, I corresponded with both Prof. Kernighan at Princeton and Martin Richards at Cambridge (when I was teaching a seminar there in the 1990’s). They helped me to track the first documented use of code to print the message "Hello, World!” Brian Kernighan remembered writing the code for part of the I/O section of the BCPL manual. Martin Richards -- who seems to have a treasure trove of notes, old documents, etc.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1940. ^ McCarron, Bill; Knoke, Paul (2002), "From Gent to Gentil: Jed Tewksbury and the Function of
Literary Allusion in A Place to Come To",
Robert Penn Warren Studies, 2 (1) ^ "CCC, 2733". Vatican. va. ^ "Before Sloth Meant Laziness, It Was the Spiritual Sin of Acedia". Atlas Obscura.