A Bare Analogy
- From: "Douglas Eagleson" <eaglesondouglas@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 6 Aug 2005 14:02:09 -0700
A small analogy of odd kind. I have
a system to describe and then code.
As computer code.
So here is the analogy to help me
code it.
A ship is to move across the Atlantic
ocean. And to let the water displace
while the ship moves is to allow it
to work.
And to displace and exactly replace
the exact water appears the analogy.
A ship is therefor the element to
cause the water to move from the front
to the rear of the ship.
A floating barrel is set for every ten ship
lengths and the numbers on the
barrel alter while the ship moves.
A ten changes to the number of the
barrel, x number back in line.
And the number of the water is as
follows.
A single ship's worth is labeled
one to the distance across the Atlantic.
And the ship loads the water and moves it
to the ten spot and dumps it. Making
a line of water ten long displace back
to fill the hole from filling.
**a transient hole is required****
note: The code is a real oddity so
the analogy make sense hardly. I write it
publiclly to assist in accuracy.
.
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