off: interesting

  • Thread starter Thread starter Frank Dulk
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Frank Dulk

TRY:
Open the Word

Write
=rand (200,99)

Type (enter) and wait 3 seconds.

Who knows somebody gets to explain this...
Things of the computer science.
 
Will it be that was not of own Microsoft?


Victor Delgadillo said:
Intresting... my guess is that it was left by a playful programmer to test
some parts of the program.

--
Victor Delgadillo MS-MVP Access
Miami, Florida

Mensajes a los grupos de noticia, asi todos nos beneficiamos!
 
for the that I read it was
test that the personnel of the development team left in the Word. The
sentence
original, in English, it is
"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog",
that is the smallest sentence than they know with all the letters of the
alphabet. but the idea would be to have all the letters of the alphabet ".
 
Intresting... my guess is that it was left by a playful programmer to test
some parts of the program.
 
Non-Microsoft? I don't think so... because I can't see anybody from the
'outside' inserting something in the source at the Microsoft CD mastering...
It's on everybody's installation... which means it was on the master disk,
not as an attachment added later.
It's a nice way to test a printer... if you need a lot of pages written...

--
Victor Delgadillo MS-MVP Access
Miami, Florida

Mensajes a los grupos de noticia, asi todos nos beneficiamos!
 
TRY:
Open the Word

Write
=rand (200,99)

Type (enter) and wait 3 seconds.

Interesting indeed!

Try just

=Rand()

Rand(1) seems to return three lines, Rand(2) returns 6, Rand(3)
returns 9.
 
Rand(X,Y) gives X paragraphs with Y sentences in each
paragraph. Default for X & Y are 3.

Cheers
Van
 
Frank Dulk said:
TRY:
Open the Word

Write
=rand (200,99)

Type (enter) and wait 3 seconds.

Who knows somebody gets to explain this...
Things of the computer science.

I saw a discussion of this in Woody's Office Watch back in May. You get
different sentences in different languages.
 
The sentence 'the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog' is an old,
frequently used (in English) touch-typing exercise. It was probably
originally used for that purpose because it exercises all fingers of both
hands.
 
Showoff! What's that mean? Babelfish only gives me "Yes, one hundred
v'i govoritye".

It's just misspelled (I don't know the proper Anglicization) for the
Russian phrase "well, what do you say" which is the phrase equivalent
to "well, how about that!"
 
It contains all of the letters of the US alphabeth too.

--
Victor Delgadillo MS-MVP Access
Miami, Florida

Mensajes a los grupos de noticia, asi todos nos beneficiamos!
 
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