- Many XML editors generate sample documents for you, but those documents generally contain meaningless data and don't have correctly related ID and IDREF values used in the associations.
- The sentence 'kicked the ball the man' is meaningless.
- While burnout is linked to long hours, poor work-life balance and our glamourisation of overwork, boreout happens when we are bored by our work to the point that we feel it is totally meaningless.
- "Critical acclaim from people who don't know what they're talking about is meaningless," he claims dismissively.
- Any measurement that you make without any knowledge of the uncertainty is meaningless.
- A poem that feels meaningless becomes deeper and more meaningful.
- Otherwise, the method may complete but the data returned will be meaningless.
- What are we supposed to do in the face of so much senseless pain and he said to me, "What else can we do but take what seems meaningless and try to make something meaningful from it"
- And while some people might welcome the idea of having more hot summers in the UK, Met Office researchers said it was not good news, especially for vulnerable elderly people, for farmers, and for those who work outdoors.
- It's our responsibility to help such vulnerable groups such as the elderly and the poor.
- B2C companies look particularly vulnerable with 19 per cent of them now worth little more than the cash on their balance sheets.
- There must be a rethink of government policy towards this vulnerable group.
- Plants that are growing vigorously are less likely to be vulnerable to disease.
- Goodyear could be vulnerable in a prolonged economic slump.
- Sending products for recycling leaves them vulnerable to being stolen and sold on the black market.
- She was left feeling exposed and vulnerable.
- This anomaly may result from increases in snowfall in the higher latitude and therefore colder karakorams, where snow and ice are less vulnerable to small temperature increases.
- There was a moment of panic in Britain as it became clear just how vulnerable the nation was.
- I hesitated to apply the word 'vulnerable' to him but it came into my mind.
- The refugees, without a doubt, are the most vulnerable.
- "When you're emotionally vulnerable, you're even more in need of a caring human being," he says.
- Swipe is the operative word : cards are increasingly vulnerable to attacks when you make purchases in a store.
- But phytoplankton are vulnerable to the ocean's warming trend.
- This is vital for climate-vulnerable nations.
- Wheat had come to nearly monopolize the region, but it was particularly vulnerable to the locusts.
- The casing is nearly airtight, which helps protect the vulnerable egg and later larva.
- There must be a rethink of government policy toward this vulnerable group.
- It can also be exploitative, especially when used with vulnerable populations.
- One key challenge facing young scientists is how to be open without becoming scientifically vulnerable.
- "When you' re emotionally vulnerable, you' re even more in need of a caring human being," he says.
- Some groups of people are more vulnerable to the illness.
- Research has shown that children are more vulnerable to environmental pollution than adults.
- Hatchlings are really vulnerable, especially to birds and small mammals when they are born.
- It can be very hard to think rationally when you're feeling so vulnerable and alone.
- A wandering mind leaves us vulnerable when driving.
- More than 20 of them would be outside the no take area and vulnerable to catch-and-release fishing.
- Help the vulnerable to cook lunches.
- This sensory substitution device is now being tested in volunteers.
- Study on calculating theoretically line loss using forward and backward substitution method.
- This section also demonstrates how to group XML elements for substitution.