| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | San Francisco, CA | |
| age | 29 | |
| visits | member for | 8 months |
| seen | Oct 11 '12 at 13:20 | |
| stats | profile views | 2 |
i hate mysql
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Sep 24 |
revised |
“Concatenate” vs. “merge” vs. “join” in scientific text added 1 characters in body |
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Sep 24 |
awarded | Student |
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Sep 24 |
comment |
word that means: causing a paradigm shift, new era, revolution Bobbi, you're absolutely right. I ultimately chose jwpat7's answer, even though disruptive innovation came close. The ideas below have given me -a lot- to work with though. Thanks everyone. |
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Sep 24 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Sep 24 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Sep 24 |
accepted | word that means: causing a paradigm shift, new era, revolution |
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Sep 24 |
comment |
word that means: causing a paradigm shift, new era, revolution Some good answers below. None are what I'm thinking of, but will choose one as an answer in 24 hours if nothing else comes in. |
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Sep 23 |
awarded | Editor |
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Sep 23 |
revised |
word that means: causing a paradigm shift, new era, revolution added 157 characters in body |
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Sep 23 |
comment |
“Concatenate” vs. “merge” vs. “join” in scientific text After rereading the OPs question, I agree it is ambiguous. I saw this: used in scientific or programming text. and also the computing tag and figured thats what he meant. |
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Sep 23 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Sep 23 |
answered | “Concatenate” vs. “merge” vs. “join” in scientific text |
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Sep 23 |
asked | word that means: causing a paradigm shift, new era, revolution |