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Full Discussion: What Came First?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What Came First? Post 302213375 by photon on Thursday 10th of July 2008 12:42:09 AM
Old 07-10-2008
It seems everyone who believes in evolution answers egg and everyone who
believes in creation answers chicken and if you believe in both you say they
are in sync.

Don't know about the Rooster, but there may be something there. Cant have an
egg without a rooster.

I think the chicken came first.

This is actually a very serious question debated by people in history from Aristotle
to Stephen Hawking, see link below.

Chicken or the egg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
TRACEBACK(1)							   User Commands						      TRACEBACK(1)

NAME
Traceback - sends an OSC message SYNOPSIS
osc-send [options] [url] osc-address [,typetags] [osc arguments] DESCRIPTION
Traceback (most recent call last): File "./scripts/osc-send", line 11, in <module> import txosc # for __version__ ImportError: No module named txosc File "./scripts/osc-send", line 11, in <module> import txosc # for __version__ ImportError: No module named txosc EXAMPLES
The following examples are equivalent: osc-send osc.tcp://127.0.0.1:17779 /ham/spam ,sif egg 2 3.14159 osc-send --tcp --host=127.0.0.1 --port=17779 --type-tags=sif /ham/spam egg 2 3.14159 osc-send -T -P 17779 /ham/spam egg 2 3.14159 OSC MESSAGES
An OSC message consists of an OSC Address Pattern followed by an OSC Type Tag String followed by zero or more OSC Arguments. OSC ADDRESSES
An OSC Address Pattern is a string beginning with the character '/' (forward slash). It is mandatory to provide one. OSC TYPE TAGS
An OSC Type Tag String is a string (beginning with the character ',' (comma)) followed by a sequence of characters corresponding exactly to the sequence of OSC Arguments in the given message. Each character after the comma is called an OSC Type Tag and represents the type of the corresponding OSC Argument. Here is the list of supported type tags: i - 32bit integer h - 64bit integer f - 32bit floating point number d - 64bit (double) floating point number s - string S - symbol c - char m - 4 byte midi packet (8 digits hexadecimal) T - TRUE F - FALSE N - NIL I - INFINITUM VALUES
Values are space separated. Quoting strings might be handy. The full Open Sound Control specification can be found at http://opensoundcontrol.org/specification HISTORY
Written by Arjan Scherpenisse and Alexandre Quessy in 2010. Traceback (most recent call last): October 2010 TRACEBACK(1)
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