Restore命令用于______。

题型:填空题

问题:

Restore命令用于______。

考点:计算机等级考试ACCESS宏(二)
题型:填空题

我国西南地区某地级市,其南部为丘陵,北部为山区,山区经济以农林为主。受地形条件影响,城镇主要集中在南部和中部地带,市域城镇化水平在35%左右。市域内现有大城市一个,县城6个,其他建制镇34个。

规划为求市域内城镇均衡发展,在北部地区新设3个镇。市域交通规划基本符合发展要求,试结合现状和规划示意图,指出在城镇等级布局和主要交通线路规划中存在的主要问题,并简要说明理由。

题型:填空题

直线x=3的倾斜角是______.

题型:填空题

物流系统设计要素是指:输出、输入、限制和反馈。

题型:填空题

A house of cards? Sounds unbelievable, doesn’t it? Not if the architect is 31-year-old Bryan Berg. He’s made a career out of building fantastic card houses, stadiums, capitols, castles — and the world’s tallest card tower. How does he do it?

Bryan’s structures are amazing because they are made entirely of perfectly balanced, freestanding playing cards. He never uses glue, tape, or anything else to hold the cards together. Nor does he fold the cards. He’s discovered another way to make a strong house of cards, using a trick from nature.

To make plants strong, nature builds them with cells that have tough walls. Rows and rows of these cells form a grid(格子) that helps leaves and stems keep their shape. Bees use the same kind of repeating pattern to create strong honeycombs, where they live and store honey. Bryan designs similar grids, using cards to create a repeating pattern of cells.

He begins with a single cell made by balancing four cards against one another to form a box. Then he repeats the cell over and over, expanding outward to form the grid, which makes a good foundation for a strong card structure. The larger the grid, the more weight it can carry. Sometimes Bryan uses several cards, instead of just one, to construct the cell walls, making the grid even stronger. The trick, he tells kids when he speaks in classrooms, is to place your cards as tightly together as possible when laying out your grid, making sure the cards are not leaning at all.

After building this solid base, Bryan lays cards across the top to make the floor for the next “story” of the building. He may add towers, columns, steeples, or domes. Using the principle of repeating cells, Bryan builds structures of amazing strength.

In the Cards

Not surprisingly, Bryan has always been interested in building things. Growing up on a “big, old farm” in rural Iowa, he had plenty of room to play. “We were in the middle of nowhere,” Bryan remembers, “with lots of space to do whatever we wanted. I was always making something, using things like sticks or bales of hay.”

Bryan’s grandfather taught him how to stack cards. Bryan’s two interests — building and card stacking — soon combined. But stacking in his family’s farmhouse was challenging. “Our old house had wood floors that weren’t all level,” he reports. “And they weren’t very firm. When people walked around, it was like ‘earthquake action.’ It was a challenge to build something that wouldn’t fall down immediately.”

Bryan constructed tower after tower; he went through a lot of trial and error before he built anything taller than himself. When he placed a few decks of cards on top of his grid, he discovered how strong it was. Bryan’s towers began to grow taller.

How Tall Is Too Tall?

Bryan’s first Guinness World Record for the world’s tallest card tower came in the spring of 1992, when he was in high school. Learning that the world record was 12 feet 10 inches, Bryan built a slim tower that topped out at 14 feet 6 inches. Done as a project for his geometry class, it took him 40 hours and 208 decks of cards. Since then he’s gone on to win world records for even taller buildings. His latest winner measured 25 feet 3.5 inches and used about 2,400 decks of cards. The building, which tapered to a high, narrow point, had 131 stories.

Why don’t these towers fall down? The key is in a good solid base, a repeating pattern of stories, and a tapering top. Bryan likes to point out how card buildings resemble real ones. They are built cell by cell, story by story. The separate parts make one strong whole. The heavier the building, the stronger and more stable it is. But the weight can’t all be at the top.

After spending so much time building something so cool, Bryan admits it’s sometimes painful to see his structures destroyed. But he compares his work to the building of a sandcastle or an ice sculpture.

“They wouldn’t be as special if they were permanent,” he points out. “My buildings are like snowdrifts, or clouds in the sky. They can’t last forever.

小题1:According to the article, which natural structure is a model for Bryan’s card structures?

A.A sand dune.

B.A honeycomb.

C.A snowdrift.

D.A thundercloud.小题2:What was Bryan’s first world record?

A.The tallest card tower.

B.The widest card dome.

C.The heaviest card house.

D.The sturdiest card structure.小题3:Bryan’s hobby is the result of combining which two boyhood interests?

A.Plant cells and honeycombs.

B.World records and geometry.

C.Building things and stacking cards.

D.Playing cards and designing houses.小题4:Why was it a challenge for Bryan to build card structures in his family’s farmhouse?

A.The floors of the house were uneven.

B.The ceilings in the house were too low.

C.The floors of the house were slippery.

D.The windows in the house were windy.小题5:In the underlined sentence, the word “tapered” means the top of the building was_________.

A.older

B.shinier

C.stronger

D.thinner

题型:填空题

现实主义教育家杜威的“新三中心”指的是()

A.教师、书本、课堂

B.儿童、活动、课堂

C.儿童、经验、活动

D.儿童、书本、活动

更多题库