Oh, right, that's what they want you to believe, but if you don't use a genuine SMPTE bleep, your show will get rejected and you'll lose your job and you'll get thrown out of your house and then where will you be?

So i'm currently doing the exercices in my programming book "Programming: Principles and practice using c++" from Bjarne Stroustrup and i'm curently stuck at one exercice. Basically, the exercice is to write a program that bleeps out words it doesn't like. The way it works is that the user inputs a string and the program repeats the word. If the word the user enters is part of the dislike vector, the word is replaced by "Bleep". (I don't know if I explained this right, but it shouldn't be to complicated to understand).


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and make it so it works like my other version without vectors (repeats words, but bleeps the dislike words). I can't seem to understand how to navigate in a vector so that it only bleeps the "dislike" words.

I am learning C++. This Program has been changed some.Write a program that "bleeps" out bad words that you don't like; that is,you read in words using cin and print them again on cout. If a word is among a few you have defined, you write out BLEEP and or have it to BLEEP(Sound) instead of that word. Start with one "bad word" such as -- string badword = "arse"; When that works, add a few more or write a whole program based on all the bad words that you do not want printed out.

Now in this example you can add many new bleeped words and you wont need to change the code.This is not the best solution in "real life" programming, but at this point in the book we learned for, if, vector(not a lot of it), cout, cin.. etc so anything else just looks confusing..until this point we dont know yet about using :: , begin, true/fals, cin.get or anything like that.

Also blip. to censor (an obscene, vulgar, or other objectionable word or phrase) from a radio or television broadcast by deleting from the audio signal, leaving a gap or an electronic tone: The word was bleeped out of the comedian's routine.

Bleep at its most sophisticated, the final tune on this seven track maxi-EP (or is it mini-LP?) starts with a dizzying roundelay of dub-delayed bleeps, falls into a strange loping sashay of a groove, and blossoms into a fiesta of textured percussion, clanking bass, and densely clustered electronic tonalities.

Have any of you ever needed to use the basic "bleep" sound when doing recordings or like podcasts or radio shows or anything? I've found a couple places to download the .wav file, but I was wondering if any of you know a quick/fun way to generate it within Logic.

In the 1920s, in America, radio was the hot new thing. After years of newspapers and the telegraph, now, even the smallest local radio station could broadcast voices into hundreds or even thousands of homes. By the 1950s radio had gone fully professional, with big national broadcasters reaching everyone in America, and it was joined by a dynamic new flash-in-the-pan invention called TV. By this point, radio and TV was regulated by the Federal Communications Commission, who had the power to dish out fines for any content they found indecent, giving rise to the bleep button.

But not without controversy. Several viewers have felt hoodwinked that the identities and affiliations of "The Bleep's" "experts" are revealed only at the end of the movie. Several scientists have piped up to say that the filmmakers mangle quantum mechanics into an unrecognizable mishmash, and at least one of the film's on-screen sources, Columbia University philosophy professor David Albert, has distanced himself from the film, accusing the filmmakers of distorting his views. Meanwhile, the DVD of "The Bleep" continues to do brisk business, not to mention the T-shirts, hats and "Dr. Emoto Water Crystal" merchandise for sale on the "Bleep" Web site. The Post's Style section never did run a review of the film because this critic found it too stylistically lame and intellectually dotty to pass serious muster. But what the bleep do I know?

Because of the ironclad protection of the First Amendment, it has proved very difficult for government to control what we can read, listen to or see. A few curbs have been put up, though, notably by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the regulations of which largely determine what kind of material is bleeped out of radio and television broadcasts.

i want to contact some one your billing me 2 to 3 times a month i dont want your **bleep**ing service i want it gone i9m not over drawn 114$ in my bank because you keep charging me and wont turn the **bleep** off or let me cancel it

So, similar to how I recreated all of those Excel functions, my next fun project is unwiding the insanity that are the DAX Time Intelligence Functions. Sure, I started that a long time ago but might as well get specific. BTW, this all started with To **bleep** With STARTOFQUARTER. Here I cover NEXTDAY, PREVIOUSDAY, NEXTMONTH, PREVIOUSMONTH, NEXTQUARTER, PREVIOUSQUARTER, NEXTYEAR, PREVIOUSYEAR ff782bc1db

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