The main disadvantage of the X10 is the fact that smaller diameter arrows at higher momentum potentials require better target materials to help prevent excess penetration or pass through. Another factor is that more care is needed when gluing components, which is also due to the small diameter. For the same reason, removing points requires a little more care and time in order to avoid overheating. Also, the cost to produce the X10 is considerably more due to the materials and techniques required to hit the required tolerances.

With aluminum arrows,, the specific stiffness- the stiffness for a given mass of material- is always exactly the same for a given alloy. The great thing about aluminum arrows is that you can get shafts to exactly match ones you had 20 years ago and 20 years into the future.


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Black Eagle Arrows is the leading arrow manufacturer in target arrows. We take and use the same technology that makes the best target arrows and apply that for hunting arrows as well. For 11+ years we have been challenging the normalcy of just ok arrows in the market place. If you look across other leading brands its easy to see they follow our lead. When it comes to best in class Hunting arrows Black Eagle is the absolute leader.

I did a software upgrade and now my symbols show arrows on the inputs/outputs. I can see the arrows are identifying my pin type assignments. In my library, there are no arrows. How can I shut the arrows off on my schematic?

From the shaft and insert materials to the fletching and nocks, TenPoint constructs its crossbow bolts using the finest materials and components available on the market today. High-performance hunting crossbows demand high-performance arrows, and our engineers work to create arrow designs that perform the best when shot out of your TenPoint, Horton Crossbow Innovations, or Wicked Ridge crossbow. Whether you are shooting in a competition or you are pursuing game in the field, TenPoint offers a full line of crossbow bolts and custom-designed accessories to meet your specific shooting needs.

All TenPoint crossbow bolts for sale come standard with the technologically advanced Alpha-Nock. We also offer our crossbow bolts with a lighted version of the Alpha-Nock called the Alpha-Brite, and you can choose the option to buy crossbow arrows with the lighted nock system conveniently installed in the arrow.

When crossbow hunting, you need a superior broadhead that exhibits long-range accuracy, strength, durability, and performance when paired with our crossbow arrows. TenPoint is proud to present the EVO-X CenterPunch Broadhead, which is built with a rugged aluminum ferrule, an ultra-strong precision point, and scalpel-sharp stainless-steel blades that stay closed during flight and deploy on impact to create massive wound channels and huge blood trails.

Screenshot 2023-06-12 at 9.44.03 pm1618112 24 KB

I am working with a big dataset of over 500 variables (columns) and have been having some trouble navigating between the columns. The arrows ( >>) that one uses to go back and forth between the columns randomly stopped working for me in my RStudio around 8-10 hours ago and haven't worked since. Things I have tried:

I am joining this thread because I am having the same issue. The arrows were working fine until I downloaded RStudio 2023.06.0+421. I am working on a MacBook Pro using OS Monterey 12.6 and R 4.2.0. Like @jahnavi I closed everything and restarted RStudio, reinstalled RStudio, and ensured everything was updated.

If it's helpful for anyone on this post, the link shared above has this workaround:

rstudioapi::writeRStudioPreference("data_viewer_max_columns", 1000L)

A word of caution around it: Make sure that the value is no larger than the number of columns. If you do, then the >> will become clickable, and clicking on it could cause the application to freeze.

Hopefully this issue gets fixed, it's incredibly annoying.

Anyone have any input on how to (in sketchup not layout) add additional leaders/arrows to text? For instance you have 5 fasteners and you want an arrow pointing to each from a single text? Ive been working around ths by just adding a text-less box but nothing snaps so aligning the leader accurately to anything is pretty much impossible and then when views change it all goes to hell in a handbasket.

SO I have Norton 360 and am trying to get to settings to take off the option for those annoying blue arrows on my files for the backup.


Every solution I come across says to go to settings and go to back up status overlay which would be easy enough however, I don't have access to any settings.


I try to get Lifelock which is the title page on all the Youtube vids on how to fix my arrow problem but it says I have to buy 360 but I already own 360 so what am I to do?


I tried to post an image and did so twice but am unsure if it worked. Funny, I run forums as a hobby using invision and am stumped by this SS. 


Hope somebody can help ass if not this will be my last year with Norton whom I've been with for about two decades.

i've searched far and wide, and i can't figure out how to either draw coordinate axes that project through a part (it's basically a long box, but i want to show the arrows in the X, Y and X directions protruding out of the part, or alternatively, i'd like to know how to just draw a plain closed arrow so i can i just manually label it X, Y, and Z. Does anyone know how to do this?

Thanks for providing the information. I have checked your site and it turns out that the arrows were behind the snowflakes. To make sure that the arrows is on top of all other layers, please add the following css code in the customizer, Appearance > Customize > Custom > CSS

The most important thing to understand is that there are more things which are arrows than there are things which are monads. Conversely, monads are strictly more powerful than arrows (the second paper above specifies precisely in which fashion).

In particular, monads are arrows equipped with an apply function of type (a ~> b, a) ~> b, where (~>) is the constructor for a given arrow. Lindley et al. point out that this destroys the meticulous distinction arrows maintain between terms and commands (or, if you prefer, objects and morphisms).

Applicative functors have a wide variety of applications, particularly for things which are best thought of as operations on streams. One can in fact think of arrows as arising from generalizing the notion of a transformer on streams (i.e. introducing a new language for morphisms on objects constructed by a given applicative functor).

So if something is not given the characteristics of a monad (even though conceptually it forms one), then it is potentially open to greater inspection and optimization. It is also potentially easier to serialize. Hence the use of applicatives and arrows in parsers and circuit modeling.

There's of course much more to the story. For applicatives, see Conal Elliott's work on FRP in particular. For arrows, see the HXT XML parser library, the Yampa FRP project, the Haskell on a Horse web framework, Hudak and Liu's classic "Plugging a Space Leak with an Arrow" paper, among other things. For monads, see everywhere. And of course take note that just because something is a monad, that doesn't mean that applicative notation might not be clearer and more expressive.

There currently isn't a way to hide the arrows in the sheet (without removing the dependencies), however what about displaying the sheet from a Report instead? A Report doesn't show the critical path or the arrows between tasks. Let me know if this will work for you!

Issue: Black ice arrows have 15 dam, 14 pen. Hardened steel arrows have 17 dam, 17 pen. Hardened steel arrows are used to make black ice arrows. If there was a secondary effect or even 5-10% more armor pen it might make sense. I did check the frost forge and it still requires hardened steel arrows to make these arrows. Not sure if this is intentional or an oversight so bug?

For the most precise arrows, we add AAE IP Nocks standard to our custom cut arrows for exceptional consistency and great string reaction. These nocks connect the arrow shaft closer to the string than traditional nocks, which results in a more precise and repeatable arrow send-off.

Made with high-strength carbon-composite fibers and a Match Grade straightness of  0.001," Easton Axis arrows are made in the USA with their pultrusion process for inherently consistent mechanical properties. 006ab0faaa

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