Just in case one database gets hacked or crashes they have another to run on
What fair use exceptions are you talking about? There are thousands on fair use exceptions.
Answer:
(c) UCA
Explanation:
mRNA is a type of RNA it is also called messenger RNA it has temporary copy of information which is found in DNA. If the particular triplet of bases in the coding sequence of DNA is AGT then corresponding codon for RNA will be UCA which is given in option
so from above discussion it is clear that (C)will be the correct answer
Answer:
hmm its unneeded files and programs ig..
Although Microsoft Excel isn't a language itself, nor does it come with its own built-in language, I do see what you mean regarding its ability to create functions and whatnot to make the spreadsheet more versatile and efficient.
Yeah, syntactical errors (or compile errors in a compiled language like C++), are going to be harder to spot in Excel than it would be in a programming language, surprisingly. This is because of the reason that I just said; most programming languages such as C++ are compiled languages, meaning that they are written in an IDE (such as Visual Studio, for C++), which is used for writing out, debugging, and compiling programs in to a executable format. The IDE would not let the compilation process finish successfully unless there were no syntax errors in the code itself (not to be confused with runtime errors; those are the harder ones to iron out, as the compiler will not tell you there is an error).