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The Vocational Licence (Malay: Lesen Vokasional) consists of three types of licence: Goods Driving Licence (GDL) (Malay: Lesen Memandu Barangan) is a licence to drive any commercially registered vehicle used for transporting goods such as rigid lorries, articulated lorries, panel van and other commercial vehicles which deliver goods.
The automobile insurance industry generally supports graduated licensing. However, some youth rights advocates have accused insurance companies of charging premiums to new and young drivers in GDL jurisdictions that are not substantially less than premiums in non-GDL jurisdictions, even though graduated licensing supposedly reduces the risk of accidents.
A driver's license, driving licence, or driving permit is a legal authorization, or the official document confirming such an authorization, for a specific individual to operate one or more types of motorized vehicles—such as motorcycles, cars, trucks, or buses—on a public road.
Deutsche Bahn maintained that it would only enter collective bargaining with a single trade union per job grouping, as was the case until June 2014 when GDL had an agreement with the much larger EVG union. [12] The strikes continued in 2015 with a three-day railway strike starting on 21 April 2015, the GDL's seventh strike in 10 months. [13]
GDL may refer to: Computing. Game Description Language; Generalized distributive law; Genomics Digital Lab, a series of educational games; Geometric Description Language;
The GDL programming language is BASIC-like. It has the same control flow statements and variable logic. In 2D and 3D in GDL, all the model elements are linked to a local right-handed coordinate system. For placing an element in the desired position, you have to move the coordinate system to the desired position (and orientation), then generate ...
Citation: Act 122: Territorial extent: Throughout Malaysia: Enacted by: Dewan Rakyat: Enacted: 1961 (Act No. 14 of 1961) Revised: 1973 (Act 122 w.e.f. 17 September 1973)
With GDL, one can describe finite games with an arbitrary number of players. However, GDL cannot describe games that contain an element of chance (for example, rolling dice) or games where players have incomplete information about the current state of the game (for example, in many card games the opponents' cards are not visible).