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24 1 No Yes 11 Serge Ibaka † Oklahoma City Thunder: February 19, 2012: Denver Nuggets: 124–118 40:41 14 15 0 Yes Yes 10 blocks in regulation, 8 blocks in the second half, and 1 in overtime. 11 Roy Hibbert: Indiana Pacers: November 21, 2012: New Orleans Hornets: 115–107 36:27 10 11 1 Yes No 9 blocks in regulation, 2 in overtime. 11 Joakim ...
Defaults to 1. ignore - the number of rows to ignore. If specified, the template subtracts this number of rows from the count. This is useful if you do not need to count header rows at the top or bottom. Count rows, not lines of text within those rows. page - the page to work on. Defaults to the current page.
15 by Manute Bol vs. the Atlanta Hawks on January 25, 1986 [549] Most blocks in a game without a point, assist, rebound, steal, or turnover; 5 by Keon Clark vs. the Sacramento Kings on February 23, 2001 [550] Most blocks without a field goal attempt in a game; 10 by Manute Bol vs. the Los Angeles Clippers on March 12, 1990 [551]
The answer is that when the table has a row without containing any rowspan=1 cell, this row is "compressed" upwards and disappears. Solution: divide one of the tall cells so that the row gets one rowspan=1 cell (and don't mind the eventual loss of text-centering). Then kill the border between them.
Solution: A simple Bol loop that is not Moufang will be called proper. There are several families of proper simple Bol loops. A smallest proper simple Bol loop is of order 24 (Nagy 2008). There is also a proper simple Bol loop of exponent 2 (Nagy 2009), and a proper simple Bol loop of odd order (Nagy 2008).
The RANK() OVER window function acts like ROW_NUMBER, but may return more or less than n rows in case of tie conditions, e.g. to return the top-10 youngest persons: SELECT * FROM ( SELECT RANK () OVER ( ORDER BY age ASC ) AS ranking , person_id , person_name , age FROM person ) AS foo WHERE ranking <= 10
Set 3-1 has three possible versions: [0 1 1 1 2 T], [0 1 1 T E 1], and [0 T T 1 E 1], where the subscripts indicate adjacency intervals. The normal form is the smallest "slice of pie" (shaded) or most compact form, in this case: [0 1 1 1 2 T ].
A count of 0–0 is rarely stated; the count is typically not mentioned until at least one pitch has been thrown. [b] A count of 1–1 or 2–2 may be described as even. A count of 3–2 is full, which is discussed below. The home plate umpire signals the count with the number of balls on the left hand, and the number of strikes on the right hand.