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compare two doubles, -1 on NaN dconst_0 0e 0000 1110 → 0.0 push the constant 0.0 (a double) onto the stack dconst_1 0f 0000 1111 → 1.0 push the constant 1.0 (a double) onto the stack ddiv 6f 0110 1111 value1, value2 → result divide two doubles dload 18 0001 1000 1: index → value load a double value from a local variable #index: dload_0 26
In 1897, the silver 1 yen coin was demonetized and the sizes of the gold coins were reduced by 50%, with 5, 10 and 20 yen coins issued. After the war, brass 50 sen, 1 and 5 yen were introduced between 1946 and 1948. The current-type holed brass 5 yen was introduced in 1949, the bronze 10 yen in 1951, and the aluminum 1 yen in 1955.
The reverse side of the coin has a figure "1" in a circle that represents one yen; below the digit is the year of issue which is written in kanji. [19] The one yen coin remains the oldest modern denomination coin with an unchanged design; throughout its minting history during the Showa era the coin was fully halted only once in 1968 due to ...
Gold traded for silver in Japan at a 1:5 ratio, while that ratio was 1:15 abroad. During the Bakumatsu period in 1859 Mexican dollars were even given official currency in Japan, by coining them with marks in Japanese and officializing their exchange rate of three "Bu" [ clarification needed ] .
In the above, is a two-byte Shift_JIS-2004 sequence, is the plane (面, men, surface) number (1 or 2), is the row (区, ku, ward) number (1-94) and is the cell (点, ten, point) number (1-94). The ku and ten numbers are equivalent to j 1 − 32 {\displaystyle j_{1}-32} and j 2 − 32 {\displaystyle j_{2}-32} respectively, where j 1 j 2 ...
10 yen coin from 1951 (year 26) Design 1 - (1951–1958) Reeded 10 yen coin from 1952 (year 27) showing its reeded edge 10 yen coin from 1959 (year 34) Design 2 - (1959–present) Smooth. The following are circulation dates which cover Emperor Hirohito's reign. The dates below correspond with the 26th to the 64th year (last) of his reign.
A yen (A圓, A en) was a colloquial term used to refer to a form of military scrip used in post-war US-occupied Japan, Korea, and Okinawa from September 7, 1945, to July 21, 1948. Unlike their B Yen counterparts, these notes were restricted to military use only with the exception of Korea for a brief time.
In graph theory, Yen's algorithm computes single-source K-shortest loopless paths for a graph with non-negative edge cost. [1] The algorithm was published by Jin Y. Yen in 1971 and employs any shortest path algorithm to find the best path, then proceeds to find K − 1 deviations of the best path.