Examples of restriction point in the following topics:
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- No additional restrictions may be placed on the redistribution of either the original work or a derivative work.
- (The exact language is: "You may not impose any further restrictions on the exercise of the rights granted or affirmed under this License.")
- The usual way this happens is that the other license imposes a requirement—for example, a credit clause requiring the original authors to be mentioned in some way—that is incompatible with the GPL's "You may not impose any further restrictions..." language.
- From the point of view of the Free Software Foundation, these second-order consequences are desirable, or at least not regrettable.
- The GPL is by far the most popular open source license; at one point Freecode had it at 68%, with the next highest license at 6%.
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- Ideal gases are assumed to be composed of point masses whose interactions are restricted to perfectly elastic collisions; in other words, a gas particles' volume is considered negligible compared to the container's total volume.
- Ideal gases are assumed to be composed of point masses that interact via elastic collisions.
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- It said it would restrict program trading whenever the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose or fell 50 points in a single day, and it created a "circuit-breaker" mechanism to halt all trading temporarily any time the DJIA dropped 250 points.
- In late 1998, one change required program-trading curbs whenever the DJIA rose or fell 2 percent in one day from a certain average recent close; in late 1999, this formula meant that program trading would be halted by a market change of about 210 points.
- The new rules set also a higher threshold for halting all trading; during the fourth quarter of 1999, that would occur if there was at least a 1,050-point DJIA drop.
- Swings of more than 100 points a day occurred with increasing frequency, and the circuit-breaker mechanism was triggered on October 27, 1997, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 554.26 points.
- Another big fall -- 512.61 points -- occurred on August 31, 1998.
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- Rational and radical expressions have restrictions on their domains which can be found algebraically or graphically.
- The domain of a rational expression of is the set of all points for which the denominator is not zero.
- If the denominator of the equation becomes equal to zero, the expression is undefined at that point.
- Set the radicand greater than or equal to zero and solve for $x$ to find the restrictions on the domain:
- The graph of the function: $f(x)=\displaystyle \frac { x^3-2x }{ 2(x^2-5) }$, where the domain is restricted at $x=\pm \sqrt { 5 }$ since the function does not exist at those points.
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- A closed walk is one where the beginning and end point of the walk are the same actor.
- A cycle is a specially restricted walk that is often used in algorithms examining the neighborhoods (the points adjacent) of actors.
- There are many walks in a graph (actually, an infinite number if we are willing to include walks of any length -- though, usually, we restrict our attention to fairly small lengths).
- It is usually more useful to restrict our notion of what constitutes a connection somewhat.
- One possibility is to restrict the count only walks that do not re-use relations.
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- Therefore, they restrict trade with non-Communist nations.
- But these restrictions vary with East-West relations.
- The most common form of restriction of trade is the tariff, a tax placed on imported goods.
- Because of the risk of expropriation, multinational firms are at the mercy of foreign governments, which are sometimes unstable, and which can change the laws they enforce at any point in time to meet their needs.
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- The LGPL has looser restrictions than the GPL, and can be mixed more easily with non-free code.
- One consequence of choosing the GPL is the possibility—small, but not infinitely small—of finding yourself or your project embroiled in a dispute about whether or not the GPL is truly "free", given that it places some restrictions on what you can do with the code—namely, the restriction that the code cannot be distributed under any other license.
- For some people, the existence of this restriction means the GPL is "less free" than more permissive licenses such as the MIT/X license.
- Freedom is a complex topic, and there is little point talking about it if terminology is going to be used as a stalking horse for substance.
- The only restriction the GPL imposes is that it prevents people from imposing further restrictions.
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- Restrictive modifiers, on the other hand, are those whose use is essential to the overall meaning of the sentence.
- In other words, if you dropped a restrictive modifier from a sentence, the meaning of the sentence would change.
- On the other hand, a restrictive appositive provides information essential to identifying the noun being described.
- In English, restrictive appositives are not set off by commas.
- Do not replace a question mark or exclamation point in a quotation with a comma.
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- Laissez-faire is an example of a deregulated economic environment in which transactions between private parties are free from government restrictions, tariffs, and subsidies, with only enough regulations to protect property rights.
- The Financial Times Lexicon states that deregulation, in the sense of a substantial easing of government restrictions on industry, is normally justified in order to promote competition.
- Entry to some markets was restricted to stimulate and protect private companies as they made initial investments into an infrastructure that provided essential public services, such as water, electric and communications utilities.
- Because the entry of competitors was highly restricted, monopoly situations were created.
- In the first instance, as markets matured to a point where several providers could be financially viable offering similar services, prices determined by that ensuing competition were seen as more economically efficient than those set by the regulatory process.
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- Ickes proposed the use of Alaska as a "haven for Jewish refugees from Germany and other areas in Europe where the Jews are subjected to oppressive restrictions. " Resettlement in Alaska would allow the refugees to bypass normal immigration quotas, because Alaska was a territory and not a state.
- In his proposal, Ickes pointed out that 200 families from the dustbowl had settled in Alaska's Matanuska Valley.
- Most Jews agreed with Rabbi Stephen Wise, president of the American Jewish Congress, that adoption of the Alaska proposal would deliver "a wrong and hurtful impression...that Jews are taking over some part of the country for settlement. " The plan was dealt a severe blow when Roosevelt told Ickes that he insisted on limiting the number of refugees to 10,000 a year for five years, and with a further restriction that Jews not make up more than 10% of the refugees.