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    1. Online Learning | Duke University Libraries

      Many programming languages use regular expressions as a means to support pattern matching. Video Workshop Materials regex via (...)

    2. Duke Collaboratory for Classics Computing (DC3) - Page 8 of 20 - a collection of parts flying in loo

      Typically, these short-form citations follow the same pattern: an abbreviated title, volume and fascicle information (if any), followed (...)

    3. Rules - Duke Collaboratory for Classics Computing (DC3)

      Typically, these short-form citations follow the same pattern: an abbreviated title, volume and fascicle information (if any), followed (...)

    4. Can't we just make a Venn diagram? - Duke Libraries Center for Data and Visualization Sciences

      Each of the five tests were listed across the top and the side, and the cell contents showed the quantity of patients who matched on that pair (...)

    5. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 18 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      So if only five out of 99 (or 75, depending on where you start counting) were infringing, no pattern of systematic infringement has (...)

    6. Bitstreams: The Digital Collections Blog - Page 24 of 36 - Notes from the Duke University Libraries

      They’re based, imperfectly, on the pattern of the Earth’s planetary motion. (A year is a little bit longer than 365 days, so our (...)

    7. Signal Boost: Tales From Collections Services | Page 7

      Every piece of data is either a class or a property, and triples follow the pattern of ‘class’ ‘property’ ‘class.’ Here’s a very basic (...)

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