Merge. If you write the left and right parts of a character too far apart, they might be recognized as two characters. You can use the merge function to unite them into one character.
Merge. The Borrower will not, nor will it permit any Subsidiary to, merge or consolidate with or into any other Person, except that a Subsidiary may merge into the Borrower or a Wholly-
Merge. If you write the left and right parts of a character too far apart, they might be recognized as two characters. You select the first character of the wrong-recognition characters from the Edit Area and click Merge button to unite the second character into one character. Please refer section 3.3.6.
Merge. When some strokes of one word are written far away from each other, they may be recognized as several words. You can use merge function to combined them into one word.
Merge consolidate, reincorporate or otherwise alter or modify its corporate name, principal place of business, jurisdiction of incorporation and organization, its structure, corporate good standing status or existence, or enter into or engage in any business other than businesses engaged in by the Company on the date hereof and similar or related businesses or businesses incidental thereto; provided, however, that on thirty (30) days prior notice to CITBC, the Company may, without obtaining the consent of CITBC, alter or modify its corporate name or principal place of business;
Merge. When some strokes of one word are written far away from each other, they may be recognized as several words. You can use the Merge command to combine them into one word.
Merge consolidate or otherwise alter or modify their corporate names, principal places of business, structures, status or existence, or enter into or engage in any operation or activity materially different from that presently being conducted by the Companies;
Merge. By using this option, you can merge the multiple objects or images placed on the canvas. SharePoint Image Editor Support Thank you for choosing SharePoint Image Editor. If you require any further assistance please visit our online Support Centre or Contact Us.
Merge. We now describe the merge protocol. We assume that, as in the join case, the communication sys- tem simultaneously notifies all group members (in all groups) about the merge event. Moreover, re- liable group communication toolkits typically include a list of all members that are about to merge in the merge notification. More specifically, we require that each member be able to distinguish the group it was in from the group that it is merging with. This assumption is not unreasonable, e.g., it is satisfied in SPREAD [1]. It is natural to graft the smaller tree atop the larger tree. If any two trees are of the same height, we can use any unambiguous ordering to decide which group joins which. (For example, lexicographical order of the identifiers of the respective sponsors.) When merging two trees, the lowest-numbered leaf of the smaller tree becomes the right child of a new intermediate node. The left child of the new intermediate node becomes the root of the larger tree. Using this technique recursively, we can merge multiple trees. k-ary merge protocol is shown in Figure 4.1c. In the first round of the merge protocol, all sponsors (members associated with topmost leaf node in each tree) exchange their respective key trees containing all blinded session randoms4. The highest-numbered member of the largest tree becomes the sponsor of the second round in the merge protocol. After refreshing its session random, this sponsor computes every (key, bkey) pair up to the intermediate node just below the root node using the blinded session randoms of the other group members. It then broadcasts the key tree with the bkeys and blinded session randoms to the other members. All members now have the complete set of bkeys, which allows them to compute the new group key.
Merge. Table 1. Communication and Computation Cost Summary