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- Dictionaryerror-free
adjective
- 1. containing no mistakes; faultless: "the program and the design are error-free"
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Jun 15, 2020 · Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.
Aug 13, 2016 · In the UK, at least, we use the term "a schoolboy error" to mean a simple or foolish mistake. Oxford has it as: British informal A very basic or foolish mistake. It is used very frequently in
May 14, 2016 · I'm looking for the opposite of "error-prone", specifically in the context of programming style. As in, "Jack has not-error-prone coding style". Some words that are inappropriate for this context are "infallible", "error-less" and "unfailing". Nobody writes infallible code. "Reliable" hits a little closer to home, but it describes the outcome ...
Nov 7, 2022 · You can use "well received" as a response to professional emails.
Jul 19, 2013 · 16. They do seem interchangeable but to me "expert in" implies doing knowledge rather than knowing knowledge. So "expert in kung fu" is clearly someone who practices kung fu, whereas an "expert on kung fu" implies he knows a lot of about kung fu, its history, etc. Clear as mud, right? My sense too is that "expert in" is used when the knowledge ...
Aug 27, 2015 · English is a second language for me. If I translate literally from my native language, I'll say, "The electricity has gone." and "The electricity has come". For the first sentence, we say things l...
According to Google Ngram viewer, "in the last week of..." is much more common. This fits with my feeling as a native speaker, too: in or during for a range of time like a week, month, or season ("in the last week of August"); on for a specific day ("on August tenth"); at for a specific time ("at 4pm"). Share.