On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 8:20 PM, Stuart Foulstone
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, August 11, 2008 10:38 am, James Jeffery wrote:
>> Disagree.
>>
>>...
>
>>
>> Again, just because something is a list does not mean it should be in a
>> list. Take for example students grades. The school needs to list the name,
>> the subject, the expected grade, the outcome (30/30) and a percentage
>> (100%). You could easily say its a list of students grades, because it is,
>> but you are not going to put that into a list because it would be wrong
>> to.
>>
>
> You could easily say its a list, but it's not.
>
> It's a table of related student data in which comparisons are made across
> the rows and down the columns.
>
> One compares across the rows for each student's results (expected, actual
> and percentage) and compares down columns for differences between
> students.
>
> Much more than a list.

you don't understand the word "list" i think. but that's alright; you can learn.

-- 
silky
http://www.themonkeynet.com/armada/
http://www.boxofgoodfeelings.com/
http://www.themonkeynet.com/
http://lets.coozi.com.au/


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