Instructions
in sentence
361 examples of Instructions in a sentence
I will follow the instructions, the tempo markings, the dynamics.
You follow
instructions
on Nerve and you should end up on Babble, which we did.
And he's also hearing our
instructions
when we tell him to do things.
So we can also generate
instructions
on how to operate the controls of the vehicle.
But the problem is this: How do we convey this information and
instructions
to a person who cannot see fast enough and accurate enough so he can drive?
We gut it out, and we rearrange the vibrating elements in different patterns, and we actuate them to convey information about the speed, and also
instructions
how to use the gas and the brake pedal.
He said, "If you don't want to follow my instructions, go away."
It's directly embedded; there's no external
instructions.
[Margaret Gould Stewart on the Hyperlink] A hyperlink is an interface element, and what I mean by that is, when you're using software on your phone or your computer, there's a lot of code behind the interface that's giving all the
instructions
for the computer on how to manage it, but that interface is the thing that humans interact with: when we press on this, then something happens.
They have about 28 of these
instructions.
Each of these
instructions
appears with roughly the equal frequency.
So there are some
instructions
that are extremely valuable to these organisms, and their frequency is going to be high.
And there's actually some
instructions
that you only use once, if ever.
I can hardly bark out
instructions
while we're playing.
So the technician takes the
instructions.
Genes send the
instructions
to make proteins.
Well as you know, genes, which are part of the DNA, they're
instructions
to make a protein that does something.
So for do-it-yourselfers, we provide free, very well-tested
instructions
so that anyone, anywhere around the world, can build one of these systems for free.
Can we live here and now in our wired web and still follow those ancient instructions, "Know thyself?"
So for example, in the most extreme cases, we can actually evolve a program by starting out with random sequences of
instructions.
Say, "Computer, would you please make a hundred million random sequences of
instructions.
Now would you please run all of those random sequences of instructions, run all of those programs, and pick out the ones that came closest to doing what I wanted."
So of course, random sequences of
instructions
are very unlikely to sort numbers, so none of them will really do it.
They were blank on one side, and on the other side I listed some simple
instructions.
What Simonides figured out at that moment, is something that I think we all kind of intuitively know, which is that, as bad as we are at remembering names and phone numbers, and word-for-word
instructions
from our colleagues, we have really exceptional visual and spatial memories.
Programming is a three-way relationship between a programmer, some source code, and the computer it's meant to run on, but computers are such famously inflexible interpreters of
instructions
that it's extraordinarily difficult to write out a set of
instructions
that the computer knows how to execute, and that's if one person is writing it.
Once you get more than one person writing it, it's very easy for any two programmers to overwrite each other's work if they're working on the same file, or to send incompatible
instructions
that simply causes the computer to choke, and this problem grows larger the more programmers are involved.
We teach them how to go right face, left face, so they can obey
instructions
and know the consequences of not obeying
instructions.
The workers still come the next day, they do their job, but they're following different
instructions.
Instead, it silently slips into the bacteria's own DNA, and it just stays there like a terrorist sleeper cell, waiting for
instructions.
Next
Related words
Which
There
Their
Follow
Would
About
Should
Government
Given
Other
Computer
Received
Really
Following
Could
After
Under
Where
Giving
Followed