Chomp Chomp Safari
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"A bang-up banquet certain to draw demands for repeat courses and sturdy enough to survive them." --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)"A big, playful counting book that's great fun for reading aloud." --Booklist (starred review)"Another irresistibly touchable title for toddler-age readers." --Publishers Weekly From #1 New York Times bestselling novelty book creator Matt Van Fleet comes an irresistible picture book about a very hungry alligator who likes to chomp, chomp, chomp, which will delight readers as they learn animal names, colors, and counting. Along came the alligator, chomp, chomp, chomp! From the internationally bestselling children's book creator Matthew Van Fleet comes the story of a hungry little alligator who gulps his way from one to ten. Ten touchable textures, a sturdy chomping pull tab, and a grand finale pop-up are sure to engage the youngest readers.
Chomp, chomp! This shark feels a grumble in its tummy. What can it munch on that's yummy? Will it chomp on the rubber ducky or the bar of soap? Maybe it'll chomp on a rusty anchor that's been abandoned on the ocean floor. There is no one chompier than this shark so look out! Wiggle the included, detachable finger puppet to make the story come to life. A great kids book about sharks to sink your teeth into!
Elephants are known for their long, flexible × flexible SIMON MCGILL/GETTY IMAGES able to bend(adjective) Elm trees have long, flexible branches. trunks. A trunk is a helpful thing to have. An elephant breathes and smells through its trunk. The trunk also helps the animal drink water and feed itself. This elephant is about to munch on grass. Chomp chomp!
When planning for an overnight safari, one option is to book accommodation at a luxury lodge. There will be all-inclusive cocktails, a freshwater pool, air conditioning, and most of all, a big sturdy gate separating you from the hungry animals on the hunt at night. Another option is to go with the banda, a small single-room hut in the middle of nowhere. There are no fancy embellishments, no security gate, and absolutely no separation from you and the wild. It is just you and the animals alone in the great desert.
In Example 5-3, the user is requested to enter thefilename of a file containing protein sequence data. After getting afilename in this fashion, there's one more step before you canopen the file. When the user types in a filename and sends a newlineby hitting the Enter key (also known as the Return key), the filenamealso gets a newline character at the end as it is stored in thevariable. This newline is not part of the filename and has to beremoved before the open system call will work. The Perlfunction chomp removes newlines (orits cousins linefeeds and carriage returns) from the end of astring. (The older functionchop removes the last character, no matter whatit is; this caused trouble, so chomp wasintroduced and is almost always preferred.)
So this part of Perl requires a little bit extra: removing thenewline from the input collected from the user at the keyboard. Trycommenting out the chomp function, andyou'll see that the open fails, because nofilename has a newline at the end. (Operating systems have rules asto which characters are allowed in filenames.)
With a product refresh rate that sees it chomp through natural resources like a chubby child demolishing a Mars bar, it's difficult to see Apple as a particularly environmentally friendly organisation. 2b1af7f3a8