Editing 379: Forgetting

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If the assertion fails, then the program will stop with an error. This would be much better than publishing an embarrassing paper, for example.  
 
If the assertion fails, then the program will stop with an error. This would be much better than publishing an embarrassing paper, for example.  
  
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Cueball realizes that he cannot forget his emotional event through the use of two commands as he can with a computer, which only makes him feel sad about an unsaid event, the item -- in a sense -- that cannot be removed.  He writes two comments further clarifying his sense of hopelessness over this event, followed by an assertion that "it will be okay," something that has nothing to do with the code he is writing.
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Cueball realizes that he cannot forget his emotional event through the use of two commands as he can with a computer, which only makes him feel depressed about an unsaid event, the item -- in a sense -- that cannot be removed.  He writes two comments further clarifying his sense of hopelessness over this event, followed by an assertion that "it will be okay," something that has nothing to do with the code he is writing.
  
βˆ’
The title text explains that assertion in question fails: nobody can be sure that things are going to be okay.
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The title text explains that assertion in question fails: we cannot be sure that things are going to be okay.
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==

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