Difference between revisions of "Derek's wiki test space"

From Derek
Jump to: navigation, search
(Comment box)
(Comment box)
Line 11: Line 11:
  
  
 +
{{Infobox
 +
|title        = Derek Abbott
 +
|header1      =
  
 
{| border="2" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0.1" align="center"
 
{| border="2" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0.1" align="center"
Line 19: Line 22:
 
|}
 
|}
  
'''Derek Abbott''' was born in South Kensington, London UK in 1960. In 1978, he began work at the [[GEC Hirst Research Centre]], London, UK, and graduated from [[Loughborough University]], UK, with a BSc (Hons) in Physics. At Hirst, he was a Research Engineer until 1986, working in CCD, SOS, CMOS, and vacuum microelectronic technologies. He also worked on solid-state image sensors in the optical and infrared regimes. He migrated to Australia in 1986, and worked at [[Austek Microsystems]] as an analog VLSI design engineer until 1987. In 1987-1990, he was a part-time Research Engineer at the University of Adelaide, and also consulted for a number of companies including Austek Microsystems and British Aerospace. In 1990, he took up a position as a Lecturer at the University of Adelaide, where he completed his PhD in Electrical & Electronic Engineering in 1995 and graduated in 1997. He was promoted to Professor in 2006.  He is a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers and also a Fellow of the Institute of Physics.
+
}}
  
 
==Symbol==
 
==Symbol==

Revision as of 15:04, 31 May 2019

Test space

Heading 1 Heading 2
Data 1 Data 2


Comment box

Derek Abbott
{

Symbol

__MATHJAX_NODOLLAR__ I owe you 20.

I owe you $20



I owe you $20

Infoboxtest

Infobox testing
Code 1.jpg
Main Heading
First set of data
Remove this line (optional)

OK this is the test bed for the u-beaut infobox. What a pain to install. For the record, I followed the info at this link: http://www.etcwiki.org/wiki/Mediawiki_template_guide

Why the heck why isn't this a file you can just unpackage into a directory rather than having to manually create 20 files, I don't know.

I owe you $20

More Testing

  • [math]\int_a^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy[/math]
  • [math]\int_b^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy,{\rm does~it~work?}[/math]
  • [math]\int_b^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy,{\rm not~quite,~as~referencing~is~cactus.}[/math]
  • [math]\int_b^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy,cactii eradicated[/math]


According to scientists, the Sun is pretty big.[1] The Moon, however, is not so big.[2]

Green-rectangle.gif


MathJax Test

Here is an inline equation: \( x^2 \)

Here is a display equation: \begin{align} \int 2x \; dx &= x^2 + C \tag{1}\label{eqn:integral} \end{align}

That last equation was Eqn. \ref{eqn:integral}.

\( \int_a^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy , \)

and in display form

\[ \int_a^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy . \]

Scratch

Therefore, the minimal cost = $50 million [math]\times[/math] 360 = $18,000 million = $18 billion. The maximal cost is = $50 million [math]\times[/math] 20,300 = $1,016,500 million = $1 trillion (approx).

Scratch pad downloads

Presentations

Notes relating to Test space

  1. E. Miller, The Sun, (New York: Academic Press, 2005), 23-5.
  2. R. Smith, "Size of the Moon", Scientific American, 46 (April 1978): 44-6.