1 Maxholt, regarding your answer "Donald Lawerence and Tri City Singers! ":Thanks so much I appreciate it .
2 Jay-C, regarding your answer "Donald Lawrence":Thank you for the lyrics to the entire song 'Encourage Yourself'. What a treat - I only asked for the title but now I can forward the lyrics to bless other people and 'encourage' them to listen to the song. - thanks again .
Who sings the gospel song with lyrics speak over yourself, encourage yourself. The gospel song with lyrics speak over yourself, encourage yourself is sung by (without quotes):. The gospel song with lyrics speak over yourself, encourage yourself was sung by (without quotes):.
W00t. Thanks. You would think that sub would do that as a default and then have an int param for replace the first N occurrences!
– DJTripleThreat Dec 13 '09 at 1:36 1 DJ: no you wouldn't. If you want to replace the first match, then **SUB**stitute is your choice, if not **G**lobal **SUB**stitute is your choice. – Robert K Dec 13 '09 at 1:42.
I could explain why sub just replaces the first match of a pattern, but I think the documentation does it so much better (from ri String#sub on the command line): str. Sub(pattern, replacement) => new_str str. Sub(pattern) {|match| block } => new_str Returns a copy of _str_ with the _first_ occurrence of _pattern_ replaced with either _replacement_ or the value of the block.
Sub looks like it only replaces the first instance. Is there an option for that or another method that can replace all patterns? Can you do it inside a regex like perl?
... and +1 to anyone who can tell me WHY ON EARTH does string. Sub replace just the FIRST match?
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.