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7639 results for: ‘微信公众号电影网站源码模板✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.UbJqLrXoVlPMT’

  • Innovation through collaboration

    Learn more about the Institute for Precision Health's innovation through collaboration projects.

  • Personal statements

    Personal statements: what they are, why they’re important and what to include and avoid - plus some suggestions from our admissions tutors.

  • The television: an electronic babysitter for the incarcerated?

    Read the article "The television: an electronic babysitter for the incarcerated?" This is part of the Social Worlds project at the University of Leicester.

  • Advanced C++ Programming

    Module code: CO7105 First introduced in the early 1980s, C++ has become one of the world's most popular programming languages, due to its potential for producing efficient and compact code.

  • Advanced C++ Programming

    Module code: CO7105 First introduced in the early 1980s, C++ has become one of the world's most popular programming languages, due to its potential for producing efficient and compact code.

  • Advanced C++ Programming

    Module code: CO4203 Over the past 32 years C++ has become one of the worlds' most popular programming languages, due to its potential for producing efficient and compact code.

  • Advanced C++ Programming

    Module code: CO7105 First introduced in the early 1980s, C++ has become one of the world's most popular programming languages, due to its potential for producing efficient and compact code.

  • Social scientist joins crew of Tall Ship for D-Day landing commemoration

    Dr Jim McDermott (pictured), an Associate Tutor with the School of Management and a member of The Royal British Legion, is setting sail to retrace the routes taken by the ships and landing craft during D-Day on 6 June 1944 to the Normandy beaches.

  • National Space Centre: Planetary Science at Space Lates

    Join Dr Henrik Melin (STFC James Webb Fellow) from University of Leicester, for this Space Lates at the National Space Centre on July 22nd.

  • New award for improving agricultural monitoring from Space

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 25 March 2020 Leicester physicists have recently been awarded a Met Office Newton grant to monitor vegetation health and stress from Space Food security has always been a major strategic issue related to...

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