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  2. Accessory (legal term) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accessory_(legal_term)

    The accomplice to a felony or misdemeanor is the person who, by aiding or abetting, facilitates its preparation or commission. Any person who, by means of a gift, promise, threat, order or an abuse of authority or powers, provokes the commission of an offence or gives instructions to commit it, is also an accomplice.

  3. Complicity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complicity

    [1]: 725–804 A person is an accomplice of another person in the commission of a crime if they purpose the completion of a crime, and toward that end, if that person solicits or encourages the other person, or aids or attempts to aid in planning or committing the crime, or has legal duty to prevent that crime but fails to make an effort to ...

  4. Aiding and abetting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aiding_and_abetting

    While aiding means providing support or assistance to someone, abetting means encouraging someone else to commit a crime. Accessory is someone who in fact assists "commission of a crime committed primarily by someone else". [1] However, some jurisdictions have merged being an accessory before the fact with aiding and abetting. [2]

  5. Talk:Complicity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Complicity

    This suggests that conspiracy is the only criminal form of complicity, which is not consistent with the rest of the article or the referenced articles, which treat being an accomplice as likely criminal. (The article also ought to be clearer about whether being an accomplice and being complicit are considered as synonymous.)

  6. Criminal responsibility in French law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criminal_responsibility_in...

    Another question is whether it complicity in complicity is punishable. Article 121-7 specifies that a second-degree complicity is only legally punishable with respect to knowing or informed help or assistance, even through the intermediary of another accomplice in the case of fraud, but the jurisprudence is rather severe and generally finds ...

  7. Category:CS1 errors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:CS1_errors

    Information about the errors is available at Help:CS1 errors. The total count of articles in subcategories of this category is 147,558 ( update this page to refresh this count). This number involves some double-counting, since a single article may appear in multiple subcategories.

  8. Type safety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_safety

    In computer science, type safety and type soundness are the extent to which a programming language discourages or prevents type errors.Type safety is sometimes alternatively considered to be a property of facilities of a computer language; that is, some facilities are type-safe and their usage will not result in type errors, while other facilities in the same language may be type-unsafe and a ...

  9. Comparison of C Sharp and Visual Basic .NET - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_C_Sharp_and...

    C# is case sensitive and all C# keywords are in lower cases. Visual Basic and C# share most keywords, with the difference being that the default Visual Basic keywords are the capitalised versions of the C# keywords, e.g. Public vs public, If vs if. A few keywords have very different versions in Visual Basic and C#: