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HackerRank categorizes most of their programming challenges into a number of core computer science domains, [3] including database management, mathematics, and artificial intelligence. When a programmer submits a solution to a programming challenge, their submission is scored on the accuracy of their output.
Sherlock solves the password, triggering a trap that kills one agent and allows them to break free. Several agents are killed in the subsequent chaos. Sherlock gets the phone first, but Irene sedates him, takes the phone, and escapes. On Christmas Eve, Sherlock receives a package containing Irene's phone.
The episode, which aired on 15 October 1931, featured Richard Gordon as Sherlock Holmes and Leigh Lovell as Dr. Watson. [5] Another production of the story aired in February 1935, with Louis Hector as Holmes and Lovell as Watson. [6] The story was also adapted for the American radio series The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. [7]
The player, first as Dr. Watson and then as Sherlock Holmes, investigates the explosion and discovers that it was not a gas leak but a bomb which was the cause. In an encrypted note, Mycroft writes to Sherlock that a chemical formula for an extremely powerful explosive had recently been stolen from the Ministry of Defence. Though the Ministry ...
The Pearl of Death is a 1944 Sherlock Holmes film that is loosely based on "The Six Napoleons". [6] Dressed to Kill – also known as Prelude to Murder (working title) and Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Code (in the United Kingdom) – is a 1946 adaptation loosely based on "The Six Napoleons", the busts being replaced with musical boxes.
Dr John H. Watson becomes convinced that his friend Sherlock Holmes, the famous private detective, is delusional—particularly in his belief that the renowned mathematician Professor James Moriarty is a criminal mastermind—as a result of his addiction to cocaine. Moriarty visits Watson to complain about being harassed by Holmes.
The episode's title "Elementary, Dear Data" was noted as a play on the iconic but false Sherlock Holmes phrase "Elementary, my dear Watson". [ 8 ] In 2011, this episode was noted by Forbes as one that explores the implications of advanced technology, in this case for exploring an apparently self-aware software program. [ 9 ]
A 2014 episode of the radio series The Classic Adventures of Sherlock Holmes was adapted from the story, with John Patrick Lowrie as Holmes and Lawrence Albert as Watson. [14] In 2024, the podcast Sherlock&Co adapted the story in a two-episodes adventure called "A Case of Identity", starring Paul Waggot as Watson and Harry Attwell as Sherlock.