Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Ghast may refer to: Creatures in H.P. Lovecraft novella The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath; Ghast (Dungeons & Dragons), undead creatures in the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game; A creature in the Spook's series by Joseph Delaney; Cliff-ghasts, creatures in the His Dark Materials trilogy; Ghasts, a monster in the video game Minecraft
Cliff-ghasts are the more prominent type of ghasts in His Dark Materials. Since many of the characters grow up in the same world as the cliff ghasts and may have encountered them before the start of the Northern Lights they know what these creatures are and consequently no character at any point explains them. Cliff-ghasts can fly, and are mortal.
If the former command is added twice to an undo stack, both items on the stack refer to the same command instance. This may be appropriate when a command can always be undone the same way (e.g. move down). Both the Gang of Four and the Java example below use this interpretation of the term command. On the other hand, if the latter commands are ...
Command and Destroy follows a number of the genre's conventions established by a more famous real time strategy series, Command and Conquer. [1] The game's plot follows an alien invasion of Earth. [2] The player completes a series of missions to progress through the game's single player mode, and can choose to play as the humans or the invaders ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Ghosts of Saltmarsh is an anthology of updated modules and adventures from previous editions, including three adventures from the classic 'U' series. The modules are modified to use the 5th edition rules, so that the adventures can be played in the order they are presented in the book, or dropped into a home campaign.
The key concept is that you can manipulate a single instance of the object just as you would manipulate a group of them. The operations you can perform on all the composite objects often have a least common denominator relationship. For example, if defining a system to portray grouped shapes on a screen, it would be useful to define resizing a ...
Most surviving genuinely old 'cobbled' areas are in reality pitched surfaces. A cobbled area is known as a "causey", "cassay" or "cassie" in Scots (probably from causeway ). [ 2 ] In the early modern period , cities like Paris, London, and Amsterdam began to pave their streets with cobblestones to manage the increased traffic from carts ...