The first question on this topic is as follows. Why must the last consonant of a word be a syllable first, not a normal post-nucleus animal complement (Coda) position? After all, we have this position internally, and this Coda is so important as it distinguishes several languages from other languages called "CV languages". First, Coda is an old term going back to the era where all the consonants that occur after the nucleus can simply be tied into rhyme. Vowels are not heavy diphthong sounds.
When I first met Coda co-founder Shishir Mehrotra, he gave me a product demonstration that I felt a little as we are in a minority report. He took out a Coda file - Team Task Tracker - with a huge touch screen TV. He detailed the team's priorities, goals, and positions. The prototype is not clean, and there are not any ringtones and whistles that Coda has right now, but it has some magic things. It is presented so that it only has data that the team is concerned about and that people can easily know what to do next.
The starting point of Coda is very well known. As with most documents, it starts with a blank page and a blinking cursor. However, I noticed that the core engine was slowly completely different and powerful. Coda's document is designed to combine the flexibility of removing boundaries and writing text on the page and rich structured data formed on the form. We build it so that everyone can work together in their own way to get the same data. We designed it as a programming platform and built a new formula language. The goal is to make these files bigger as people become more creative. One of our early adopters called it "Minecraft for Documents." Perfect
We also use Coda for my previous colleagues. Word tells you to several teams of your company you may know that they are seeking to participate in our alpha test. As usage increases, Dr. Coda begins to accept her life. Our recruiter Raechel has created an elaborate wedding plan. A team of 100 people is using Coda as one of the biggest projects. And my eldest daughter just joined her LEGO Robot League team and I hope to win again this season.
You do not need to know how to code using Coda, and you can get more from Coda without writing any code. However, I am very interesting and an explorer and I'm interested in using 'official' to get the most out of Coda's experience. I am surprised how easy the concept of expressions is. The expression is not a code page but a single line of code that can be placed anywhere in the document by pressing the = key. Coda will help me by suggesting the line of code and the name of the document part that you might want to reference in the expression. There is no need to memorize grammar