...5, 6, 7 and 8!
Sunday, June 6, 2010
12:16 AM
Labels: corrado riccomi , gens d'ys academy of irish dance , hallo world , i dance the irish dance in rome , martina spagna , rome , umberto crespi
Labels: corrado riccomi , gens d'ys academy of irish dance , hallo world , i dance the irish dance in rome , martina spagna , rome , umberto crespi
Beginning from this I'll publish (some of) translations of the old posts from my other Blog:
Hello World1
So... have you read the Cover, haven't you?
Ok let me explain why this Blog notebook was born and what you'll find inside it.
I Dance the Irish Dance in Rome is the subtitle and that suggest us the plot: the story of a very peculiar experience with the learning of the Irish Dance (and the Breton Dance) in a city like Rome in which you won't find anything similar.
I want to emphasize a thing: dancing the Irish Dance is entertaining!
It’s something that I suggest everybody and it's a thing that everybody can do.
It’s something that I suggest everybody and it's a thing that everybody can do.
I was writing, before, of a city like Rome in which you won't find anything similar and so is needed a particular acknowledgement to the Gens d'Ys Academy of Irish Dances and to its President Umberto Crespi. I wish to thank also our wonderful teachers Corrado Riccomi and Martina Spagna that with their strong commitment and great patience have succeded in sharing the love for this kind of dance even to me that, until now, haven't made a single step following the music.
Since this is the first post, I don't want to be too long so...
That's all folks.
Notes:
1 Hello, world! It's the phrase, printed on video from the very first program written in C language from the famous book on that language: "Programming in C: A Tutorial" (actually the phrase on the book is "hello world" without capitals and puntuations).
That program, simply, prints on the video the citated greeting and it's important in other languages as example of programming. Frequently a student or a programmer who is about to begin to use a new language writes a program that prints on the monitor: "Hallo, world!".
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