A:
You can achieve this using WHERE IN clause:
DELETE FROM table WHERE IN(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10);
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All Saints Catholic Church. A Local Community in Wake Forest, NC. The Parish Church of the Holy Redeemer is affiliated with the Archdiocese of Louisville, and the Diocese of Raleigh. The Parish, established in 1946, celebrates weekly Masses. Rector: Fr. David Linton. The Pastoral Administrator is, Fr. Dennis DeVitis.
All Saints Catholic Church. A Local Community in Wake Forest, NC. The Parish Church of the Holy Redeemer is affiliated with the Archdiocese of Louisville, and the Diocese of Raleigh. The Parish, established in 1946, celebrates weekly Masses. Rector: Fr. David Linton. The Pastoral Administrator is, Fr. Dennis DeVitis.
Diocese of Raleigh. The diocese is a province of the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Louisville, Kentucky. The Catholic Community of Wake Forest, NC is a member of the Diocese. The church is located at the corner of South Main and Green Street.
A Local Community in Wake Forest, NC. The Parish Church of the Holy Redeemer is affiliated with the Archdiocese of Louisville, and the Diocese of Raleigh. The Parish, established in 1946, celebrates weekly Masses. Rector: Fr. David Linton. The Pastoral Administrator is, Fr. Dennis DeVitis.
All Saints Catholic Church. A Local Community in Wake Forest, NC. The Parish Church of the Holy Redeemer is affiliated with the Archdiocese of Louisville, and the Diocese of Raleigh. The Parish, established in 1946, celebrates weekly Masses. Rector: Fr. David Linton. The Pastoral Administrator is, Fr. Dennis DeVitis.
All Saints Catholic Church. A Local Community in Wake Forest, NC. The Parish Church of the Holy Redeemer is affiliated with the Archdiocese of Louisville, and the Diocese of Raleigh. The Parish, established in 1946, celebrates weekly Masses. Rector: Fr. David Linton. The Pastoral Administrator is, Fr. Dennis DeVitis.
All Saints Catholic Church. A Local Community in Wake Forest, NC. The Parish Church of the Holy Redeemer is affiliated with the Archdiocese of Louisville, and the Diocese of Raleigh 01e38acffe
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Category:Crimean WarQ:
Why does my hard disk continue spinning even though it is stopped?
I have a Western Digital Scorpio Blue 500GB SATA hard disk drive. I've had it for several years and it never seems to stop. Even though the computer is completely shut down, the disk is spinning, and I can hear it.
I've shut down my computer several times, once using the "shutdown" command, and once by pressing the power switch.
I've also waited a few days and shut down my computer again. The disk is still spinning.
How can I shut down the disk when it's in this state?
A:
If it is spinning by itself, chances are that it's not been powered down completely. It's still somehow powered on and for some reason it's spinning even though it's not doing anything.
You can look at the processor on your motherboard (you don't really need to, you can use a power meter to check that) and make sure that there's no voltage being supplied to the motherboard's BIOS. If the processor is powered off, then you'll have no voltage at all, and it will be impossible for the system to run.
Q:
How can I wait for the cudaMemcpyAsync operation to complete?
My original question was:
How can I wait for the cudaMemcpyAsync operation to complete?
But my question now is:
I'm using both the cudaMemcpyAsync and cudaMemcpyAsync_v2 for the same operation.
How can I wait for cudaMemcpyAsync to finish, before moving to the next line of code?
I mean, at the moment my program is running like this:
// cudaMemcpyAsync operation
//
// cudaMemcpyAsync is invoked
// The operation finishes and goes to the next line
//
// Do more operation
//
What I want to happen is:
// cudaMemcpyAsync operation
//
// cudaMemcpyAsync is invoked
// The operation is completed and the program is waiting for the new line
//
// Do more operation
//
A:
You should be able to use the cudaAsyncLaunch() function. This should block until the completion
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