I posted an almost
identical version of this question to the Code Review Meta site, but asking whether or not this would violate their posting policy:
Not exact matches
That
question is somewhat complicated, because there are very good things about it — Chloë Grace Moretz's fantastic as a foulmouthed twelve - year - old
version of the Punisher, with some Jackie Chan thrown in, and so is «lead» Aaron Johnson, who manages not to look like he's lost the movie he's top - lining to every single other cast member, whether it's Moretz, Nic Cage, Christopher Mintz - Plasse (whose squinty nerd thing,
identical to Superbad, is just annoying here) or Mark Strong, even though he does at one point or another in the film.
The
question of how that'll work out in the end is one that isn't satisfied by my hands - on, which only gives me the briefest glimpse at a small mission that is essentially
identical in structure to what I remember from my time with the PSP
version — save,
of course, some demo - friendly tweaks.
The improvements included using larger fonts, lists, headers, white space, simple language, and logical organization.29 In a study
of voter behavior, Reilly and Richey found that increasing language complexity on ballots made voters more likely to skip ballot
questions.30 Rogers and Brown found that subjects who received «high - impact» instructions complied with those instructions at a significantly higher rate than the group that received instructions in the «low - impact» style.31 Finally, McGlone and Tofighbakhsh found that readers presented with two phrases with
identical meaning more readily accepted and believed the
version of the phrase that rhymed.