David Najar

David Najar was a rabbinical writer of Tunis, where he died at the beginning of the nineteenth century. He was the author of Ẓemaḥ Dawid, which was published after his death, together with the Admat Yehudah of Judah Cohen Tanugi (Leghorn, 1828), and which contains novellæ to some tractates of the Talmud and to some parts of Maimonides' Yad.

Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography

  • David Cazès, Notes Bibliographiques sur la Littérature Juive Tunisienne, p. 260.
gollark: Being able to program microcontrollers is mildly cool, but it also means I have to wait for an electronics assembler, they can't interact with external components, and they're very irritating to debug (apparently *deliberately?!*). CC computers boot fairly quickly anyway.
gollark: CC workflow for setting up a computer to do things:- (auto)craft computer- place computer- write code/download code onto computer as startupOC workflow:- figure out what cards/other components it needs- queue autocrafting for everything- wait a while while autocrafting runs, and possibly converts some coal into diamonds- pull autocrafted stuff out of ME network, put into computers, be sure to get the right items- find openOS disk, disk drive- install openOS- write/download code- either move code to `boot` or work out how `rc` works
gollark: I play on servers. I can't just edit the recipes.
gollark: Even with autocrafting I still have to queue up all the parts and fetch them from storage and install them every time I want a new computer.
gollark: I mean, personally I just find it less annoying than OC because I don't have to microcraft (or program AE recipes for) 89126871258 parts.

References

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Singer, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "article name needed". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
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