Lords Mobile Wiki

What is Lords Mobile Player Statistics? Lords Mobile Player Statistics (or short Lords Mobile Player Stats) lets you easily parse player statistics of Lords Mobile and collect the data of multiple players. The data can then be compare between players and export as text file or images. Latest Hero in Advance Server Exclusive Season Skin Reward Welcome to Mobile Legends Wiki! The best source of information about Mobile Legends that anyone can edit! Be sure to read the rules first before you begin editing. About MLBB is a multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) mobile game developed and published by Shanghai Moonton Technology. First released in 2016, the game has become.

What is Lords Mobile Player Statistics?Lords Mobile Player Statistics (or short Lords Mobile Player Stats) lets you easily parse player statistics of Lords Mobile and collect the data of multiple players. Social empires shut down. The data can then be compare between players and export as text file or images. Comparing the statistics between players can be useful to identify your own strength and weaknesses to improve your gameplay. Additionally, guilds might highly benefit from using the tool to get an overview over their players performance. How to install/use the application?Because of being in an early development stage the application does not come with a dedicated installer. Dungeon princess apk full. Simply unzip the whole file you downloaded into a directory of your choice and run LordsMobileStats.exe.

Please make sure that you have the Microsoft.NET framework 4.5.2 installed on your computer, otherwise the application won't run. How is it working?Typically you take several screenshots of your statistics and the statistics of other player and load them into the Parse Screenshots window of the application.

There you can then either manually enter the player name for all screenshots or let the applicaiton try to auto detect the name. After starting the parsing process which can take several seconds per screenshots the application will try to parse all relevent statistics from the screenshot and assign them to the player. For parsing the screenshot data the open source Optical Character Recognition (ORC) engine Tessaract is used. All files required for running Tessaract are included within the project. Known problems and frequently asked questions?The biggest problems may arise from parsing the screenshots because it is very difficult to reliably parse complex images such as a game screenshot (OCR engines are often optimized for scanning book pages). The application also has to take care of differently sized screenshots from many different devices and form factors.

How to improve parsing accuracy?Make sure to use the original screenshot files without any compression or rescaling applied. DO NOT transfer them over Whatsapp, Line or similiar application as those rescale and downsample the screenshots. Overall screenshots provided as.PNG files will work best. The player name is mispelledThis can happen quite often for characters that are very similiar in the font used by Lords Mobile, like for example o and 0 or 1 and I. I'm constantly working on improving the text recognition, however, if you run into such a problem simply ignore it or manually edit the player name afterwards in the single player view.

The player name can't be extracted at allIn this case you have to manually set the player name before parsing the screenshot. To do so click each screenshot and either select the name of a previously parsed playe or manually enter the player name into the provided edit field Can I parse the statistics for my entire guild?Yes you can! However, this requires you to either collect the screenshots from all your guild members or create all required screenshots yourself. Typically it takes 3 screenshots to cover all statistics of a single player. With 100 players in a guild you will have to take about 300 screenshots.

Best practice is then to transfer them to your computer by USB, Google Drive, Dropbox, etc. In order to parse them. Don't forget to save the results after the parsing for quick access at a later point.

The parsing of that many screenshots can take a while (5 to 30 minutes). What languages are supported?Currently parsing screenshots in English and German is supported. Adding support for other languages is on my todo list, but adding those is a lot of work.

If you language is not supported right now what you can always do is change the client version of Lords Mobile to English when taking screenshots and switching back to your language afterwards.Project Members:. (admin).

Main articles: andUnder the, 'lord' had a wide, loose and varied meaning. An overlord was a person from whom a landholding or a manor was held by a or under various forms of.

The modern term ' is a vestigial survival of this function. A was a person to whom a vassal owed sworn allegiance. Neither of these terms were titular dignities, but rather factual appellations, which described the relationship between two or more persons within the highly stratified feudal social system. For example, a man might be Lord of the Manor to his own tenants but also a vassal of his own overlord, who in turn was a vassal of the King. Where a knight was a lord of the manor, he was referred to in contemporary documents as 'John (Surname), knight, lord of (manor name)'. A was a true titular dignity, with the right to attend Parliament, but a feudal baron, Lord of the Manor of many manors, was a vassal of the King.Lord of the manor. See also:The substantive title of 'Lord of the Manor' came into use in the English medieval system of after the of 1066.

The title 'Lord of the Manor' was a titular dignity which derived its force from the existence and operation of a or at which he or his steward presided, thus he was the lord of the manorial court which determined the rules and laws which were to govern all the inhabitants and property covered by the jurisdiction of the court. To the tenants of a certain class of known in Saxon times as their lord was a man who had the power of exercising over them.

The term invariably used in contemporary mediaeval documents is simply 'lord of X', X being the name of the manor. The term 'Lord of the Manor' is a recent usage of historians to distinguish such lords from and other powerful persons referred to in ancient documents variously as 'Sire' (mediaeval French), 'Dominus' (Latin), 'Lord' etc. The title of 'Lord of the Manor' is recognised by the British Government for any such title registered at before 13 October 2003 (the commencement date of the Land Registration Act 2002) but after that date titles can no longer be registered, and any such titles voluntarily de-registered by the holder cannot later be re-registered. However any transfer of ownership of registered manors will continue to be recorded in the register, on the appropriate notification.

Thus in effect the register is closed for new registrations. Such titles are legally classified as 'incorporeal hereditaments' as they have no physical existence, and usually have no intrinsic value. However a lucrative market arose in the 20th century for such titles, often for purposes of vanity, which was assisted by the existence of an official register, giving the purchaser the impression of a physical existence. Whether a title of 'Lord of the Manor' is registered or unregistered has no effect on its legal validity or existence, which is a matter of law to be determined by the courts. Modern legal cases have been won by persons claiming rights as lords of the manor over. The heads of many ancient English land-owning families have continued to be lords of the manor of lands they have inherited.The UK Identity and Passport Service will include such titles on a British passport as an 'observation' (e.g., 'The Holder is the Lord of the Manor of X'), provided the holder can provide documentary evidence of ownership. The United States however, forbids the use of all titles on passports.

Australia forbids the use of titles on passports if those titles have not been awarded by the Crown (in reference to the Australian Monarchy) or the Commonwealth (in reference to the Australian Government). Main article:Lord is used as a generic term to denote members of the. Five ranks of exist in the United Kingdom: in descending order these are,. The appellation 'Lord' is used most often by barons, who are rarely addressed by their formal and legal title of 'Baron'. The most formal style is 'The Lord (X)': for example, can be referred to as 'The Lord Tennyson', although the most common appellation is 'Lord Tennyson'. Marquesses, earls and viscounts are commonly also addressed as Lord.

Dukes use the style 'The Duke of (X)', and are not correctly referred to as 'Lord (X)'. Dukes are formally addressed as 'Your Grace', rather than 'My Lord'. In the, the members of the lowest level of the peerage have the substantive title ' rather than Baron.' Lord' is also used as a for some or all of the children of senior members of the peerage: for example the younger sons of dukes and marquesses are entitled to use the style 'Lord (first name) (surname)'. As these titles are merely courtesy titles, the holder is not by virtue of the title a member of the peerage and is not entitled to use the definite article 'The' as part of the title. Sons of, would also use a similar style if the holder doesn't have a peerage.House of Lords. See also:The upper house of the is the, which is an abbreviation of the full title, 'The Right Honourable the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled'.

The Lords Temporal are the people who are entitled to receive to attend the House of Lords in right of a peerage. The Lords Spiritual are the Archbishops of Canterbury and York, the Bishops of London, Winchester and Durham, and the twenty-one longest-serving bishops of the Church of England from among the other bishops, who are all entitled to receive writs of summons in right of their bishoprics or archbishoprics.The Lords Temporal greatly outnumber the Lords Spiritual, there being nearly 800 of the former and only 26 of the latter. As of December 2016, 92 Lords Temporal sit in the House in right of hereditary peerages and 19 sit in right of judicial life peerages under the.

The rest are life peers under the.Judiciary. This section does not any. Unsourced material may be challenged and.Find sources: – ( September 2015) 'Lord' is used as a title of for various gods or deities. The earliest recorded use of 'Lord' in the English language in a religious context was by English Bible translators such as. However, Bede wrote in Latin, and was described by Michael Lapidge as 'without question the most accomplished Latinist produced in these islands in the Anglo-Saxon period'. He used an Anglo-Saxon phrase that indicated a noble, prince, ruler or lord to refer to God; however, he applied this as a gloss to the Latin text that he was producing, and not as a clear translation of the term itself. 'Lord', as a gloss to Old English dryhten, meant royal, ruler, prince, noble, and did not indicate a deity.

After the Norman invasion and the influx of French Catholics, this understanding began to be applied to religious texts as well, but that was during the later Middle Ages and not the early medieval period of Bede's time. It was widely used in the translated in the 17th century. See also. In English language Old Testament translations such as the, the name (the ) is usually rendered 'the L ORD'. This usage follows the practice of substituting the spoken Hebrew word ' ('My Lords') for appearances of YHWH.: is in the.: The English term 'Lord' is often used to translate the Arabic term (: رب‎), used with respect to (: الله‎).: In, the may refer to the concept of the representation of the monotheistic God.

Another name more commonly used in Hindu theology is, meaning 'The Lord', the consisting of the trinity of, and.: Other deities given corresponding appellations to 'Lord' include:. ('Lord') was used by the both as a generic term of address to various local deities and as the spoken name for the once the form 'Hadad' became too sacred for any but his high priest to utter. Similarly, came to be addressed as 'Adoni' ('My Lord'). meaning 'Lord' as in Sumerian deities and.: is often called Lord Buddha. Definition expands on: 'lord' Dictionary.com Unabridged. Random House, Inc. 2011.

'This word means in general one with power and authority, a master or ruler.The word is used for anyone whom it was desired to address deferentially' Cruden's Complete Concordance to the Bible, revised edition, 1992, 'Lord', p.390. Oxford English Dictionary Second Edition (Revised 2005), p.1036. Glossary of Manorial Terms, Manorial Society of Great Britain. Retrieved 2016-08-23.

Manors: manorial titles and rights (PG22). Retrieved 2016-08-23. (PDF).

Retrieved 2017-06-24. Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government. Retrieved 23 August 2016. Chisholm, Hugh, ed. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

P. 992. (PDF). The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom. 13 December 2010. Retrieved 23 August 2016. Larousse Dictionnaire de la Langue Francaise, Paris, 1979, p.1713.

Retrieved 2016-08-23. NASB (1995).

(Updated Edition). Anaheim, California: Foundation Publications (for the ). Archived from on 2006-12-07. One of the titles for God is Lord, a translation of Adonai. There is yet another name which is particularly assigned to God as His special or proper name, that is, the four letters YHWH (Exodus 3:14 and Isaiah 42:8).

This name has not been pronounced by the Jews because of reverence for the great sacredness of the divine name. Therefore, it has been consistently translated LORD. The only exception to this translation of YHWH is when it occurs in immediate proximity to the word Lord, that is, Adonai. In that case it is regularly translated GOD in order to avoid confusion.External links Wikiquote has quotations related to.