If you want to go from the log domain to the "normal" domain, you have to exponentiate the numbers. The problem is that exp(-10000000000) is an incredibly small number.
And since each probability is <= 1.0 by definition, almost all of your probabilities will be negative in the log domain (except for the 1.0 case where log(1.0) = 0).
That would be log(0), which unfortunately does not exist. The log function is undefined for 0, because there is no number y which satisfies the equation e^y = 0.
Sorry, it took me over two hours to understand one simple table and what the numbers inside them mean (and I still don't get those NULL states), and now Miss comes up with another large heap of terminology and data. I simply don't have the time and energy right now, sorry.
well as i understand , these are for featues have divided in all states
The mixture weights are NOT in the log domain.
4. The means are NOT in the log domain.
5. The covariance values are NOT in the log domain. These covariance values are the diagonal of a 14x14 matrix. These covariance values are sigma squared (variance), not sigma (standard deviation).
ok, so now we've figured out what those numbers mean, we've figured out what the numbers in the other table mean and you already have the function you need to apply (and, now, a link to an article that tells you how to get to that function). What more do you need?
I gotta go - @FredO, if you haven't run out of energy yet, have fun :-)
Since when is C++0x dead? If they don't put their stamp of approval on FDIS, it'll be C++12 at least - and even if they do, there's bureaucratic hoops to jump through
While SOIS might not want to do it, we, as the user, can. And the script is absolutely ridiculously simple - so simple that I'm surprised nobody has posted it yet. Ah well, free Meta rep here I come:
// ==UserScript==
// @name StackExchange Title Tag Remover
// @namespace yijiang
/...
@MartinhoFernandes yes, it is. it can assume the copy ctor is written so that it expects elision
that doesn't necessarily mean the compiler will elide the copy ctor if it doesn't want to, since usually people that add side-effects in a cctor usually expect them to be performed...
I'm checking one last thing then updating my answer