@corvid - I have no idea if this is best practice or not, but I would maintain a hash of all the loaders with some kind of master test to ensure all the child processes had loaded before moving on
Please write JavaScript function "mulc" that accepts only one (first) argument and returns a delegate (another function) M. Another function M should accept another one (second) argument and return multiplication of first & second arguments.
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@rlemon You should probably read the wiki article, since my terminology isn't great, and I'm not 100% clear on what counts as currying
> Currying and partial function application are often conflated.[13] One of the significant differences between the two is that a call to a partially applied function returns the result right away, not another function down the currying chain
My controller loads the zip file after requesting it from S3 (where it gets placed by the OpenTok API), opens the zip file in memory, generates the video elements, and slaves them to its own custom event generator.
made this table selection polyfill jsbin.com/cacarew/edit?html,js,output (for chrome and a bit for firefox that can't do square selections) any suggestion?
Please write JavaScript function "mulc" that accepts only one (first) argument and returns a delegate (another function) M. Another function M should accept another one (second) argument and return multiplication of first & second arguments.
@Zirak Correct, I was telling him about terminology
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> Currying and partial function application are often conflated.[13] One of the significant differences between the two is that a call to a partially applied function returns the result right away, not another function down the currying chain
In mathematics and computer science, currying is the technique of translating the evaluation of a function that takes multiple arguments (or a tuple of arguments) into evaluating a sequence of functions, each with a single argument. It was introduced by Gottlob Frege, developed by Moses Schönfinkel, and further developed by Haskell Curry.
Uncurrying is the dual transformation to currying, and can be seen as a form of defunctionalization. It takes a function f(x) that returns another function g(y) as a result, and yields a new function f ′(x, y) that takes a number of additional parameters and applies...
// create a function named f which accepts three parameters: x y and z
// the function named f then returns the sum of x y and z
f(x, y, z) = x + y + z
// COMPRENDRE?
// let's imagine a function named partApp which does partial application
// partApp accepts a function and vararg arguments
// it returns a partially applied function, which can be called with additional
//arguments until all the function's arguments are passed
partapp(f, 1)(2)(3); // WERE YOU DROPPED AT BIRTH?
// COMPRENDRE?
@Zirak What he means is that partial application works on one level (returns a function that will return a value) whereas currying is more of a recursive/automatic operation
That will keep returning functions as you partially apply more and more.
@xZ4FiRx Why not just make a question on Stack Overflow and tag it with android? It's probably going to be leaps and bounds ahead of asking such an offtopic question in this room.
You're saying that partial application is when you curry a function, and use some, but not all of the resulting functions? — SpoonMeiserOct 20 '08 at 11:22
@xZ4FiRx That's not how SO works. If you ask a good question with all the relevant information, someone will answer it. If you ask low quality questions, you're absolutely right that they're going to get dismissed and ignored.
@xZ4FiRx Read this, our own friendly moderator @MadaraUchiha wrote it. It should get you on the right path in terms of asking questions. That's about all the tools I can give you.
Depends on what your goal is. If you just want a baby for a single night when you're extra down then sure. But if it's a baby for a fancy occasion? Or you plan on stocking them for some time? Some of the cheaper babies go bad quickly.
Plus, the import tax can be steep.
Anyway @SterlingArcher what was wrong with your baby?
Well, we get a 24 hour data collection set to run a control signal on, then every 5 minutes, check the control to the new 5 minute data set for a signal authentication heartbeat