> Use each of the numbers 1, 3, 4, and 6 exactly once with any of the four basic math operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division) to total 24. Each number must be used once and only once, and you may define the order of operations; for example, 3 * (4 + 6) + 1 = 31 is valid, however incorrect, since it doesn’t total 24.
A ques. on probability. From my textbook. Smart people help.
> A card is selected at random from cards numbered 00, 01, 02,...,99. An event is said to have occurred if the product of digits of the card number is 16. If card is selected 5 times with replacement each time, then the probability that the event occurs exactly three times is..
The way he taught us was thinking about sets and having to add and subtract the intersections alternately. That was the intuitive way, anyway. Next lecture, he'll dive deeper
Now, we know exactly 4, right? And that exactly 4 = at least 4 - at least 5 (inclusion exclusion) so we know "at least 4" too, and can calculate "at least 3".
@SomeGuy ok, allow me to explain. Inclusion exclusion is all about double counting.
@SomeGuy only in my example I used at least 4 and not exactly 4, but you're right in this case we didn't have to use inclusion-exclusion I just wanted to demonstrate it.
she was pretty much just freaking out because she didn't know what to do with her future. needed some time alone to get it all sorted out and it worked out again after that
> Despite being able to tie his own shoelaces and hold down a skilled job, he made the astonishing (and 100% serious) observation "it really annoys me that they give us an extra day in February when the weather's rubbish - why don't they give us an extra day in the summer instead?".
@Main Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
@nhahtdh Yes, and I also asked it explicitly in the list. Hi by the way.
@SebastianNette no it doesn't. The reason people say "eval makes code slow" is because they're cargo-culting things they heard years ago. If code is only run once then the performance of new Function and eval would be exactly the same - the difference is in scoping rules and is irrelevant in this quesiton anyway. — Benjamin Gruenbaum2 mins ago
Is any of future versions of JavaScript (ESx) targeting simplification/removing quirks/etc of the language? (e.g. some bad properties are mentioned in "JavaScript the good parts")
Saying "new Function is the real deal", I can't understand if he's being sarcastic or he genuinely doesn't understand performance at all.
What he probably wants to say is "new Function is important if you run code a ton of times and you want to utilize the JIT in a dynamic compliation way", or something like that.
So I'm not sure if he's mocking me or genuinely just cargo culting.