@Ffisegydd @JonClements fun times with transcripts: long messages have the "see full text", and the full text, injected via javascript, the only way you can tell there's more is that the message has class="partial", then you have to build the url and fetch the message manually
I thought I was finished with transcripts, but with that discovery, I'll have to wait until morning after I get some sleep.
@Ffisegydd I asked for one on meta/asked balpha for details - there isn't one as such... just web sockets and post requests - which isn't publically documented
interesting...I'm new to SNMP and I am having such a hard time figuring out how to code it. The concepts seem simple enough, but the code is just so confusing
@JonClements You mean Gohlke ? It seems to be a special "MKL" version ...
I don't know what it is, and I'm not sure it will run on every machine...
A biiiiiiiigggggggg package like Numpy could at least propose binaries for 64, don't you think so ? Here they propose binaries installer but only for x32 : sourceforge.net/projects/numpy/files/NumPy/1.9.1
you can go to http://chat.stackoverflow.com/messages/<room_id>/<message_id> for any message, not just the partial messages, and you get back the markdown instead of the rendered output in the transcript
Hmm mine takes 0.6 us for finding min then 1.3 us for sorting once. The double sort takes 3.6 us ... but again I didnt test with random inputs as I suppose I should ?
@davidism that is brilliant :D I totally didn't think about that !
Why do some mathematicians find it difficult to wrap their heads around: x = x + 1 When that is basic iteration - basic recursion taught in senior high school in Pure Math as part of Numerical Solution of Equeations
Pure functional languages are a great idea if you're writing a PhD thesis, but you'd be laughed out of a job trying to only use that in the real world.
anyway - before I put my head on the pillow - @Ronald if you're asking for suggestions on material to how to teach your students, that's pretty much your job, knowing your students and such - we'll have bias between what will and work won't for our selves... your job - you work it out
You are asking strangers on the internet how to teach your class. If I was one of your students and found out you didn't know what to teach, I'd go effing mental.
imo it tends to be best to learn by... just... doing it. You don't learn guitar by fastidiously studying scales, modes, etc. You learn by picking up a guitar and seeing what works
I want the book so they can read it for themselves and come into class knowing how to program so we can start discussing data structures and algorithms
By the end of June I should leave the city with them having read K & R, the GCC Manual and SICP from start to end on their own
Self-actualization is a term that has been used in various psychology theories, often in slightly different ways. The term was originally introduced by the organismic theorist Kurt Goldstein for the motive to realize one's full potential. Expressing one's creativity, quest for spiritual enlightenment, pursuit of knowledge, and the desire to give to society are examples of self-actualization. In Goldstein's view, it is the organism's master motive, the only real motive: "the tendency to actualize itself as fully as possible is the basic drive... the drive of self-actualization." Carl Rogers similarly...
Rather than K&R, GCC, and SICP, which are incredibly dull, if informative, you need to reduce your scope a ton, have some cool simple examples that demonstrate the power of programming, get them excited about the possibilities, but don't try to cram ideology and huge texts in.
Maybe she doesn't. This isn't a harsh thing to say. In fact, it's a very fair and difficult thing to say. But maybe she doesn't belong. You have to take this into account.
So I will narrow my scope to C and Scheme starting with Scheme since that lady I made reference to found it easier to work with. Their projects will however be in Python
By June they should be ready to take on data structure and algorithm classes