@PengKim care for some advice? If you want to be taken seriously by anyone apart from a 13 year old teenager, don't say "SKILLLLLLLLLLLS" on your resume.
I don't know a suitable example of Chinese culture to use, but if I were a hiring manager I would look at that one word and throw your entire resume in the bin. I would literally not read another word.
Also your "list of work/jobs" should go from most recent and back in time.
No one really cares what you did years and years ago, they care what you do now, and by ordering it in the way you have I have to scroll through all the text to find it.
I'm not being mean, I am offering constructive criticism. Plus you saying "it's only an introduction" is rubbish because it is during an introduction that you want to look your absolute best.
If it's a poor introduction then people are unlikely to look any further, are they?
But it's okay, if you don't want feedback then I won't give it, I just assumed you wanted some as you linked it into chat (and if you were linking it into chat looking for a job then this is the absolute worst place for you to do it.)
I disagree. Even a personal site should be as well formatted as possible, especially if you were looking for employment. I doubt a potential employer would look at a personal site and say "Okay well this is a personal site so I have to give them some leeway, they're allowed to make mistakes."
Guys, I'm stuck on something that I think should be very simple. I have an numpy array of shape (43000,) and each element is another numpy array of shape (8421,). How can I turn this into a shape (43000, 8421)? Without using a for loop?
I have two StackExchange accounts .If I've asked a question on new account and if I want to start bounty for the question(s) from it ,may I use bounty for it? is it a fair approach ?
@PengKim I just arrive here, but I don't think anyone has been treating you "like a child" This chat room gets silly at times, and there is an informal attitude, I don't think anyone is trying to insult you, only to understand you. Also, when you first come to a new place, usually you should adapt to the people there before forcing them to change. In this case, we speak English here. That is all.
Millennium is a 1989 science fiction film directed by Michael Anderson and starring Kris Kristofferson, Cheryl Ladd, Robert Joy, Brent Carver, Al Waxman and Daniel J. Travanti. The original music score was composed by Eric N. Robertson. The film was marketed with the tagline "The people aboard Flight 35 are about to land 1,000 years from where they planned to."
Millennium is based on the 1977 short story "Air Raid" by John Varley. Varley started work on a screenplay based on that short story in 1979, and later released the expanded story in book-length form in 1983, titled Millennium.
== Plot... ==
Maybe it originates in the far future, where a more entertaining plot with no historical ramifications was needed and thus swapped with this one, as that's the only way anyone makes original stories in 3001
It reminds me of another funny time-travel situation. Which claims that the Titanic actually sunk because of all the added weight of time-tourists who travel to locations/places of disasters to experiences historic moments in time where they are guaranteed not to affect it. Which is a paradox, Vis-à-vis the chicken-and-egg conundrum
I just read the synopsis on Wikipedia for the movie of Varley's "Overdrawn at the Memory Bank" - it seems that it deviates a bit from the original storyline; I assume it does so for increased dramatic effect.
@GeoffreyMureithi If it's very small, no more than a dozen lines or so. If it's longer, put it on pastebin etc & link it. And if you paste it here, make sure you format it correctly, by selecting all the text and then hitting Ctrl-k, or the "Fixed Font" button
@poke Are you sure? I agree that it'll work ok if you use it to generate the Tribonacci numbers in order, but what happens if the memoization cache is unpopulated, and you try to do fib3(4000) ?
@GeoffreyMureithi Here's a simple non-recursive solution. I guess it could be optimized with some memoization. But if you really want to do this efficiently, you should use something like numpy that can do fast matrix calculation, and use the matrix exponential equation from oeis.org/A000213
def trib(n):
queue = [1, 1, 1]
for i in xrange(n-2):
queue = queue[1:] + [sum(queue)]
return queue[-1]
print [(i, trib(i)) for i in range(10)] **output** [(0, 1), (1, 1), (2, 1), (3, 3), (4, 5), (5, 9), (6, 17), (7, 31), (8, 57), (9, 105)]
@JRichardSnape Yeah, matrix exponentiation is what the big boys use for this sort of stuff. :) For plain Fibonacci numbers (and other such quadratic quantities), I prefer the so-called Binet's formula using an arbitrary precision library like mpmath.
The weirdest Fibonacci calculator I've ever "coded " is a pattern in Conway's Game of Life. It generates Fibonacci numbers as a stream of gliders. IIRC it's limited to 80 bits, but it's not that hard to expand the pattern to handle larger numbers.
AFAIK, I was the first person to make a Fibonacci generator in Life, but a little while later Adam Gouger, aka Calcyman, created one that's not limited in bit length. However, his version is many thousands (or maybe millions) of times slower than mine.
@JRichardSnape Doing arithmetic in Life is a bit tedious, but it's fun - it's like designing a custom chip to perform an algorithm.
bah - I wish you hadn't pointed me to FRACTRAN. I do believe that featured in another Euler problem I had a go at - probably not credited in order not to make it to easy.
Yeah.. when you need IDEs to color every parenthesis pair in a unique color, then you should probably think about introducing other syntax elements in your languages…
Haskell, I guess, is readable if you 'get' the fundamental concept of it. Without that, it's impenetrable IMO. I had a little dabble with it a while back - it seems I should do more, all the mathsy big boys are at it.
That's the bit. Monads. That's where I kind of half got it and didn't go much further. I should also have another go at it.
I found tryhaskell.org quite useful. Anyhow. Back to Python, or some RO or other is going to thunder This is not a Haskell room, y'know. Stop distracting me, other ROs ;)
I was just looking at the FRACTRAN interpreter that I wrote in Python 5 years ago. I suppose I ought to update it: it uses eval() on the command-line input so that it can accept expressions in the seed number and the fractions.