@davidism Yeah, I can see how the association can be made. I have a few suggestions for you too, if you like this style. Check out Flunk. If you are in to something more on the electronic side, check out Lamb.
I actually read an article about it this week here: http://qz.com/847181/chinese-sci-fi-the-three-body-problem-and-invisible-planets-with-translator-ken-liu/
I like how the beginning starts with the character meeting "some British chap named Al" at Princeton.
The way the author doesn't immediately state that this is Alan Turing was great since I know quite a bit about him already. Both his work and as a person.
I have Snow Crash on my back log, too. Just recently put together that it is the same author.
It's a confident author that can spend 10+ pages having two people cycle down a lane with a broken bike, explaining in mathematics that the spokes on the broken bike act in a certain way, before (right at the end) saying "Oh btw, that's how the Enigma machine worked..."
I only read the part where he mentions Turing Machines and the main character figures the rest out. I think the author was hinting at a more extensive conversation than was actually explicitly written.
and the jump from WWII time period to "modern" day (1990s I assume) in the next chapter was a little bit jarring
I read Dan Brown's tech thriller, Digital Fortress. The puzzles in it were kind of interesting. The tech seemed dumbed down too much, though. To the point where it was incorrect in places.
@Code-Apprentice my first introduction to dan brown was ~10 years ago when Angels and Demons was introduced to me as "the worst book in the history of humankind"
half of the plot is the hunt for an impossible antimatter container containing an impossible amount of antimatter, located in a place where it is "seemingly impossible to find"...
in digital fortress, there is this impossible encryption...
and all the time the author keeps talking like he's the expert of all knowledge
for key, value in enumerate(table):
if key != 0:
val[table[key][5]] = (float(table[key][6]), float(table[key][7]))
Can you this be done with lambda in dict comprehension?
@idjaw I read your question earlier on mobile, dunno if you got an answer: gold stars on the aoc leaderboard are for solving the challenges. Each day there are 2 parts, each gets you a gold star.
@AndrasDeak, but I'm not sure that'll work, because the dict is accessing the qstat output of the function, right? So I need to somehow have a preset mem1, mem2, mem3, and mem4, and set those functions...?