@Alchimyst Mate - program whatever inspires/interests you!
If you want to code stuff that might be useful to others, check out all of the projects on GitHub to see if there's anything you'd like to contribute to.
@PM2Ring I always assume that you can't edit deleted posts. Maybe it's just modlocked posts? Anyway, if vandalism&deletion happens a lot, consider modflagging
though the problem is usually "asker deleting post with answer" or "answerer deleting-vandalizing answer" (for which BalusC got suspended back in the day)
@davidism: I looked at it earlier but figured I should add an "even though the error message is slightly different, the underlying problem and solution is the same" comment and was too lazy.
@DSM I mean, it really doesn't matter. I find it a tiny bit more readable because it tells me that I don't have to figure out what the variable is being used for.
@MartijnPieters For len(X) == 2 , I think you can hit 100% of the solutions. But as the size grows, I think you hit less and less of them. And in the limit to infinity I would conjecture that you are reaching 0% of them.
When there are more possibilities to swap things around, the extra condition implicit in yr algorithm is more and more restrictive. Anyway , that's a fascinating question .. so simple to state, but quite deep to solve
(and by solve I mean having a uniform distribution on the output) I wonder if it has been tackled already by mathematicians or theoretical computer scientists
@wim: that was an interesting question. I got distracted into Life Stuff(tm) so didn't have time to work out what the best way to try to maintain uniformity was.
@PM2Ring: the OP described what he wanted as "twice", which I think is natural-- he's counting the number of times he wants each element to show up. It seems weird to choose an enumeration over that count (even if it's the canonical one) and use that instead.
Looks like I'll feel the same way about that as I did about the last one: if our heroine makes no mistakes which affect the plot, she's not a character. If she does, and overcomes them, then we might have a story.
@PM2Ring Hi PM2 - I had a look. Looks OK I think - although I'm not an expert in limits stuff. To illustrate the point, I'd avoid "true for any positive, finite u and v" followed immediately be "set u to 0". You can illustrate the point with u=2 and v=x+2, I think. But you need to be careful that your numbers keep both u and v +ve, finite with x=-1. That probably means (as you've already alluded further up) there's a way to show it without the positive, finite constraint.
N.B. It's a tough task in a way, because the OP is asking for intuitive, rather than formal proof. But you'll be pulled up on the informality almost inevitably with this kind of problem, because it can invalidate the analysis.
I don't really understand the homework dump people. Even when I was just starting out... well, I was going to say when I first started on SO I didn't ask terrible homework questions, but now that I go back and look, I'd been asking questions quite a bit for work, heh.
So I learned how to (usually) ask questions that don't suck [though apparently I still can't ask a decent Java question] before I started asking homework-related questions
My reasoning behind it is that the homework dump folks who come here to put their homework up are the students that left it to the last minute and don't really care all that much to know the material
Not saying I never left things to the last minute....but I left it enough to the last minute that I gave myself the time to actually learn what I was doing so I can do the assignment on my own or in our study group.
I think some of them really do just misunderstand SO and think we provide tutorial services. A fair number say things like "this is homework, so I just need hints, don't code anything for me".
And that OP said they made a good start and just wanted help on a couple of things, but they totally failed to post any code to prove they weren't BSing.
Here's a good example - I literally have no clue what assignment that was for. I know it was something to do with school, but I couldn't tell you what class or what I was doing it for for the life of me. As opposed to these terrible homework questions that are just copying out what was written in their homework assignment, sometimes with no explanation -_-
Just-so explanation: homework dumpers have low impulse control and consequently submit half-baked posts before fully thinking about the problem. This is typical because STEM types are brought up fixing their parents' computer by trying every button in every menu. When something's broken, hesitation only delays the ultimate solution.
@Kevin Turns out that's actually a good trait in developers. Rather than becoming hyperfocused, as most do, we take a step back and start casting around for other solutions to the problem.
Though obviously they take it to the other extreme where they don't bother applying critical thought, yet.
I would be really interested to see the # of SO questions I've abandoned
I bet it's at least 1/4 of my total actually asked questions
most of the time just writing out the question and creating an MCVE exposes my stupid typo
This attitude is unique to tech because, unlike meatspace-based crafts, it's hard to permanently screw up a computer. 99% of the things you can do to it will revert when you reboot. Likewise, 1 rep users see that they can always make a new account if their current attempt fails.
Oh and also, there's another place where I can optimize the speed - it's in the dropout layer
I'm currently matrix multiplying by the full weight, and then multiplying by a binary mask and then passing that through
according to this research paper: arxiv.org/pdf/1502.02478v1.pdf , they suggest just randomly dropping rows of the weight and matrix multiplying by that :oo
Fiction chat. This week I've been reading Mother of Learning. It's a Groundhog's Day-esque story taking place in a generic fantasy world. It's noteworthy to me because I've been able to stick with it despite the author introducing like fifty characters over the course of the story.
Maybe it's because the characters are pretty well compartmentalized. The MC has friends in the main city, and he has friends in the northern forest town, but they never interact because he can only be in one place during any particular time-reset-window-thing.
In case of udp when a server is sending packets to client's public address and the client is using s.recvfrom(). Does it work? It is connection-less how the router port-forward?
I'm seven chapters away from reading everything that's been written, and have only just discovered that the story isn't finished. Based on chapter numbers, I'm halfway through the second "arc", of which three are planned.
Got an issue with Django Pagination - for some reason it's always throwing PageNotAnInteger even though the page variable I'm passing in is correct, I've printed everything and not seeing anything that would cause the Exception. Any ideas?