(smarty pants response to my own smarty pants response: turing completeness guarantees a baseline level of computing power, but the language is free to go above and beyond that. For example, KevinScript is Turing complete, and it can whistle the Star Spangled Banner, which most other languages can't do)
test.c:1:20: warning: extra tokens at end of #include directive [enabled by default]
#include <stdio.h> int main() { printf("hello world"); }
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/4.8/../../../x86_64-linux-gnu/crt1.o: In function `_start':
(.text+0x20): undefined reference to `main'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
I'm a fan of raytracer as a pet project because it's a nice incremental thing with easily observable results. But you need someone to walk you through the math.
this question has been asked a zillion times. Is there an official mathematical term for this? Applying a linear transformation to each of A,B,C, so they become X,Y,Z, for known values of A, B, C, X, and Z?
@rvraghav93 Half-remembered guess: interpolation gives an exact curve passing through all known data points. Regression gives an approximate curve which passes near as many data points as is reasonable.
interpolation is like you perfectly can fit the data, with regrssion you have some statistical measurements with errors that you cannot really fit perfectly
@MarcusStuhr I suppose, but I was really hoping for something that had a Wikipedia page I could link to, so I wouldn't need to spend more than two words explaining what the OP should do.
thus as wikipedia says: "[extrapolation] is similar to interpolation, which produces estimates between known observations, but extrapolation is subject to greater uncertainty and a higher risk of producing meaningless results."
@inspectorG4dget ahhh yes... I'm glad that worm hole manipulation, spacial folding, trans-dimensional travel and jump gates are still something you're not aware of
ER bridges are awesome, yes. But we are yet to create a stable one. Therefore, expedited transuniversal communications are probably still limited by the speed of light
interestingly, I was having this conversation with a friend not long ago - if you could control the DNS that your target connects to, then you basically control their view of the internet
According to Paul Graham, case analysis by means of conditional statements was introduced by Lisp. Before Lisp, how did the programming languages then deal with case analysis
@RonaldMunodawafa Maybe they're making the distinction between conditionals and branching. For example, Assembly's JNZ instruction can jump to different points in the code depending on the contents of the register, but there's no formal "if then" structure
So I guess the practical consequence is, in lisp you could write the "then" block directly inside the routine without having to mess around with gotos or jumps.
There is so much wrong with this question: made login available over crossdomain, uses md5 to hash passwords, and obviously didn't read the docs on how to use flask-login: stackoverflow.com/questions/27110737/…
oh, is also using the development server in threaded mode and treating it like a production server
I have always held the belief that a lot of what makes modern languages "modern" was in Lisp way before we approached the modern times and were deemed complicated
@davidism Perhaps you could tell him all these things. Perhaps he would be grateful. (Or perhaps he'll get defensive and tell you "it works fine for me")
This guy asked two questions in one post, and someone already answered the easy question. I could answer the harder one, but I don't really feel like sharing the glory 50-50 with him.
Alphas aren't tested well enough, if you ask me. What if I build from source and bees fly out of my computer's exhaust port, and sting me all over? What then?