How does different style of formulae change the results? Is that a bug in mul_interval()/ add_interval/ div_interval in my code? par1 and par2 are as shown below:
Q6 in this link realise that two algebraically equivalent expr are giving different results: Lem complains that Alyssa's program gives different answers for the two ways of computing. This is a serious complaint.. am trying to know, why?
@overexchange Don's electronic engineering hat You've got a bit confused about what that assigment is trying to get you to do. It doesn't want you to put the intervals into the direct formulae, so when Antti is telling you your code is wrong, because he didn't have context, he's assuming you want an exact result - in which case you shouldn't be passing in a tuple (e.g. r1 = (1,2))
@overexchange No. When I say exact, I don't mean same. By exact, I mean would return one value - this is common in most calculations for parallel resistors etc - we assume that the values of resistors are exactly known. You are working with inexact values, or intervals (as I'm sure you know). Without the context of the assignment that wasn't clear - interval(1,2) is not common terminology
Now. You wouldn't expect to get the same result, because the assignment is telling you to look for why you don't get the same
The good news is - I think your results are right. The bad news is - you need to figure out why
i.e. I would expect the bounded interval on the resistance values you gave to give [0.5,2] using method par1, given all the preceding questions / code and for par2 to give you 0.75 to 1.333
What it's trying to get you to look at is nasty problems when doing arithmetic with intervals instead of exact values - your python code is (probably, without seeing answers to previous questions) right.
I've had little luck with teh internets so I'll try it here. My script is a simulation that produces an error (or not) somewhere down the line. It's not feasible to step through the code each iteration at a time so I'd like to examine what happens in post mortem mode. Unfortunately I couldn't find a way to run the script like so: python -m pdb myscript.py in PyCharm. Any tips, or am I doomed to running it via a terminal?
Last thought - as this is veering off into engineering, rather than python. Try the hint - set the values of the intervals to high values with small % differences - e.g. r1 = interval(99,101) r2 = interval(99.101)
@JRichardSnape For your question: you need to figure out why I strongly feel this is due to IEEE floating point format where we are losing the precision. I feel par1 ahould give more accurate output than par2
@overexchange I can't figure out why you strongly feel that, as that is in your head. I know plenty about floating point precision. I have no question - you are the one looking for help. If you feel that's the problem - put loads of print statements in your helper functions to convince yourself what's happening. Set r1 and r2 the same - then you know in the exact case, the value should be exactly half of the middle value. You need to think about why the intervals are different.
All I'm telling you is that the python is right - your problem is an engineering maths one
By the way Fizzy - I saw that link that you posted (I think to Kevin) last night - Time clustering paper looks interesting - revives an old interest of mine from too-many-years-ago masters dissertation
@AnttiHaapala Maybe someone objected to your bold must not. They don't like being told what to do, those RasPi hackers... I note the problem no longer persists
Q8. Write a function quadratic that returns the interval of all values f(t) such that t is in the argument interval x and f(t) is a quadratic function:
ahhh, I see. A little early for the deep freeze for me, I think (hope). I did note yesterday that I started programming 25 years ago, though. I'm going to claim a young start, but still...
I remember doing first html files in primary school. I still remember having problems because Internet Explorer wouldn't recognize my html file, only to realize it was actually a .txt. Damn you hidden extensions in windows (still a problem today, ~20 years later).
"html in primary school" The internet didn't exist when I was in primary school. HTML was specified the year I left. Now that's scary. I remember the school had one physical turtle which you could connect to a BBC B and drive around using simple logo. The teacher could never get it to work and would hardly ever let me have a go :(
I remember that too. We used Lego Logo at the science/engineering camp I went to.
Although I had some trouble wrapping my head around programming at that age. It wasn't until my friend taught me TI Basic in high school that I understood the basic idea.
We would work on stuff like that, but always end up playing Warcraft 1 or some other games I don't remember any more. :)
My first "true" programming experience was in college in early 20s... Had I started earlier, I would be much more proficient in some other languages. Too bad I never had money for programming books.
@AnttiHaapala Fair enough - I lazily didn't check the edit history. Was just musing (procrastinating) You can probably guess this, but for the avoidance of doubt - I wasn't the downvote, so wasn't explaining myself :D
@RomanLuštrik My first "True" programming experience was an RPG my friend and I wrote on our TI-89s in high school. But I didn't receive any formal education in it into undergrad at 19 when we learned Matlab as part of our signal processing course, and two years later when we learned C in a "C for engineers" course.
I had a TI-81. The recommended one at school was a Casio. I laughed at them. Always like to be different - I attribute my early 2000's leanings towards Linux that way.
Although - given the number of questions I see that mysteriously involve the characters 'A','C','T' and 'G', I suspect there is some basic stuff being done...
"Calculus capabilities were better" and there is where I triumphed
Can you please tell as to what is the specific answer you are looking for? For the question Anyone else get UCBLogo to work as described in the manual?, the answer is yes — Bhargav RaoMar 22 at 12:13
Hi everyone, I am having problem. Are these two statements same because they aren't giving me same results, I mean output is same but problem occurs when i use these in code. table = [ [0] * (capacity+1)] * (length+1)
table = [[0 for i in range(capacity + 1)] for j in range(length + 1)]
This makes me sad. link. The OP is just totally unaware of what he is trying to do, he doesn't even know how to ask properly.
People don't take the minimum time to read the tutorial before coming online to ask for help.
I would rather stay away from dictionaries right now and just program it normally on python first, I might check it out later but for now I am more interested in programing it manually on python first. Thanks anyways :) — NecropolisMcServer5 mins ago
Dictionaries are absolutely part of "normal" python, and their basic usage is not very different from lists. You really should consider using them. — leeladam4 mins ago
It seems like a lot of new users get their very first experience with file manipulation when they want to make a persistent high score table for their game.
Yes, and again, they don't take the minimum time to learn on their own before coming online for help. The easy access of the internet is it's own downfall :P
Leading to a mess of a question like "I want a high score list that can contain three users, and each user has up to ten high scores, with higher ones pushing lower ones down the list, and I'd like each user to be sorted based on average score..." when they really should start with "how do I get the lines of a file into a list?"
Or are you saying that the code is deceptive because it only produces the high score for Starplayer, even if Starplayer doesn't have the highest combined score?
Ok, I agree with that.
I have pointed this out to the guy, as there's a chance that he simply misunderstood the requirements.
Based on his previous comments, though, I expect him to say something like "changing this code so it finds the cumulative score of each user, and then chooses the maximum among them, is left as an exercise to the reader"
Saying "Actual laugh in the office" makes me think about the mongodb webscale videos. I was literally creased up at those. I almost fell off the chair.
Damn, this question was so nice and clean that I bookmarked it as a canonical Q, but now the OP is back with some "one more thing..." BS involving menu bars or I don't even know what
@corvid <grumble> Their website renders really badly on my phone - which starts them at -10 in my book. Specially when it's obviously a Jekyll site and there's a ton of resources how to specifically make them responsive </grumble>
user559633
@corvid if it does what it says, it's a cool replacement for firebase
When I write a statistical function that forbids empty input, what exception should I raise when the function is call with empty input? (Btw, is raising an exception the way to go?)