@DeadMG Well, I'll have to just disagree, because I'm fairly certain the span you can go without generalizing is about the span you can stay by yourself without going crazy.
@Xaade I'm quite an introvert and can go an extremely long time by myself without going crazy. There are hermits who spend decades without other human contact.
@Xaade To an extent I agree -- we seem to be hardwired to (attempt to) recognize patterns, even to the point of finding them where they don't exist. It is often (always?) difficult to draw a hard line between recognizing patterns (generally good) and drawing conclusions that are more general than the data really supports (generally bad).
@JerryCoffin Like I said. Finding potential patterns is a good thing even if the pattern is bad, as long as you recognize the risk.
You say, this is a generalization. You use it to see if the condition exists. You become aware of the probability.
For example. If I invited foreign diplomats, I may include food from their country on my menu. But what if, gasp the leader I invited actually prefers hotdogs. We shrug and eat the menu anyway.
If I had a female friend, and didn't know what to get her, I may try getting her a gift card to Dillard's or such. But what if gasp she's a gamer.
@Xaade I'd have a bit of a hard time buying the notion of knowing somebody well enough to consider them a "friend", but still having no clue about what sort of present she'd prefer.
It's just when someone feels "disenfranchised" that there becomes this massive thin sleeved emotional chaos reminiscent of preschool children worried about cooties.
If people can be so mature to avoid generalizations, why can't they be so mature to ignore them.
The problem is that people have forgotten what racism and sexism and hate really are. You can't so much as blink an eye in the sunlight without being labeled as committing some form of -ism.
I can't speak on jalf's or anyone else's behalf, but I was really caught off guard by the tone of the discussion. I know that the 'tone' of a written communication is a nebulous concept, but that was still reason enough for me to back off. I don't understand why some were so harsh in their tone (or, if it come to that, why that's how I perceived the situation). I didn't have a problem with the ideas (even those I don't want to have any business with) per se.
Honestly, I don't believe that I know any female who would have taken offense at the suggestion that confidence and communication are attributes prized by women. But to each their own, I will drop the subject.
@Rob Apparently, there's some woman out there that prefers idiotic speechless men, and she was offended that you generalized against her. She'll be rioting outside the mall tomorrow stealing an HDTV to make you pay for your comment.
Does it help if I say that in my culture there are no "Harhar political correctness gone wrong" jokes? The only ones that complain about an overly politically correct society usually are in the right-wing fringe...
@TonyTheTiger Hopefully the "and then" expands to "I read part of the book, wrote some code, read more, etc." not "read the whole book before I tried to write any code."
I truly believe I learn C++ by osmosis in this chat room. We're always off topic, but for some odd reason I've learned faster here than with any online self-learning website.
Great. Now I can't get rid of this. There's no conflict, so I can't invoke conflict resolution to resolve it. But I can't commit because there's a conflict.
@DeadMG No, if I were going for certainty, I could do a much better job than that! If nothing else, decades on Usenet teaches one to be exceedingly good at insulting people.
@Rob Only if you include force-jump rule of official checkers. I find that rule so annoying. What's the purpose of strategy if you defeat strategy. Might as well play Tic-Tac-Toe.
"At a chess tournament in London, 1982, one of the players complained to the tournament director that his opponent was rocking the table. After that was worked out, the same player complained that his opponent was making noises and threatened him with violence. The player then demanded his entry fee be refunded...."
"The TD said no, so the player picked up someone’s chess clock and ran away. Later, the organizers received a call that if he didn’t get his entry fee back, they would never see their clock again."
The Monty Hall problem is a probability puzzle loosely based on the American television game show Let's Make a Deal and named after the show's original host, Monty Hall. The problem, also called the Monty Hall paradox, is a veridical paradox because the result appears odd but is demonstrably true. The Monty Hall problem, in its usual interpretation, is mathematically equivalent to the earlier Three Prisoners problem, and both bear some similarity to the much older Bertrand's box paradox.
The problem was originally posed in a letter by Steve Selvin to the American Statistician in 1975. ...
The Singleton pattern is a fully paid up member of the GoF Patterns Book but lately seems rather orphaned by the developer world. I still use quite a lot of singletons, especially for Factory classes, and while you have to be a bit careful about multithreading issues (like any class actually), I ...
@Rob In fact, many people with a lot of mathematical background will argue that it's 50%. The problem is pretty simple: many people try to treat independent chances as dependent (when I flipped the coin, it came up heads the last 5 times -- there must be a better than 50% chance that it'll come up tails this time). People (especially with mathematical background) constantly have to argue against this.
Because of that, they assume that the choices are independent in this case as well -- but they're really not -- and the dependency makes all the difference in the world.
@JerryCoffin Yea, it took me a while to figure that out the first time I was presented with it. And of course I made the same mistake before I was presented the solution.
@Rob Maria Vos Savant also (rather more famously) got it wrong. Then when she published the correction, she got raked over the coals by quite a few mathematicians and statisiticians who got it wrong.
@Rob Her article was in a magazine targeted toward a more general audience, IIRC -- but one with a rather high-brow reputation, so apparently quite a few well-educated people read her column.
The ton is a unit of measure. It has a long history and has acquired a number of meanings and uses over the years. It is used principally as a unit of weight, and as a unit of volume. It can also be used as a measure of energy, for truck classification, or as a colloquial term.
It is derived from the tun, the term applied to a barrel of the largest size. This could contain a volume between 210 and 256 gallons (800 to 1000 L), which could weigh around 2,000 pounds (900 kg) and occupy some 60 cubic feet (1700 L) of space.
In the United Kingdom, the ton is a unit of measure which, ...
@TonyTheTiger In the area where "megaton" is usually used, a megaton only actually weighs about a ton (I.e., it takes about a ton of Plutonium to produce a megaton explosion).
@TonyTheTiger Actually, thinking a bit more, that would only be true for a pure fission device, and based on uranium, not plutonium. A megaton-level device normally has a much smaller fission device, with some hydrogen and (if memory serves) some deuterium (or maybe tritium?) nearby. The fission device compresses the hydrogen enough to start a fusion reaction, which releases the much larger amount of energy.
when talking about tonnage of nuclear bombs, then it's not about the weight ofthe bomb- it's the equivalent weight in TNT to produce the same destructive power
@RMartinhoFernandes Right -- but most of it is "normal" hydrogen, with only a much smaller amount of deuterium needed (and, IIRC, it's normally present in the form of "heavy" water).
I have created a DLL using Visual C++ 2008 that creates to external functions. Using python I have created two separate executable functions to run these. When using powerbuilder to call the function, the first executable runs fine. The second executable results in a runtime error: error calli...
Have two threads that need to access same global C structure. I need to copy values from the function into the following structure
typedef struct {
struct queue ** queue1;
} my_struct;
my_struct my_queue;
my_func(struct queue ** queue2)
{
my_queue.queue1 = queue2;
*(my_queue.queue1...
> I did not make it far in this game, because one day I will die, and I refuse to go out thinking I spent one second more than I had to playing Bodycount.
This is a listing of common symbols found within all branches of mathematics. Each symbol is listed in both HTML, which depends on appropriate fonts being installed, and in , as an image.
:
Symbols
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:auto; width:100%; border:1px"
! rowspan="3" style="font-size:130%;" |Symbolin HTML
! rowspan="3" style="font-size:130%;" |Symbolin
! style="text-align:left;" |Name
! rowspan="3" style="font-size:130%;" |Explanation
! rowspan="3" style="font-size:130%;" |Examples
|-
! Read as
|-
! style="text-align:right;" |Category
{{row of table of mathemati...
for each(i in Z)
for each(j in Z)
assert(!contains(max(i, j), Z);
assert(!(max(i, j) == i || max(i, j) == j));
assert(!(i <= max(i, j)));
assert(!(j <= max(i, j)))
end
end
for each(i in Z)
for each(j in Z)
assert(contains(max(i, j), Z);
assert((max(i, j) == i || max(i, j) == j));
assert(i <= max(i, j));
assert(j <= max(i, j));
end
end
@LucDanton That's (kind of) the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis -- which is generally considered discredited/disproven. The reality is that people seem quite able to express almost any idea in almost any language.
@JerryCoffin No, the hypothesis is that if you are a speaker of the language, your ideas are affected by the language. I only stated something about the expression of ideas -- even if you can't express something in a language, you might still be thinking of the idea; just not in terms of that language.
I remember when I wrote something that could count from 1 to 10 or from 10 to 1 according to earlier input. SO MUCH POWER. Also those weird Pascal downto loops.
@JerryCoffin Also I didn't claim that some ideas can't be expressed at all. But when transposed to the language, they might be described as 'crippled ideas'.
e.g. you have true => A ^ B. If B is true then A is also true. If B is false then there is an error, so you have to come back in whatever your algorithm is and change things.
@LucDanton Let me put my point rather differently: I think a close analog of Turing completeness can be applied outside of pure programming languages, so languages basically fall into two classes: those that can express absolutely anything, and those so crippled they can express virtually nothing at all.
Also if A is true then B is true. It's much more powerful than an assertion.
This is very useful in combinatory logic because if a predicate is erroneous, you can use backtracking to come back to where you made a supposition. That way, use can use deducing logic as well as what could be called brute-forcing.
But you don't have to use one or the other. You just enter a set of truths, and the engine works it out by itself.