well, of course, you'd also need me to hook up the input manually
I mean, LibRocket is pretty close
I dislike HTML and JS, but it'd be usable, if only it didn't have an irritating global to render interface, so when I come to change rendering interfaces at run-time, it'd die :(
thing is, I would, and I could, and probably should, just write my own controls, but going above Button and Label is so mind-numbing, and I have no idea about how to make a layout
It's the fastest way to prototype something, I think. Having a rendering engine doing all the math for you lets you work on what you're working on instead of creating containers or layout strategy or intensely boring things like that.
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Hydrofluoric acid (HF) is a solution of hydrogen fluoride in water. It is a valued source of fluorine and is the precursor to numerous pharmaceuticals such as fluoxetine (Prozac) and diverse materials such as PTFE (Teflon).
Hydrofluoric acid is a highly corrosive acid, capable of dissolving many materials, especially oxides. Its ability to dissolve glass has been known since the 17th century, even before hydrofluoric acid had been prepared in large quantities by Carl Wilhelm Scheele in 1771. Because of its high reactivity toward glass and ...
In automata theory, a pushdown automaton (PDA) is a variation of finite automaton that can make use of a stack containing data.
Operation
Pushdown automata differ from finite state machines in two ways:
# They can use the top of the stack to decide which transition to take.
# They can manipulate the stack as part of performing a transition.
Pushdown automata choose a transition by indexing a table by input signal, current state, and the symbol at the top of the stack. This means that those three parameters completely determine the transition path that is chosen. Finite state machines...
This is a listing of common symbols found within all branches of mathematics. Symbols are used in maths to express a formula or to replace a constant. 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
|-
! styl...
I don't know anywhere to help you learn about it
and even if I did I have no idea how much mathematical background you have.
Sorry. :-/
But the above link should at least help you identify the many symbols you will see when you research the topic
terseness is only useful if a), the amount of data is very large to begin with, which is not true in this case, and b), the other person has any reason whatsoever to understand your compression algorithm, and even then, it would c) be applied by computer, not by hand
In physics, the Navier–Stokes equations, named after Claude-Louis Navier and George Gabriel Stokes, describe the motion of fluid substances. These equations arise from applying Newton's second law to fluid motion, together with the assumption that the fluid stress is the sum of a diffusing viscous term (proportional to the gradient of velocity), plus a pressure term.
The equations are useful because they describe the physics of many things of academic and economic interest. They may be used to model the weather, ocean currents, water flow in a pipe and air flow around a wing. The Navier–S...
sorry to interrupt, but does anyone else think this snippet of ruby is just awesome? `Stack = Array.extract([ :last, :push, :pop, :size, :clear, :inspect, :to_s ])`
so because Ruby is pointlessly dynamically type orgasming, I will simply write in my documentation that any methods except those listed are internal implementation details and calling them yourself is UB.
@CatPlusPlus I also believe that std::stack is equally useless, although arguably, you can change the underlying container of std::stack for fun and afaik, that code can't
In actual usage, you can retarget std::stack to another underlying container by changing the template parameter at the point you declare the std::stack object.