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01:34
doop
 
2 hours later…
03:05
sleepy time...
 
4 hours later…
07:17
good morning
 
7 hours later…
14:32
@Pizzalord good... morning!
@Code-Apprentice hi!
14:50
@AaronHall good morning
Time to head to work
@Code-Apprentice work work work...
i am almost going back home
I hope you get some Haskell in today!
@Pizzalord Gonna write some Haskell when you get home then?
i should write some more haskell have not done more then a bit of tutorials
i have some math that i do not understand but needs to be solved and i am going to haskell it
@AaronHall
15:00
@Pizzalord that sounds like a really good idea.
tell us about the math
well, it somethin like
for x = 1 y = 1
for x = 20 y= 5
for x = 200 y = 25
for x = 2000 y = 45
how do i calculated y for every value of x up to 2000
@AaronHall i need this to write a bot for a game so do not feel forced to solve it
You want to sort-of interpolate with a steady curve, I suppose?
sec let me get some moredata
@Pizzalord looks like it's proportional to a square root relationship. Gotta focus on my day job now though... Good luck!
maybe log...
15:17
@AaronHall can't get the data now but i can in 2hours form now
post your work here, that's fine by me... :)
15:33
@AaronHall yes, that is what I do most days. Not all of us have the luxury of a professorship
i am an intern i have all the problems without the good salary :)
are you interpolating values given only specific points on the curve?
i am not sure if there is a curve
but i can get more data in a few hours
it probaly something like y = x**f where f increase every ? steps of x
two points or more points always define at least one curve
15:47
You could... run a Box-Cox transformation analysis, which could tell you what the relationship is...
i know the first 5 points are something like
x y
1 = 1
2 = 1
3 = 1
4 = 1
5 = 2

@AaronHall what is a Box-Cox?
Google it, my friend. :)
do the analysis, get the output, I'll help you understand what the output means...
It's basically a single number.
if > 0 that's the power relationship
well x is the level of my character and y the dead time :)
if ~ 0 - it's a log relationship
x is always 1 or more
15:49
oh, well it's probably log then...
(special case it for x=1)
or add 1
y = ln(x) + 1 maybe...
and then just take the floor...
y = floor(ln(x) + 1)
when i am home i will get some good x and y points so we can decide how i can calculate it :)
If it's just for a game, you might want to come up with your own hard-coded tables...
@AaronHall i was going to do that but then i decide i want to calculate things with haskell, and i takes long to level so i wrote a python bot to do that for me but for it to work better i need to have proper dead times
@AaronHall I think you and pizzalord are talking about two different values
@Pizzalord What is "dead time"?
the time my hero is dead
16:04
And there is a "proper" dead time greater than zero?
When I play video games, I typically want to minimize the number of times I die.
well i woudl probaly die once every 30 minutes because my bot gets killed by the anti afk system :)
when that happens it needs to know how it the hero is dead
but going home now
info in eta an hour]
@Pizzalord I see. So is the "dead time" the 30 minute timer?
or is there a certain amount of time you have to wait after the system kills your character before you get rezzed?
@AaronHall Salutations. Hello everyone.
16:19
@EricFulmer what's up?
Working and trying to build Node from source -- Haskell's cool and still on my radar, but I'm bullish on Python, Rust, and JS as the best languages to know careerwise
There's also Python and JS rooms here... but I'll let finding them be an exercise for the reader...
@AaronHall That's too hard. I may build GHC from source later.
that's sounds cool
17:26
@Code-Apprentice no every 30 minutes i die for x seconds where x is based on the level of my hero
@Pizzalord that's what I was asking ;-)
now it all makes sense!
@EricFulmer hi. I'm not really here. Just peeked in between some coding.
@AaronHall I have not yet done anything with Rust. It is on my radar, but if I decide to learn it, I will have to set aside like an entire weekend to get started.
or better yet...a consistent time every weekend for like an hour or two
 
2 hours later…
19:51
@Code-Apprentice That's the way to do it. Start with the book, IMO: doc.rust-lang.org/book/second-edition
2
20:09
@EricFulmer I need to sit down and prioritize all the projects and tech stuff I want to work on and learn. Then I also need to set aside the time to work on it a little at a time.
 
3 hours later…
23:18
stars the good stuff
@Pizzalord give us data! :)
23:34
Assume constant fit

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