Would love to join product based company. But i am not getting opportunities. I will have to expand my contacts and apply via employee referrals. They are very few opportunities if you apply from outside.
@MehdiB. did you learn any new math stuff for machine learning
Does it make any sense to create different exception handler for different API calls?
e.g., If I am trying to authenticate user, I will just show him a toast when error occurs. But, for listing-api, I need to show that "this failed, try again". This is only possible with different exceptionHandlers, right?
which happens in 0.1% of cases, in companies that do AI research
I actually dislike people who discourage people from getting into a field by saying it's hard, "it's hard, but we managed to learn it, because we're super smart and the rest of you are not"
@rupinderjeet why do you need exception handlers. can you not use normal try catch blocks and depending on the catch block you can display the message?
wrapping all api-calls with trycatch is good, right?
i dont know.
I was trying to have a default exceptionHandler in my BaseViewModel. And, when I would need to do something different for errors, I would just provide an exceptionHandler while using launch block.
Or I can have the defaultExceptionHandler call a method. And, then, override this method for special error cases.
I will try. I usually read docs, and they don't even say that trycatch is a valid candidate unless it is a CancellationException. kotlinlang.org/docs/reference/coroutines/…
And, I was thinking why wouldn't they suggest trycatch as their primary excpetion handling method in a doc about exception-handling.
these things are weird to me. I read something else, and when it comes to implementation, I have to do something else.
I just read about strictfp (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strictfp) and the fact that floating / double point operations may yield different results on different CPUs since Java 1.2.
Now I wonder if the same is true for Float.valueOf method?
I cannot find any source to this. The javadoc for valu...
I just saw discussion about ML. Let me summarize the things: ML involves lot of Math but majority of ML Engineer don't use much of Math. There're Frameworks/Libraries like TensorFlow and others to save you. You just need to know basic of Algebra and Statistics.
The difference between Programming we do and ML is: In Software development we're given input and we write algorithm/program to produce output. But in ML input and output is given and job of code is to find the algorithm that can convert input to output.
Point is not to limit the fields just to explain the difference between both
I means that Programming job is to write program that solves problem. And in ML Model is trained against input and outputs to learn so that it can solve future problems. Hopefully now above definition make sense.
1 reason could simply be performances, instead of having something computationally intensive and heavy to test if A = B, I could have a heuristic program that gives me in 30ms the probabily of A being equal to B and I settle on a threshold
@TaseerAhmad Random forest classification and affinity propagation clustering, finally managed to have everything working now, now... the optimisation part
there are only 2 problems in supervised learning: regression (predict continuous values such as the price of a property) and classification (predict a class, could be binary: 0 and 1 such as "human / not human" or multi class: such as "dog, cat, squirrel, bear, other"
I'd like to speak to the architect in charge of this project. Having not enough blood to cover all base functions simultaneously seems like a design-flaw
The hard part with AI is that they're switching to a computer test for the first time, so you either get it exactly right or get nothing, no more partial marks
Crypto is a formal math course, so just more effort
Actually trying to fill out this "spotlight profile" thing for our newsletter I was nominated for. It sounded good at first but half the questions is about how our company is doing in our "cultural goals" or whatever. Which is not the place for that sort of thing because I can't be brutally honest since it's in a company-wide newsletter
I work for a power company in Oregon. We have a 1Mvdc line to southern California that's been there since (I believe) the 60's. I asked about how fast electrons travel and was told that the first electrons pushed into the wire in the 60's aren't in California yet. I know that' super inexact but it made an impact. — Bill Kyesterday