and now I'm trying to figure out both simplex noise, and whether it's ok that I'm trying to figure it out (I never mentioned I could have known how to use it, so it wasn't a presumed skill, but neither did they ask me to use it, I just think it's a good solution to a problem they asked me to solve)
@Francisco oh no, I meant using something simpler that I knew how to do, but with a quality cost
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any good articles on simplex noise? Can't find anything about the basic algorithm so I can implement it myself rather than transpile random java code :/
@ssube you always have the best graphical algorithm guides ^
With this bar chart, I want the 0% to have a bar showing so a user can highlight them.
I thought pad did that, but doesn't work because the numbers are so low.
Here is my code:
plot1 = $.jqplot('chart1', [s1], {
title: '@ViewBag.Title',
// Only anim...
thanks anyway. I think I got some nice sources actually. Thought the academic who wrote it just copied everything from wikipedia at first sight, but now it looks more like wikipedia just tried to simplify his/her paper
anyone have any experience with university application personal statements? I guess it's the same mindset as employers, but with different contexts and goals?
Arguing with a friend about gulp vs grunt and we noticed that contributions to both projects stopped around February. Anyone know what happened? https://github.com/gulpjs/gulp/graphs/contributors https://github.com/gruntjs/grunt/graphs/contributors
My assumption is that because incest leads to mentally retarded babies more often than not, so the law is in place to keep the human blood line as healthy as can be
The problem with TYT is that they stoop to the same ad hominem, appeal to emotion, and all the other useless "feel good speech" that many conservative groups use.
Sturgeon's revelation, commonly referred to as Sturgeon's law, is an adage commonly cited as "ninety percent of everything is crap". It is derived from quotations by Theodore Sturgeon, an American science fiction author and critic; while Sturgeon coined another adage that he termed "Sturgeon's law", it is his "revelation" that is usually referred to by that term.
The phrase was derived from Sturgeon's observation that while science fiction was often derided for its low quality by critics, it could be noted that the majority of examples of works in other fields could equally be seen to be of low...
Everything is mostly crap because if it wasn't, we'd be more picky and label more stuff as crap
In computer programming and software engineering, the ninety-ninety rule is a humorous aphorism that states:
The first 90 percent of the code accounts for the first 90 percent of the development time. The remaining 10 percent of the code accounts for the other 90 percent of the development time.
This adds up to 180% in a wry allusion to the notoriety of software development projects significantly over-running their schedules (see software development effort estimation). It expresses both the rough allocation of time to easy and hard portions of a programming project and the cause of the lateness...
This would be genius, only it doesn't work when the route paths are the same. I've tried this same implementation on express4, passport 0.3.2, and the check on authentication follows the route path, not the router instance. All routes in this case are being protected for me. — jbodily3 hours ago
express simply 'fires' all middleware in order and keeps going until one ends the request. routes are just a little helper that says "if (!routeMatch) next()"