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@BenjaminGruenbaum I never cheated either and I failed in Chemistry for that /cc @AwalGarg @littlepootis
and it is very common here in practicals, the lab attendant or etc will supply either you with papers or hints. In colleges they let us write from the manual itself while the external examiner was taking Viva's
btw Benji am on 5/6th the Functional Programming videos from Meijer can I ask you directly if I have doubts ?
fixed: Do not leave space for the element. Instead, position it at a specified position relative to the screen's viewport and don't move it when scrolled. When printing, position it at that fixed position on every page. This value always create a new stacking context.
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@JasonMarsh Took a quick look. Not quite sure why. There are many answers on SO explaining what make fixed not working, usually solve my fixed problems.
Ah, I remember. iOS does not support fixed background. It support position fixed ok.
@JasonMarsh That's normal. Imagine the workload when you play 100 videos together. Complex website like facebook test your graphic card more than any other every day app.
Not as bad as India, India is one of the worst countries to be a poor person in. It's also a beautiful and a very historically rich country - but I would definitely not want to be a poor guy there or even middle class.
+A lot of Indians I meet (yes, bias) are focused on CS which means if they get good enough they can pretty much move anywhere in the world.
I might have anecdotal experience but poor skinny kids begging for food is not something I forget easily.
@littlepootis like getting a degree from a good place, like being a total boss at coding and having international offers etc.
@AwalGarg I never claimed otherwise. The problem is that it's very easy (for example: through family sickness) to become poor as a middle class person and India doesn't have the same sort of safety net other countries have for that. (For what it' worth - neither does the US)
But yeah, as an Indian myself I believe we should do something to improve our economic situation - you know like create employment opportunities, health care, etc....
@deostroll to make in India, you need professionals. We have electrical engineers working as programmers and medicine degree holders as pharmacists. I don't really want to live in a country where there's little scope for innovation.
@AwalGarg Only if you believe that the nationality of someone is very important - I'm Israeli for example but I think that's much less important than being a person - as a person I don't really mind where I live.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Its a good idea to have about 3X of the cars On-Road price in your bank account before you spend it on a non-essential thing like a Swanky Car. need a Crore.
Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam is a Sanskrit phrase found in Hindu texts such as the Maha Upanishad, which means "the world is one family".
== Translation ==
The phrase Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (Sanskrit: वसुधैव कुटुम्बकम्) consists of several words: "vasudhā", the earth; "ēva" = indeed is; and "kutumbakam", family.
== History ==
The phrase appears in Maha Upanishad.It is in Chapter 6 of the text. This verse of Maha Upanishad is engraved in the entrance hall of the parliament of India.
The original verse is contained in the Mahopanishad VI.71-73. Subsequent ślokas go on to say that those who have ...
@BenjaminGruenbaum Let me put it this way: Just like you guys have heard shitty things about India, I have heard enough of dreadful stories about other countries.
What I am saying is - leaving one place to get rid of a problem while another similar problem exists at the other place as well does not make sense to me.
@littlepootis Well, I don't have your passports to detain you...nor I have such intensions...but make in India you must...for the very reasons you just said...
@AaditMShah Hey I am curious - how much "real" stuff does your curriculum cover about compilers? As in - is the level of knowledge that you can immediately get out of the class and start writing a production ready compiler (for, say, a small language like lisp/lua) - or is it more abstract and enlightening and you are expected to study further on your own?
@Abhishrek I'm talking about the fact when I came to Delhi 5 different people tried to scam me before I got to my hotel - and for the next 2-3 days at least a dozen more tried - and the fact there were a ton of poor starving people in the street and in train stations. I realize that's not all of India but the fact these places exist is really weird.
I do miss India a lot though and for several reasons. 1) The food 2) The traffic (yes I miss the horrible traffic) 3) The weather (I hate the winter, I hate snow)
I think it's beautiful (India) but I just couldn't get how you'd have a country that's advanced on one end and has parts that are full of shit (literally). It just seemed so backwards.
@AwalGarg Well, we're learning how to write a Racket to x86-64 compiler this semester. Topics covered were register allocation, lambda lifting, branching and constant propagation to name a few.
i have one tiny question suppose lets say i have my project which is works mostly with API calls , which fount -endfream work should i use anguler or React.js
Hey! I want to create a module which lets users upload images and html and css files. But I want to just exclusively let users upload these files and no php or javascript files for example. Are there any modules that can do that work for me or do I have to write that one by myself?
i have one tiny question suppose lets say i have my project which is works mostly with API calls , which fount -endfream work should i use anguler or React.js
@littlepootis No, I'm studying at Indiana University Bloomington. It's a really good university for programming language theory. A lot of really great professors here. Amr Sabry, Dan Friedman, Ryan Newton, Jeremy Siek and Sam Tobin-Hochstadt.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Hahaha. Yeah, it's really weird but Indian always try to scam foreigners. For some reason Indian taxi drivers, shop keepers, etc. think foreigners are an easy target to make a quick buck.
For example, last year when POPL 2016 was held in Bombay a lot of people from Indiana University came down to India. They told me about the experience they had with taxi drivers and how the taxi drivers charged them exorbitantly more and tried to "impress" them by driving recklessly.
@Abhishrek @AaditMShah I asked a taxi driver once when he was trying to get a foreigner to book him about why he is singling them out. He said "1 dollar = 48 rupees so they pay more" (dollar was ~60 at that time). Ofcourse this is anecdotal, but I guess this is commonly spread out information or whatever they think about this.
Yeah, @BenjaminGruenbaum you must have been swindled when you came to India. I apologize for your bad experience. Can't do anything about the starving children though. That's something we really need to fix.
@Abhishrek I miss driving in Bombay. Call me crazy but I actually prefer the traffic of Bombay to the traffic of the US. Driving in the US is so boring. Driving in Bombay is exciting.
@Abhishrek I've been to one such school in Dharavi. However, there's a big problem. Communication issue. Most of the children in the slums speak Marathi and I suck at Marathi.
@AaditMShah I haven't been swindled, but the people right in front of me have been - I don't buy bullshit like "please buy a tourist ticket to the train" easily.
@Abhishrek Not that that really matters. What's the point of knowing the name of the PM of India if you don't learn the elementary skills of life? I think the teachers of India are doing a wonderful job of teaching the basic skills for survival. Plus, it should also be noted that most of these teachers didn't have a lot of education themselves. Considering what they started with and what they're contributing back to society I would say that they're doing a pretty good job.
No. Teaching is a really difficult job. I know because I've been an AI (associate instructor) for a few classes here at IU and I've interacted with other AIs too. It changes your perspective on the entire student-teacher paradigm.
@Mosho it does the Hollywood thing. It calls you and not vice versa effectively meaning you're inside a framework rather than driving a library. This is vs. a router that would give you callbacks to load your own components rather than drive your code.
@AaditMShah It's not like our schools are teaching the elementary skills of life. They teach us calculus and water cycle, but never teach us investments and income cycle.
@Abhishrek what I care about is them knowing what they are teaching - and not what they are not teaching. A physics teacher for high-school not knowing about Indian president is an amendable mistake at worse, but him not knowing that electrons are not actually undividable is shameful.
Anyway, I'm not saying that I know what going on. There's definitely room for improvement. However, credit should be given where credit is due and belittling the teachers of an impoverish nation is hardly fair.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Indeed. Technology is a great means to deliver better quality education. One of my favorite books on the subject is "Mindstorms" by Seymour Papert, an MIT professor. I would definitely recommend that you read that book.
@AwalGarg Also the video I linked is for a primary school teacher, in Primary school GK is a subject where you are supposed to be teaching kids about atleast the basics
@BenjaminGruenbaum Sorry to break the news to you. This generation's children does not have computer, either. They have pads and that is enough for them.
@AaditMShah I teach C++ once a week for 3 hours formally, everything else I do informally + I have a pretty demanding full time job which I usually end up doing for 12 hours a day anyway.
@AwalGarg I memorized at least a hundred lemma proofs, probably much more. Sometimes you just need to do that in order to do things quickly. I still remember (vaguely) every proof from Calculus 1 and Calculus 2 and that many years ago.
@AaditMShah because it doesn't even have the same complexity.
@Mosho well, an alternative would be a router that is not react aware that just does your routing, and then your library being in charge of how components are bootstrapped - basically. I'm not saying "don't use react router", I'm just saying "It makes your code a pretty opinionated framework, that might be fine but we need to be aware of it".
@BenjaminGruenbaum I don't think it has the same space complexity. First, because you are using two loops to calculate the smallerSorted and biggerSorted lists. Second, because you're using list append (which is a O(n) operation) to combine the sublists.
@AwalGarg yes, otherwise it would be worthless. I had the luxury of doing my CS degree after I coded so I never really cared about grades. I totally get the people who do.
@BenjaminGruenbaum well students here mug up those proofs couple days before exams, spit them out in the exam sheet, and forget those within 2 days. IMHO a system which bares this is shameful and needs to be burned with fire.
@AaditMShah It does capture the essence of the algorithm - but it's also important not to fall to a trap and call it quicksort since it's simply not the same algorithm and doesn't have the same performance. It's a very similar algorithm that does not do the sorting in-place and I guess an incredibly smart compiler can optimize the allocations away and do it in place but I'm yet to see one.
@AwalGarg academia is always like that though, that's why I loved courses that made sure you understand the material rather than know it (like calculus, or computability) where the tests were unseens.
we are asked to get xerox of a 40 page file, and form, fill in the form with our details, attach them and submit it to external examiners saying that that is our "project". This happens at leading institutes which have great reputation.
@AwalGarg I think that the culture is primarily to blame. Indian parents push their children to get good marks, and a good degree and a good job. Those are they wrong goals. Children should be pushed to get the right knowledge and the right skills. Everything else will follow.
@littlepootis You got better solution? We parents have to work, so we have to let the school teach. The school have to ask for grants with good scores. The system is at least able to make the schools push the student to memorise something.