There's also an extra bonus with Gham (that Pham and Smokey don't have); instead of simply saying "TP/FP", you can also specify if the post has been incorrectly classified; so, if Gham says something's LQ (but it's actually spam), you can reply with "TP spam".
@its_notjack If I link every positive response about me, even if I quote only the ones from distinct people (without repeating), it would still fill this entire transcript twice.
@Unihedro No one in this room is a genius. That's my opinion. I also received this kind of compliments and surely Sam or FOX also did. But we aren't geniuses. Just smart kids :)
Your opinion is the most of insightful, influential, critical and backed up by solid proof that I'm convinced and it inspired me to do anything productive at all. Thanks again.
> Mostly, you get a shovel and directions to the crap heap. The only reward of being a moderator is the satisfaction that you helped make the site better. meta.stackexchange.com/questions/222667/…
def getNum(n):
holes = [[1, 2, 3, 5, 7], [0, 4, 6, 9], [8]]
total = sum([holes.index(sum(filter(lambda x: int(i) in x, holes), [])) for i in str(n)])
return total
def getNum n
n = n.to_s
total = 0
n.split("").each do |i|
if [0, 6, 9].include? i.to_i
total += 1
elsif i.to_i === 8
total += 2
end
end
return total
end
def getNum n
total = 0
n.to_s.split("").each do |i| ; if [0, 6, 9].include? i.to_i then total += 1 elsif i.to_i === 8 then total += 2 end ; end
return total
end
optimized kinda
It's not letting me submit my answer
It accepts it and I click "Submit Final" and it goes to the answers page, but says I haven't completed it.
Haskell IDE. A /usable/ Haskell IDE. I'm (officially) learning C++, and using VC++ for that (it's wonderful; except for compile times, kinda)... But for Haskell, can't even try it >_<
It's actually a beautiful language (okay, I'd started seriously reading about it only a week ago. But seriously, take a look at some code - the syntax and structure of the code is just dreamy compared to, say, C++. And the concepts are quite mind-bending (the code pieces I understood seemed like short stories somehow, not programs, since you didn't have to direct every move by the computer in your code (lazy evaluation))).