Proving once again that germans have no sense of humor :/
(Whether that's me or Miyagi is up for interpretation)
@MisterMiyagi The idea was to represent units as a tuple. For example, acceleration would be Unit[Distance, Invert[Time], Invert[Time]]. But typing out the whole thing every time was annoying, so I wanted something like Divide[Speed, Time] to give the same output
The alternative is to represent that as a bunch of nested Mul and Div types, i.e. Acceleration = Div[Div[Distance, Time], Time]
Well, I say the opposite, I've had a lot of problems using just pip, with conda I only end up having problems when I end up involving some installation via pip.
When you use conda it checks which package should be installed so that it is compatible with your installed packages.
Does that make sense to you guys? I mean if the possible types are the same as the ones given how is it unexpected? Is it because it could also be bytes?
@Hakaishin What's the context? Is it complaining that you're trying to assign a value of type LiteralString | str | bytes to a variable of type LiteralString | str?
If you install a library, etc., is there a human-readable file somewhere on your machine to view? I acquired a word embedding tool using import gensim.downloader and gensim.downloader.load("glove-wiki-gigaword-50") (the one mentioned in the recent 3Blue1Brown video on word embeddings), and I can use model["word"] to get a vector and use it for basic arithmetic
...but I can't find an online resource for any other functionality (I want to search for the closest vectors to an input vector and return their words). Is there a way to find the available functions on my machine?