So my instant reaction was: yes. But then I thought that actually -273 degrees C is the real zero, so the actual ratio between the temperatures is 283:293
Interval data has a meaningful order and has the quality of equal intervals between measurements, representing equal changes in the quantity of whatever is being measured. The most common example of the interval level of measurement is the Fahrenheit temperature scale. If you describe temperature using the Fahrenheit scale, the difference between 10 degrees and 25 degrees (a difference of 15 degrees) represents the same amount of temperature change as the difference between 60 and 75 degrees. Addition and subtraction are appropriate with interval scales because a
Taken from Statistics In A Nutshell, Boslaugh 2013.
Besides, if you touch something that's 30 degrees C and then something that's 300 degrees C, you'll quickly realise that the second one isn't 10 times hotter, it's one billion times hotter. #proofbynaiveundergrad
Metallic is similar to ionic except the electrons are "free" and so can move (part of why metals can conduct IIRC), as opposed to ionic where they're static.
In physics, a state of matter is one of the distinct forms that matter takes on. Four states of matter are observable in everyday life: solid, liquid, gas, and plasma. Many other states are known such as Bose–Einstein condensates and neutron-degenerate matter but these only occur in extreme situations such as ultra cold or ultra dense matter. Other states, such as quark–gluon plasmas, are believed to be possible but remain theoretical for now. For a complete list of all exotic states of matter, see the list of states of matter.
Historically, the distinction is made based on qualitative differences...
Well - I have learnt that the range of plasmas is far wider than I thought. And with that, I'd better go and do Bank Holiday things. Thanks for prompting thinking once again, all :) Rbrb
I think a more useful thing to do would be to put massive funding into battery tech by making the Le Mans electric-only, and you can't swap out the battery.
Shows: 1) the print angle matters for appearance 2) Shows what makes 3D printing ground-breaking (printed as a single object) 3) "Seams" that can appear in 3D printing
Oh, actually I think I remember this - with and it just returns the first falsy value, or if it's the last value it just returns that without checking if it's truthy or falsy
When you want to see the six-line solution, let me know. But hints for refactoring: do use inequality tests, then move some of the logic from then to else and have it execute unconditionally.
cbg all Just wanted to ask if its possible to use .replace() with bytes object's. Ive tried to decode('UTF-8') then .replace("\x00" , '""), but the string still has all "\x00". Am i just decoding to the wrong codec or something?
oh i found what was going on. i have to encode outside of the for loop, im working with a list of byte object.
cbg again all, Im having a string step issue, the string"00440049004d002d0031007200" im trying to turn it into "44494d2d3172" .the closest ive come is " [2::2]" witch outputs "404040203070". What am i doing wrong here,this is very confusing for me: /