"One of us always tells the truth, and one of us --" says the left daemon, but he is cut off by your sand attack. "Hmm," ponders the right daemon, "an interesting game. The only winning move is not to play." He opens the gate.
You retrieve the succulent date from your inventory and offer it to the right daemon. He accepts it gratefully. "I'll remember this," he says. [+1 virtue point(s)]
@davidism @Kevin the array behaves like an ordinary 2d array. I need to extend the dimensions (100,99) to (100,100). reshape isn't working in this case as the number of elements in reshape must remain constant.
although that first ping tells me that maybe I shouldn't worry about it anyway
Unfort. current company policy isn't big on short-term positions -- our new COO thinks the startup/teardown personnel costs are too high. Which is almost exactly the opposite view from the previous guy, who liked the flexibility of being able to renew/remove as he liked and pretty much only hired contractors on fixed-term contracts! :-/ And just to be clear, I was just using the standard room encryption like "HugeCo" there.. ;-) You can contact me offlist if you're really curious..
I'd be lying if I said I was entirely surprised. I remember back in like... 2005? I heard that Simpsons was going to have their last season, but that turned out to be not the case
If a show counts as still going as long as there's no series end episode, then I can still have hope that the Pirates of Dark Water can find the five remaining Treasures of Rule, picking up where they left off twenty six years ago
IIRC vampires aren't reflected in silver-backed mirrors because silver is a holy metal, so if your telescope's mirror doesn't have silver in it, it can probably still see space vampires.
What are space vampires? Are they just normal Vampires but from space? Do they have spaceships or is it a magical power that allows them to fly in a vacuum?
The Space Vampires is a British science fiction horror novel written by author Colin Wilson, and first published in England and the United States by Random House in 1976. Wilson's fifty-first book, it is about the remnants of a race of intergalactic vampires who are brought back from outer space and are inadvertently let loose on Earth.
The titular space aliens are energy vampires, rather than the familiar stereotypical Earth vampires that suck blood and change into bats. They consume the "life force" by seducing living beings with a deadly kiss and also have the ability to take control of the...
My hypothesis is that all the silvery noble metals (Ir, Pd, Rh, etc.) are equally "holy" i.e. deadly to vampires and lycanthropes, but silver was the only one known back in the day.
OK, here's the problem. I'm trying to get Selenium Chromedriver working on my work's Windows 7 laptop. The Chrome browser keeps displaying some weird alerts and not going to the webpage I need the program to. However, each time I try to implement a fix from the internet, Chromedriver ends up crashing.
question: I'm using unicode block character u"\u2588" to create block elements in my printout, but I'm finding that I can't apply font colors to those. Are there block characters that work with font colors?
I know this is dumb, but is this the use case for a proxy server? If you want to rewrite a request like /api/v3/blah to https://myfancysite/api/v3/blah?
I meant math (trick/algo); and yes, algorithms are on topic, we even have a tag for it. But then you'd better edit the question into a clear algo question, which it doesn't read as right now, at least to me
so you want to make requests to http(s)://localhost:5000/foo/bar and you want that to result in a request being made to http(s)://localhost:3000/foo/bar? Then yeah, proxy server is what you're looking for
def f8():
if f4() <= 2: # this has a 50% chance of happening
return f4() # numbers uniformly distributed in [1,2,3,4]
else:
return 4 + f4() # numbers uniformly distributed in [5,6,7,8]
> To create each random bit, we wait until the first count occurs, then measure the time, T1, until the next. We then wait for a second pair of pulses and measure the interval T2 between them, yielding a pair of durations. If they're the same, we throw away the measurement and try again. Otherwise if T1 is less than T2 we emit a zero bit; if T1 is greater than T2, a one bit.
The exact same approach one uses for the "how do you get fair results from an unfair coin?" puzzle
The other day I was watching TV and they were giving a pep talk to someone who discovered they had alien ancestry and it was like "It's not what's in your blood that matters, it's who you are that matters" and I was like "but your blood does comprise a significant portion of you by volume"
And it made me wonder what exactly that percentage is.
Google tells me it's seven percent. So what's in your blood matters, but not as much as the remaining 93% of you.
If we're going by total weight, then it's your skin that matters most of all. Ironically in opposition to what after-school specials tend to say.
It bothers me when "this thing we knew about all along has been reclassified into a slightly different category" gets spun by pop media into "BREAKING DISCOVERY: this totally new thing"
And the laymen (why is it always the laymen) read half the headline and are like "idiot scientists couldn't find [thing] for the entire history of medical science? Did they have insufficient lighting or something?"