Yes, squarely in the territory of unambiguous night and day
@MartijnPieters question regarding your answer stackoverflow.com/a/13562327/2336654 Why do you say {# #} isn't intended to be for comments and only intended to turn off parts of the template?
it would appear to me that it effectively acts as a means to make comments.
@RobertGrant Not exactly, but I can easily make a Life pattern that constantly spawns a 'cbg' pattern made of spaceships. But I'll do it a bit late, when I've finished eating.
>>> [''.join([f(c)for f,c, in zip(({'0':str,'1':str.upper}[u]for u in f'{i:03b}'),'cbg')])for i in range(8)]
['cbg', 'cbG', 'cBg', 'cBG', 'Cbg', 'CbG', 'CBg', 'CBG']
@piRSquared I don't mind them, as long as the OP posts a decent sample of the JSON they're trying to pass, not some invalid excerpt that I have to spend 5 minutes fixing up.
Nested format specs are also valid in the .format method and format function. They can only be nested one level deep, but it's hard to think of a situation where you'd need more than that.
@ThiefMaster Yeah, that’s a fair move. I understand what GM is attempting to do, cleaning up the API and stuff, but it’s really not the best timing for that.
And obviously, they want to do it differently to all those other extensions that copied GM back then, in a way that is more modern to the current developments of web extensions. Which is also a good move but also comes at a time where it’s still difficult due to missing WebExtension features.
I started using Tamper with my new firefox for want of GM, but at one point it stalled my fox for minutes during an auto-update so I happily ditched it when GM came (too bad that's useless for the time being)
Having learnt a bit of XUL just to make a contribution to an Open Source project, I can agree it is not good, but have to agree with Poke that it could and should have been handled better.
And many features will likely never come, since they go too deep into the browser internals. But that was a key feature what originally made Firefox popular. That extensions could change so much.
@AndrasDeak "Beyond what I could attribute to cognitive bias". I presume this has been rigorously tested, given our propensity to have incredibly wrong intuition when it comes to "runs" in data ;)
Mind you, it's probably got some crappy learning algorithm that tries to account for what you listen to most and accidentally reinforces itself into some local maximum or other
@AndrasDeak Well, obviously the answer is to open it up and use an ultra precise temperature sensor to read minute changes in processor temperature and then trigger the next track selection based on that ;) OTOH, you may just have to live with it. Or make yourself a very long "sounds random to me" playlist that you start at varied positions.
@AndrasDeak Indeed, from my internet based observations I can confirm you are an entirely objective being, devoid of preconceptions, biases, context or experience.
@Jurgy heck no! While I've got over 10 years of Python under my belt - and fairly au fait with its inner workings , I've only really used pandas for a couple of years and still consider myself a beginner (and never delved deep into how a lot of things work at an implementation level). Just one of those "off the top of my head" things - fairly sure the development crew would have already thought about it/dismissed it. There's a friendly crowd in the Python chatroom including a few very experienced numpy/pandas people... Might be worth saying hi. — Jon Clements ♦25 mins ago
^^ kinda did a namedrop there - whether someone turns up is another thing :p
@RobertGrant Ok. Sorry about the delay. Here's the RLE file, which most Life programs should be able to load Game of Life "cbg" printer in RLE format. Unfortunately, the SO imgur upload thing won't do GIF anims, so I had to resort to PhotoBucket.
How to solve partial differentiation with tensorflow , if anyone tried let me know ? there is only one example with rain drop problem which is not what i am looking for.
Thanks, poke. There was an earlier system of doing printing using spaceships like that, but it used p46 technology (oscillators and guns with a period of 46). I figured out a more efficient p30 system, which gives greater horizontal density. I also invented those p30 memory loops.
:) The "cbg" pattern is built out of lightweight spaceships (LWSS) which are produced by guns that emit a new LWSS every 30 steps. The "cbg" pattern is built by selectively destroying LWSSes by colliding them with gliders that emerge from memory loops: patterns that allow a loop of gliders to circulate indefinitely. When a glider reaches the corner of a memory loop it can be duplicated to allow output from the memory loop.
So, when you build stuff like that, do you actually know these patters, or are you putting this together out of common blocks you have saved somewhere?
@JonClements Well, obviously, now that PM explained it, it’s all crystal clear. I don’t know why I ever had problems coming up with things like that myself…!
@poke of course... you must have been thinking like I was: "Wow! That's awesome. I wonder if we can improve upon that by using UFOs, air-rifles and blimps...", right?
@poke Yes, I have a library of well-known basic building blocks, and simple patterns built from those blocks. Some of those patterns I discovered myself, but many of them were invented / discovered by others. I didn't assemble that "cbg" printer by hand, though, I used a Python script which I originally wrote several years ago but which I made a few improvements to earlier this year. The excellent Life program Golly has a built-in Python interpreter, it also supports Perl.
There's a great collection of Life patterns in the LifeWiki. There's a lot of stuff that's not in there, but it's a good starting point for people who want to mess around with Life patterns.
In the early years of Life research one of the big questions was whether there exist oscillating patterns of every period, or if some periods were impossible to achieve. It was eventually discovered that every period is possible, but in the process all sorts of weird and wonderful patterns were created.
So we now have techniques for building oscillators of any period, and we can build glider guns of any period >=14 (you can't pack them tighter than that or the gliders destroy each other). And so I have a library (which I can easily access via Python) of the most efficient glider guns known for every period from 14 to 1000.
@Rawing GoL is Turing complete, so you can do anything that's computable with it.
Several decades ago, a couple of guys built a pattern that can add 2 binary numbers represented as p60 glider streams. It can handle input streams of any length, so it can do arbitrary precision addition. People were impressed, but nobody incorporated it into more complex patterns. When I started getting interested in building glider circuits I decided to rectify that situation. :)
So I built a pattern that calculates Fibonacci numbers, then one which uses continued fraction techniques to approximate sqrt(2) as a rational number. I also built a limited-precision binary multiplier. My most ambitious glider circuit to date calculates Collatz sequences.
@Rawing Especially if the pattern has a lot of repeated elements. Then it can be generated using Bill Gosper's hashlife algorithm to achieve blisteringly fast speeds, like over a billion generations per second. Of course, that doesn't actually generate all the intermediate generations. :)
@Rawing There have been all sorts of interesting developments in the last decade or so. In the earlier days, a lot of the progress was related to the oscillator search, but these days there's a lot of work being done with so-called stable circuitry, which tends to be slower but more versatile because it's not locked to multiples of the base period.
OTOH, there's still plenty to be discovered in relation to the basic well-known elements. Eg, a few years ago a previously unknown 3 glider collision was discovered that leads to a pattern with infinite growth.
It's easier to do logic gates, counters, etc in various other cellular automata, but I like GoL since it's so well-known and has accumulated such a large collection of building blocks.
> For those of you who rely on saved tabs to find questions, it must be frustrating that we are taking them away even temporarily. Of registered users who have used Stack Overflow recently, 1% have opted in. Roughly 0.6% have saved a search and just over 0.1% have saved a search with a custom name, sort, or filter. The median reputation of New Nav users is 535. Given how little we did to promote the feature and that it was hidden behind a user preference, that’s amazing conversion. Clearly there’s something useful going on that we need to build into 3.0.
@MooingRawr It's such a basic thing that it would be easy to write 2 sets of code to cover both alternatives. OTOH, the OP needs to learn that you shouldn't try to write code if you don't know what it's supposed to do. So if they don't clarify it in the next 10 minutes I'm going to VTC as unclear.
IMHO, it would be reasonable to assume that the ID is supposed to be a string, since the data list is a list of strings. Also, if that list is huge it's more expensive to convert it all than to simply convert the category.id. But still, it's better not to assume.
I must confess I wrote an answer to an ambiguous question a little while ago. But I'm (pretty) sure my code will be helpful to the OP anyway (unless they're using Python 2), since it shows better ways to handle their binary data than what they're currently using. stackoverflow.com/questions/47413640/…
@RobertGrant It can be really addictive when you get into it. I went through a period about a decade or so ago where I probably spent a little too much time on GoL. :) So I decided I need a break, but I've hardly done anything with it in recent years, and I really ought to get back into it before I forget all the stuff I learned.
At least we didn't cross the p60 glider streams! I've seen a documentary with these guys who are experts in the supernatural thing that do that and it's supposedly a bad thing to happen...
ugh... OP asked why math.log10(0.5) was yielding 0. I asked him to show us his code as I suspect they're casting it to int(). OP doesn't respond, someone gives an answer of saying "they can't reproduce but it should work (similar to the comments)", OP then respond to that answer saying they've made the mistake of adding int() :(
Poor newbie just deleted their SEO question 6 minutes after posting. I guess they didn't stop to think that it could be seen as spamming. stackoverflow.com/questions/47439452
TIL (or rather I think it works this way) if you flag a question, and the OP deletes said question, your flag becomes helpful :\ I should read into the ins and outs of SO more... when I get some time...
3k is too hard :( requires much work. flagging is more useful and I personally flag instead of downvote... and leaving comments is what I do more than answering questions :\
@AndrasDeak I used to use it all the time for printing to stderr.
I'm pretty sure that what this OP wants is impossible, due to the way class scope works. Unless there's some clever trick... stackoverflow.com/questions/47439594/…
@PM2Ring umm... one thing that strikes me is that one of the roles of functools.wraps is to preserve the docstring - they're not using that while decorating for a start
There shouldn't be anything though stopping the wrapped method accessing that attribute later
@JonClements Yeah, they're doing it weirdly, modifying the docstring inside wrapper, because that's the only way they're able to get at the class attribute.
@PM2Ring: Messing with the stack would probably do the job, but it seems pointless. They probably know whether change_docstring is set and what it's set to when they write the code, so they can probably just leave out the decorator if they don't want to change the docstring.