« first day (2048 days earlier)      last day (1496 days later) » 

9:58 AM
On another note, do you by any change know how to calculate this in R?

$sum_{k=31}^50 \binom{50}{k}$
I can barely understand how to read and write files in R
Fair enough, I see we're in the same boat then.
10:55 AM
4 messages moved from Python
12:08 PM
1 message moved from Python
 
4 hours later…
3:57 PM
i have only 68 reputation
can i share the question here?
if it's at least 48 hours old
and some one downvoted it, i didnt find the answer, i searched everywhere
Your questions are not clear and don't demonstrate the effort you might have put in searching
ok i am sorry, so i edited it now its clear
There is no need to apologise to me; I'm just reviewing the content and giving you feedback
4:04 PM
ok so is it clear for you?
No, your latest question is totally unclear to me.
Are we talking about the wav to image question? That one's not clear at all
ok so what part didnt you understand?
All of it. Where is your code?
You have given exactly 0 information about what you want this image to look like
4:06 PM
google sstv first
Note that the reason we have rules about waiting 48 hours before asking here is to try stop duplication of discussion. I'm bending those rules for this in the short term, but your question should just be closed
bruh...
... yuh..?
Ok, fair enough. I don't know anything about SSTV, so I'm tuning out
ok so do you know what sstv transmission file mean?, i think so you know, if you knew you woud not close it
Slow Scan television (SSTV) is a picture transmission method used mainly by amateur radio operators, to transmit and receive static pictures via radio in monochrome or color. A literal term for SSTV is narrowband television. Analog broadcast television requires at least 6 MHz wide channels, because it transmits 25 or 30 picture frames per second (in the NTSC, PAL or SECAM color systems), but SSTV usually only takes up to a maximum of 3 kHz of bandwidth. It is a much slower method of still picture transmission, usually taking from about eight seconds to a couple of minutes, depending on the mode...
4:09 PM
No, I would close it anyway as too broad
22 messages moved from Python

« first day (2048 days earlier)      last day (1496 days later) »