If performance was the primitive concern then definitely it was Frank's but I think I can compromise a bit here on performance since my arrays are not too big.
I need your advice: I'm co-interviewing someone for a potential internship, she put 4/5 as R skills. What do you think would be the best questions to test that?
@zx8754 ah, that can be a good idea, chosing some good Q&A and ask to explain. I can chose some of akrun's answers too to be sure the explanation is not already with the A ;-p
Consider two vectors.
a <- c(123, 234, 432, 223)
b <- c(234, 238, 342, 325, 326)
Now, I want to match last two digits of a to first two digits of b and create a new vector pasting first digit of a, the matched part and last digit of b. My expected output is :
[1] 1234 1238 2342 4325 4326 2...
So we are used to say to every R new user that "apply isn't vectorized, check out the Patrick Burns R Inferno Circle 4" which says (I quote):
A common reflex is to use a function in the apply family. This is not
vectorization, it is loop-hiding. The apply function has a for loop in
its de...
thanks guys, I went with Ronak's as I needed to do quickly, the interview is in 1 minute... hope it's gonna go well :-) I'll let you know when I'm back !!
@Cath FizzBuzz (print fizz for every multiple of 3, buzz for every multiple of 5 and FizzBuzz for every multiple of 15) kind of nice way to see if there's a sapply or a vectorized approach at first
@Oghli There's no policy about votes, they are anonymous and everyone is free to vote as they are pleased
Now for the downvote: the question is 'I wish to know this function code to evaluate it, how can I do it ?' => There's no research effort shown, you're not very precise about which function you're interested in (or it's all questions)
@Tensibai you are right but may be we can find a good solution for this issue and suggest it to the community in order to control anonymous down voting.
Downvotes are currently anonymous on Stack Overflow. I've not received many, but the two or three I can remember are usually on a question or answer that has significantly more up votes and in the case of a question been favourited.
I'm not against downvotes, and I'm not so arrogant to believe t...
The answer was down voted because I lost my keys. Please, stay with me, let me explain this odd chain of events.
Earlier today I couldn't get to the store on time because I could not find my keys. That caused me to miss the opportunity to run over a golf ball, which would have bounced between a...
So, it turned out she didn't even know substr, sub, ... so I didn't ask her for too long... I guess she's 4/5 if 5 is best level in her class... at least she was nice
btw as for the new "member" coming in just to whine why his bad Q was DV, is it ok if I put him on read access only (I don't think he'll come back anyway but...) ?
@DavidArenburg lol I just find that quite rude to come in a room just in order to whine (much I found even more annoying after seeing the Q he was complaining about...)
@m0nhawk you use optparse, right ? I may have questions later... ;-)
You can if there's decimal, that's the problem when you don't make a exemple matching the reality, the answers are not exactly matching what you're after ;) — Tensibai10 secs ago
@Tensibai That's not a "problem". It is guaranteed that x == x%%y + y * (x%/% y). As (-5)%/%10 == -1, obviously (-5)%%10 must be 5. Otherwise the equality would not be correct.
@m0nhawk cool thanks :-) for now I'm struggling to have unknown number of parameters (like t1, t2, t3, ... but I don't know how much "i" there will be). Is that possible or am I searching in vain ?
@Tensibai euclidean division with decimal numbers doesn't make much sense anyway;-p
@m0nhawk well at least I didn't miss something obvious... (always seing a half full glass) ;-)
thanks for the link :-)
@m0nhawk actually it gave me another idea: I only need file names so I think I'm gonna make just one parameter with all file names separated by like semi-colons and that'll be it ;-)
@m0nhawk ah cool, I did strsplit(..., ";")[[1]]...
@MichaelLeBarbierGrünewald 5%/%10 is just 0 as 5 is 0 times 10 + 5 as in euclidean division. euclidean division is only for integers. For negative numbers, you're just supposed to do the euclidean division of the opposite (so positive number) then negate it. So -5%/%10 is actually -(5%/%10) so -0 so 0
Actually the algorithm for integers can also be applied to decimal numbers, by factoring out an adequate power of 1/10. It also works on polynomials and some cases derived from polynomials. And probably many others I am not aware of :)