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23:00
Hmm... how to ensure that large numbers don't collide
If you are comparing IDs, you can just return the hash code of the Id
naive I'm sure
@TravisJ just make it as entropic as possible
I was following tutorial how to create a tri state checkboxs tree control then realize none of them is practical
then found out there is an easier way, use ImageList
phew!
public override int GetHashCode()
{
 string hash = "";
 hash += this.a;
 hash += "00100";
 hash += this.b;
 return int.Parse(hash);
}
something like that?
@KendallFrey - Is that going to be unique enough?
23:05
non polished (format etc)
I don't think 00100 would add much entropy there, since it's constant
Too basic?
too complex
If it isn't constant, then isn't it going to make the same numbers different?
and what he said
@TravisJ no, you clearly don't understand hashing :P
23:07
@KendallFrey - link?
I would do something like a * 982451653 ^ b
(that's a large prime)
@TravisJ MSDN
Isn't that going to be too large?
too large for what?
an integer?
23:08
Like, right now?
@KendallFrey Back to that code, do you have any suggestions on creating those 5 points 2-apart?
another decent approach is bitshifting
@Kroltan add one at a time to a list, don't use linq
An ideal hash should have a 50% chance of each output bit swapping with each bit difference in the input
chaotic is generally good
@KendallFrey - I cheated
public override int GetHashCode()
{
 return new Tuple<int,int>(this.a,this.b).GetHashCode();
}
23:14
wait, where is that?
a custom class?
yeah
@KendallFrey - Concerns?
w/e this is mostly for testing anyway
trying to use some machine learning approaches to data mine
23:33
I'm back. Did you miss me?
@TravisJ this is what R# suggests.
a^b? What about for a,b, and c?
Anyway, cheating with the tuple works just fine :D
But is relatively slower and binds you to recent versions of the .NET framework
23:41
@TravisJ tuple does it like this
@TravisJ a^b has numerous problems
prolly pretty expensive, a bunch of calls + allocation
if a == b it always gives 0
Anyway, I am way past this at the moment :P
and if 1.a == 2.b && 2.a == 1.b it gives the same result
23:43
I am now trying to make the model for the machine learning process
@TravisJ good, just making sure my knowledge is backed up :)
@KendallFrey :D
Decision tree learning uses a decision tree as a predictive model which maps observations about an item to conclusions about the item's target value. It is one of the predictive modelling approaches used in statistics, data mining and machine learning. Tree models where the target variable can take a finite set of values are called classification trees. In these tree structures, leaves represent class labels and branches represent conjunctions of features that lead to those class labels. Decision trees where the target variable can take continuous values (typically real numbers) are called regression...
Or maybe bayesian?
Anyway, that is the step I am on now.

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