Lempel–Ziv–Welch (LZW) is a universal lossless data compression algorithm created by Abraham Lempel, Jacob Ziv, and Terry Welch. It was published by Welch in 1984 as an improved implementation of the LZ78 algorithm published by Lempel and Ziv in 1978. The algorithm is simple to implement and has the potential for very high throughput in hardware implementations. It is the algorithm of the widely used Unix file compression utility compress and is used in the GIF image format.
== Algorithm ==
The scenario described by Welch's 1984 paper encodes sequences of 8-bit data as fixed-length 12-bit codes...
which defeats the purpose of matching duplicate sequences and such, like zips do
I guess my solution gives yes for example 3 tho
in which case, I have no clue what the formula is
the only contraint I can really think of is "every compressed file must be different, since equal compressed files should result in equal uncompressed files, which doesnt exist"
the compression algorithm must therefor result in different bit sequences for every compressed file
well I mean if we're being pedantic, we could argue that it requires 0 bits to compress the entirety of shakespeares' works, because you know that if you receive no bits of decompression, then it's the entirety of shakespeares' works
first 2 bits indicate how many files there are, and then 2 bits to indicate length of the first and another 2 bits to indicate length of the second, etc
@Dimuth Ruwantha Welcome to the C# chat! Please review the room guidelines and tips. If you have a question, just post it, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
Great! I have a problem with updating sizes for controls at the time I initialize the size let's say height is 200. then value changed to 192 in the runtime. then if I try to get the updated value, it still says height is 200. but if I explore the instance with a breakpoint it shows me 192 and update the height to 192. does any one has any idea how to fix it?
@Dimuth That might not be the exact behaviour but I think it's correct. Try resizing the control in the designer and if it snaps to particular heights then that will be it
I'm not sure exactly what the precise ownership situation is. It's not technically my company (I'm a contractor), but it's a big enough company to assume they will either own it or have a very long-lived dedicated lease.
@CaptainSquirrel And manage all the ports? Keep track of which is live and which isn't? That's a lot of management.
In most places I've been in in recent years, either most offices didn't have phones, or were assigned phones because that was standard operating procedure, and those phones lay dusty and unused taking up space on the desk.
public class Stupid : IExpression
{
public IExpression Expression { get; }
public Operator Operator { get; }
}
new List<IExpression> {
new Stupid(Literal(10), Operator.Plus),
new Stupid(Literal(2), Operator.Multiply),
new Stupid(Literal(5), null),
}
I want a proper expression tree, not this stupid lists