Have you seen the interview where he talked about a different interview that he lead where he was so high on crak (?) that he could swear that his interview partner was answering the questions he was about to give to him?
Um, I need some Docker w/ WSL2 help. It's probably a stupid question. I run Docker on Windows and mount a volume in a container, like so /var/opt/mssql. Where the bloody fuck can I access that stuff inside WSL2?
Docker Desktop is using WSL2. I run a Docker image with a volume mounted to /var/opt/mssql. In my understanding, the WSL docker-desktop should then have a /var/opt/mssql with the data of that image, but I don't see it?
the downside of storing character pairs and triples is that the hash map would grow quite a lot and I can't really guarantee that I have all the combinations
@Squirrelkiller Firefox has always been my go-to browser, but they're really dropping the ball. It's getting progressively worse on both desktop and mobile. Might as well look at what Microsoft is doing.
@kame Your earlier comment about having a problem with software made me laugh out loud. I have a problem with software literally everyday! In the night time it mostly just haunts my dreams.
In my ASP.NET form field the comma of a decimal number is not recognised.The 1,00 is converted to 100. My system is using locale-de. - My htmlcs-file --> <input type="number" asp-for="Product.Price" class="form-control" /> - When I inspect the web element it says that it is still text. :/ I tried different things, but nothing is working.
I'm not sure what com.ss.android.ugc.trill is, but it's not the version available to me. The trill thingy is maybe the asian version, thus only available in Asia or something?
I'm trying to convert the following algorithm (see picture above) to C#, I almost done it but I got lost in a few parts: what are the values of dilX, dilY, and dilZ, and what is dil[xyz]. Could someone help me? Here is the code pastebin.com/ZyJH9GJL
@EnderLook I would need more context to understand what dil stands for. Or a german version, as I learned all my maths in german. No time for digging right now though.
The Morton Code allows to encode a 3D coordintae (X, Y, Z), in a single integer. It works by merging the bits of the three coordinates. For example, the code "abcdef" has x=ad, y=be and z=cf. I think that the dilX are the dilated mask of each axis
However this is not exactly a morton code, because it also encodes the depth tree by adding a mask 1 bit
Also, integers has 32 bits, but the 3d morton code works 3-bit multiples. So I am not sure about the exact value of dilX
The morton code allows to store octants in a linear hashmap very efficiently. Also, that single number has a lot of advantages. Wiht it, you can calculate the parent node, the children nodes, the current node depth, size and position (everything with a single number!). However, in this exact algorirthm, the morton code of each node is used to calculate the vertex code of each octant's vertex, which is required to generate a graph that connects all octants with their neighbours
leaf2vert turns the Morton Code of an octant into the 8 codes of each vertex
Those vertex codes (and their depth) are stored in another hashmap
Which is then used to create a dual octree (octree + edges between octants)
However I don't understand the math notation of the picture
That single integer is very lightweight and I can calculate a lot of different data with it, it's very cool. Also, it's used by the algorithm above to produce the edge graph (and a lot of other algorithms), so anyway I have no choice XD.
@mr5 Instead of having a conventional tree, where each node has a reference to its parent and children I have an array of octants, where each octant has a morton code
The morton code already says me the parent, children and current depth in the tree
Also, all the octants are stored in a single array (inside the dictionary) instead of heap allocate each instance by separate
It's compact and fast
(papers have proved that it's like 5 times faster in some aspects that a conventional tree)
Anyway, if you don't mind, the question wasn't about refactoring my data structure, but about converting the picture into actual C# :) And math/progamm papers aren't very readable for me
But does it make sense in your use case? Because if that happens once a minute, it wouldn't make sense to do this much work just to cut down from 50ms to 10ms.
@Squirrelkiller People use octrees to optimize collision detection in games. So the algorithm must be fast enough to execute per frame. However, I plan to use it for pathfinding-only (ATM).
Yes, but I'm not sure how to convert that (eg: dilX) 001001 (with overline on it) to plain C#. Also, I don't understand where came from dil[xyz]and what is its value.
Let me put it this way.. you need to identify various length strings lumped together in another string, how would you go about that? ['a', 'bc', 'def'] into 'defaaabc'?
did anyone else ever have one of the original kindle fire tablets before they used android? lmao it's like why get a fire when you can get a real tablet or just a regular kindle?
I feel like I don't know C# rn! I want to get only the base class properties, but when I do: BaseClass base = DerivedObj; of course, base is of type derived. but I want to extract the base class properties (that I only need for serialization) but what I have is the DerivedObj
well maybe not exactly a joke, but just to say that people should be critical thinkers and not just take things on fact.. the irony being that that's exactly what flat-earthers are
Tried to make my bachelors years ago. Didn't exactly get the one I wanted though, so I tried electrical engineering ("and information technology"), but it turned out the information technology part was slowly phased out of that so I stopped after two years and started by dev apprenticeship.