One of the weirdest matlabisms ever, bordering a bug (and conflicting common sense from multiple aspects). Good job unraveling it. I think you should accept your own answer for transparence. — Andras DeakAug 15 '15 at 20:58
datetime and datestr use mm/MM the opposite way around
datetime(... ,'MM/dd/yy HH:mm') is the correct case......
@AndrasDeak No, my native convention'd be DDMMYYYY; YYYYMMDD is the scientific one, which seems to become more popular in everyday use in Sweden, and of course the arbitrary rollercoaster is the US convention
The "scientific" one of course because it's accepted world-wide that HH-MM-SS is going largest->smallest, and this way the larger date chunks are also ordered largest->smallest
@AndrasDeak triying to give a hand to the poor user with the deleted accoun huh
also, its probably cheating xD
That is an astounding coincidence that the only two users at your location were named "Tom L", both were voting for each other's posts, and both shared multiple items of personal identification. The two of you lead a remarkably similar life. I should note that had the two of you not coordinated votes for each other, none of this would have happened. — Brad Larson ♦yesterday
@Adriaan thanks for your following the proposal but if you wish to upvote a question please upvote the ones that are scored less than 10 (o)not the ones that have been upvoted ten times or more.
Of course you should just upvote the questions that are interesting but please look ar other questions that are interesting but still have less than 10 scores
Almost two years after the first misplaced request on MSE and almost a year after this fixing attempt, we still need a disambiguation guide.
Here's what guide is about right now:
created 7 years ago, info page viewed 9 times
no tag wiki
sloppy short tag description:
Use this tag for questi...
@beaker @Adriaan ^
@excaza and that's a very nice standard you've got there;)
I'll wait a bit, partly because I'll have to leave soon for a bit, and I want to do this consecutively; and partly because there's a minuscule chance that someone might object
But I'll let you know:) If I run into a horrorshow of a post, I'll almost certainly outsource to @Adriaan :D
@AndrasDeak and whoah, this is Europe turned around. We Westerners are outsourcing shitty jobs to Easterners (mostly Polish/Bulgarians around here), not the other way around!
for k=1:n
for m=1:n
K_anv(k,m,:)=exp(-(x(k,:)-z(m,:)).^2./(2*l'.^2))-A(k,:).*A_(m,:)./B;
end
end
K_anv is 3D matrix representing a kernel where k is the number of data and m is the number of estimation points. x and z are nXD x n_XD matrices (l is DX1 vector).
Can I obliterate...
Just a thought: I removed the underscore after n_ in the second for, as I thought it a typo. Naming your variables this way is rather confusing to anyone but yourself at this moment, and probably will be confusing to you as well when you look at this code in 6 months. — Adriaan22 secs ago
I actually thought that that wasn't an allowable variable name, hence my removing of it.
@AndrasDeak Yeah that's the impression I got from visiting Hungary... "we were occupied by the Nazis, then we got "liberated" by the soviets, which was almost as bad..."
@AnderBiguri I heard that too... First many Israelis were excited, then started looking for the catch, then realized that Spain's economy must be in a real bad state...
@AnderBiguri "Scholars disagree about how many Jews left Spain as a result of the decree; the numbers vary between 130,000 and 800,000" ... if Wikipedia can be trusted
@Dev-iL so what's the problem with getting the Spanish nationality then? I don't think it matters. The only reason to get that passport for free would be if your own country has all kinds of travel restrictions to the West (and of course you are suddenly an EU citizen, meaning you can move to Germany/Austria/Sweden without them doing anything)
ah, I meant to have the passport just as a kind of travel-backup, regardless of whether you like Spain or not. If you'd get a free Dutch passport, that's more or less how it'd work, all you have to do is renew the passport every 10 years
@Dev-iL depends on who you ask. Some think that the soviets indeed liberated us, but yeah, it wasn't nice either. And we weren't just occupied by the nazis, we were the nazis.
The official story nowadays is a bit different: we have a new memorial statue, worse than the house of terror business
it depicts poor Hungary being assaulted by the bad ol' nazi eagle
It's as if the local authorities weren't doing everything in their power to deport as many jews as possible
it's said that the nazis were complaining that the Hungarians were sending too many trains, and the camps can't keep up
(either true or not, but Hungary wasn't an innocent victim)
I can't really answer that... What I can say is that the vast majority of words are constructed from (usually) 3-, (uncommonly) 4- or (rarely!) 5-word roots, which are then placed inside "structures" which add a "specific type of meaning" (e.g. "actions you do with another person", "passive actions" .... "tools" ... )
So if you know the root of a word, and are familiar with the structures, you can guess with good accuracy what the word means
now in some cases, such as when the object is not very bright, I need to increase the exposure duration to make use of the dynamic range of my detector in a better way,
but by doing so, I will inevitably also increase the "signal" of the background I'm subtracting
these are extreme examples... I will also upload the transition cases (where one pair is the "last good one" and the other pair is "the first bad one")
My guess is that its way greater in the bad ones, as your "badness" its generally "impulse noise"
You can most likely delete it and get a decent image. There are quite alot of algorithms to correct "salt and pepper noise". This is now exactly that, but my guess is that ill work
also, in my code central diferences dond do good, and I think neither on yours, as the dots will "disapear"
better like this
The only way to check this is for you to have a series of images when you know it goes bad in acertain point and plot the TV norm of the images. See if it jumps
Ok, I'll do that So to summarize - you're suggesting that I find some acceptable threshold value for this TV, below which images are considered "good"?