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7:27 AM
I have a strange problem: I implemented a solver that is faster than MATLAB's for my problem. Well, MATLAB's solver (reflective trust-region) has 3 different methods and it switches between them dynamically according to some logic. My solver, on the other hand, only implements one of the approaches. The problem is I don't know which one 😂😆
 
 
3 hours later…
10:14 AM
@Dev-iL How can you not know? :D Or do you just mean you don't know which one of MATLAB's 3 it corresponds to?
 
10:30 AM
@AndrasDeak Yes
 
@AndrasDeak there's no need for this in Python right? As in: if you don't use any of the variables except one, Python automatically cleans
 
If there's no names pointing to the object it gets deleted. But names stick around. So you'd do del big_object_name to get rid of it in memory and the namespace
I bet there's a dupe for that
done
 
Ehoa, you Python gold? I didn't know that!
Congratulations
 
Basically, I don't know to which of the 3 steps my solution corresponds. I think it's Cauchy, but it's also reflected... and different sources call it by different names... so ¯_(ツ)_/¯
 
Fairly new :) Thanks
 
 
2 hours later…
12:05 PM
No idea what the question is; only that he likes the word "folder" :-D
 
12:19 PM
is there a function to concatenate strings and cell string?
a='huhu'; b={'foo', 'bar baz'};
and I want
c={a b{:}}
but without knowing that b is a cellstring
 
octave:4> cellstr([a, b])
ans =
{
  [1,1] = huhu
  [1,2] = foo
  [1,3] = bar baz
}
hmm, but probably doesn't work for two chars, sorry
cellstr({a, b}) seems right
 
1:02 PM
I just realized: Since the value of question upvotes has been increased I feel more inclined to downvote questions
@Andy c = [a b] works, at least in Matlab
In Octave too
 
@LuisMendo yup
@LuisMendo heh
 
@LuisMendo omg, you are right? I haven't even tried this...
Thank you @AndrasDeak
 
1:27 PM
thank Luis ;)
 
 
1 hour later…
2:47 PM
I am trying to think up a title of my thesis, but can use some help. I currently have Electromagnetic induction sounding of the Martian mantle using measurements from orbit and in-situ. Up to "mantle" this is OK, but the rest sounds off. How can I combine the two measurement types in a single sentence?
So I have measurements from an orbiting satellite, as well as a lander on the surface.
 
"induction sounding" sounds off too ;)
(But I take it that's jargon)
 
@AndrasDeak quite
"using in-situ and orbital measurements"?
"using measurements from orbit and the (planetary) surface"?
 
The mantle is under the crust, right? So I'm not sure a rover counts as "in situ" (but again this depends on the jargon)
 
That's a good point actually
 
does "direct and remote" sound weird?
 
2:52 PM
@AndrasDeak Mars is quite remote anyway ;) "direct" sounds like we are sticking a thermocouple directly into the mantle, so in that sense it has the same problem as in-situ
 
right
 
"using ground-based and orbital measurements"?
 
that's not bad ^
 
Ohh, and in my template I get a visually pleasing structure:
 
\./
(that's the shape of the title :P)
 
2:55 PM
@AndrasDeak your arms are very long with respect to your head...
Can we get this somehow deleted? It does the same as a now-deleted answer: not adding anything to answers from as far back as 2013
Also, can I trouble someone to protect that ^?
 
latter done
still reading answers before delvoting
 
eskerrikasko
 
only the second "s" should be there :P
Yeah, most of those answers are redundant. Voted.
weird that Shai deleted their self-answer
 
I have been toying with the idea of somehow cleaning that post for a long time, but I lack the 20k priv. Most answers seem to copy one another in one way or another...
 
you'd have to grind them each down to -1 score to delvote anyway...
 
3:02 PM
Oh, nvm, that wasn't this post, that's the why is MATLAB so fast post, especially because a lot of answers are just "My C++ code is fast!", which is not what the question asks
 
3:47 PM
Does anyone know the rationale behind hiding the dupe-hammerer's name for the general public?
 
Is it hidden?
As far as I know only self-dupes are made by Community
or are they hidden in the new UI?
 
I mean this: "Viewable by the post author and users with the close/reopen votes privilege"
 
as far as I know nobody knows the motivation behind the new UI :/
 
Also for closing in general (not just dupes) it is hidden
@AndrasDeak Inclusiveness, of course :-P
 
It can't be a means to protect the askers' feelings because the askers see the banner. It can't be a means to protect the hammerer from abuse, because the askers see the banner and who are we kidding.
@LuisMendo it doesn't even fit there
 
 
2 hours later…
5:51 PM
posted on November 19, 2019 by Steve Eddins

Earlier this year, I learned something about DICOM datasets that surprised me. I had downloaded a Head-Neck CT+PET study, and I wanted to create a volume array in MATLAB. I tried to do this the hard way at first, and of course I got it wrong. (Spoiler: there's an easy... read more >>

 
 
1 hour later…
6:57 PM
Hi, I have a quick question
 
@LuisMendo They don't show the name of close voters where it is not relevant. They figure it's relevant to the asker and to people with close vote privileges. It's true that for the general public it's just noise. If you want to edit out "Hi!" and "Thanks!", you certainly want to edit out the list of names of close voters. Especially with the banner being on top now. The smaller the banner the better IMO.
 
 
3 hours later…
10:19 PM
@CrisLuengo I liked my name displayed there :-( It was part of the gamification. By the same token, showing your name near your answer could arguably be considered noise too, and actually I think it's important
Ugh. Three mistakes/bad practice issues in a single statement: n=[1:length(A)]';
 
10:39 PM
@LuisMendo Nice catch! :p
 

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