@David Huh? XZ is not a MATL function. And that ] has no matching ", ? or backtick?
I think it may be some problem with this web page interpreting the backticks. Maybe paste it as plain text, without any code format? Oh and thanks for the interest in MATL!
In computer science, a stack or LIFO (last in, first out) is an abstract data type that serves as a collection of elements, with two principal operations: push, which adds an element to the collection, and pop, which removes the last element that was added.
The term LIFO stems from the fact that, using these operations, each element "popped off" a stack in series of pushes and pops is the last (most recent) element that was "pushed into" within the sequence. This is equivalent to the requirement that, considered as a linear data structure, or more abstractly a sequential collection, the push and...
Yes, by removing what's on top. Or rearranging stack elements. Or using a function-input spec like TFFF...to indicate you want to use that element as input
For example, try
matl '1,2,3,D'
You'll get 3 printed
To get 1, use
matl '1,2,3,TFF$D'
or
matl '1,2,3bD'
or
matl '1,2,3xxD'
Respectively: select desired input; rearrange elements by "bubbling up"; delete the top two elements
Matlab, 20 bytes
Perform k mod n for every k = 1,...,n, then perform not (which turns every nonzer to zero and every zero to 1) and sum up all those values.
@(n)sum(~mod(n,1:n))
It seems MATL would be the winner on this one! 7 bytes:
it;\~zD
Oh, there's a language called "PARI/GP" that has a builtin for that and uses 6 bytes
@rayryeng My dbstack-based solution gives the same result as that. Also, I needed specifically just the full path to the folder in which the currently-executing file is located.
First of all, I don't have access to the "Communication system toolbox", so in order to operate in GF(2) I have to add mod(stuff,2) calls in the code. Just remove them if you have access to the toolbox.
Gaussian elimination in GF(2) works exactly the same way in essance than in R or C, expect it...
I have a question about my low pass filter. I want to interpolate and upsampled signal however when I use my low pass filter it only party interpolates the samples:
The code of my filter looks like this:
function Hd = lpf5mhz3
%LPF5MHZ3 Returns a discrete-time filter object.
% MATLAB Code
% G...
Sean's pick this week is nflcolor by Alan Bindemann. Let's take this plain old boring football and turn it into one with some team colors:football = imread('football.jpg'); imshow(football); Segment the football... read more >>
Below is the code I used in my m.file:
for idx = i_start:i_end
CheckTemp = (timeTick > time_tr(idx)) .* (timeTick <= time_tr(idx));
CheckTemp2 = find(CheckTemp);
IdxS = min(CheckTemp2);
IdxE = max(CheckTemp2);
......
the timeTick array is a double array about 100MB, and idx...
I have a binary matrix A (only 1 and 0), and a vector D in Galois field (256). The vector C is calculated as:
C = (A^^-1)*D
where A^^-1 denotes the inverse matrix of matrix A in GF(2), * is multiply operation. The result vector C must be in GF(256). I tried to do it in Matlab.
A= [ 1 0...
First of all, I don't have access to the "Communication system toolbox", so in order to operate in GF(2) I have to add mod(stuff,2) calls in the code. Just remove them if you have access to the toolbox.
Prequisite : Summing in GF(2^8) :
Summing in GF(2^8) is not trivial, as it behaves like (Z/2...
@AbhishekBhatia No you absolutely can't. Not unless the vertical coordinate is also non-linear.
Take for example a circle or an ellipse.
@AndrasDeak that's because f(4) gets stored in ans and ans is then used as a variable. It's a quick way to create a variable without explicitly declaring it.
I am looking for a library for Twin Weighted SVM (TWSVM) and Weighted Lagrangian Twin SVM (WLTSVM) in Python or Matlab.
It seems, these method are new and i can not find anythings.
Please help me.
My understanding is that princomp and pca are the same functions in MATLAB. But using these functions is giving different answers. The output below shows this:
>> size(pcainput)
ans =
29 50
>> size(pca(pcainput))
ans =
50 28
>> size(princomp(pcainput))
ans =
50 50
Based on...
I want to select a subset of pixels from one image. int_img.*(resize_outline) Here, int_img is grayscale. Both int_img and resize_outline have dims 601 x 601.
@LuisMendo very slow my friend. I'm trying to finish today.
@Ballbreaker you did the right thing buddy. Just keep telling yourself that.
It's the best outcome that you could hope for. The only other scenarios would result in someone getting dealt the most hurt, or all of you getting equally hurt a lot more than what you chose.
I know, it's just hard still.. but I think I'll be okay in some time
I keep thinking "I should say something to her" then I remind myself to have some balls in this situation for once In my life, I've always been terrible at severing ties
@AndrasDeak Hahaaha thanks for that. A nice little distraction right there..
Shes back dec 15th
My last side-wheel started messaging me today lol.. funny coincidence
This girl I have no real emotional connection with though
They support monogamous relationships because that's mostly the way it's been for the past few thousand years, and modern media basically glorifies monogamy through fairy tale situations
I wouldn't say there's less shit, kind of depends on the people I suppose. There's a reason the divorce rate in western civilization is above 50%
But I get where you're coming from, it's easier in some senses
Best case scenario for me would have been being upfront about polyamory from the start lol
Married to a guy with more than one wife... and if you want to do splitsville, tough shit, you're gonna lose more than you came in with.... YEAH LET'S DO IT
This used to plot mean and variance with no trouble, it has recently started giving me an error of "num must be 0 <= num <= 3, not 4"- I haven't changed anything and not sure what is happening - See updated fix below
import numpy as np
import pylab as plt
plt.figure(1)
z = 1
for N in (10,100,100...