In conjugate gradient schemes one works with a matrix A, for which must hold that A^h A=I. My supervisor told me I could use a dot-test for that; but of course some random Merican government agency has called their drug-test thus, so I can't find any results anymore. Does anyone know how it's called otherwise, or have a reference?
bayesopt can run many hours (depending on task) and you always have time to switch figure before it ends; I made detecting figure in plotFcn callback, but this also doesn't guarantee result — Dims27 mins ago
I always have difficulty understanding him, can anyone help me out here?
Dude's a Russian, claims on his LinkedIn profile to have at least 5 years work experience in the USA/Canada, but I'd say that's bogus, and he probably worked for a USA/Canada based company in RUssia
@CrisLuengo sure, but that's not what my code does. MATLAB doesn't display figures until the full code stops running anyway, thus calling gcf directly after the bayesopt call gives the correct handle (unless bayesopt outputs more figures than this)
@CrisLuengo I have no idea what that function does, I haven't even tried this in my MATLAB (just the handle thing with title change), but my experience with my Conjugate Gradient code is that the first figure, which is in the code before the CG, doesn't get displayed until the full code has finished. Ergo: there's no way for me to manually shift focus away from a figure before the full code has finished running
@Dev-iL I see you have a better idea as to what bayesopt does, if you care to answer in a way the OP wants, I'll just remove mine
You can now sum over multiple dimensions using sum(x,[3,4]), or over all dimensions using sum(x,'all')
I've had that functionality for a long time in my toolbox, when applied to image objects. It seems that my overloads of sum etc. now finally match the built-in versions... :)
There's no glue involved, you "tie" the pieces together by bending or twisting the metal tabs. Those models are awesome to build, I've got a little collection of Star Wars vehicles from that same company. But I hadn't seen models that large yet. Looks cool!
Well, it's just two sheets of metal that have been engraved by laster. The biggest cost is designing the model. There's hardly any production costs involved.
You should definitely buy one of them, see if you enjoy building it.
just today I told my students that "Statics tells you whether and when shit starts moving. Of course you can compute all sorts of forces and stresses, but that's only of interest to engineers, we don't care about those things." :D
@LuisMendo Thanks, that was half an hour of Youtube right there. :/ Very interesting, though. Beautiful machine. I wonder what would be necessary to analyze signals that are not even or odd?