Perhaps, but this means I didn't get to wear the "graduation uniform" (i.e. robe and mortarboard) in any of my degrees (nor did this happen after high school). Of course the ceremony is not that important, but I was really looking forward to taking photos with some friends
At the ETH it's less formal. You wear whatever and the committee wears whatever. Some students choose to wear just a shirt, others go full suit (or a more formal dress for women). I'll probably go three-piece.
After the defence, you (usually) have to do corrections on your thesis. Then, the faculty board meets twice a year and during one of those meetings your degree is formally accepted. So after your defence there will be a party (organised by yourself alas) and you can call yourself "Dr. des.", and only after the corrections and this faculty meeting you can drop the des. part
I don't think there's a formal ceremony at some point, also because there's usually a few months between handing in corrections and the faculty meeting; most people will be gone for another job by then
Using load(filename,'-mat',variable_name) I can load a specific variable from a .mat file. This suggests to me that there should be a way to obtain the size of this variable without actually loading it in its entirety. Does anyone know how to do that?
Context: I have ~3000 files, each with 1 day of data. Their file names are sequential, and all they contain is a single variable, data whose size is Nx13. Now I need to load some 100 at a time, and would like to preallocate the output variable, for which I need to know the exact number of rows in each file.
I have been plaing with HDF5 stuff recently, so much so that my additions to load HDF5 data into a 25 year old repo has made me the 5th biggest contributor XD
I've never explicitly dealt with HDF5. I probably should though.
I looked into them when I started my PhD, for easier file management and transfer between MATLAB and Python. In the end I just used binary files. I knew what was in any of them, and reading binary files is fast and uses minimal overhead (also in file size)
HDF5 is just good when you have loads of variables etc
its self-describing, so the HDF5 header contains all the info of the variables, sizes, names, types etc, then you can use all that info to go and load each of them individually instead of the entire thing. Well, like MATLAB does, essentially