@flawr I thought MS-DOS introduced the backslash as a path separator just to be different, but there’s actually a good reason. I just learned about this now.
$ echo 'potato\npotahtoe' >foo
$ cat foo
potato\npotahtoe
$ python3.8
Python 3.8.6 (default, Sep 25 2020, 09:36:53)
>>> with open('foo') as f:
... dat = f.read()
...
>>> print(dat)
potato\npotahtoe
If you read a string from a file \n gets read as two characters. You only get in trouble if you put that string in a regex, but that's not specific to control characters. In that case you need re.escape.
How can I make the rectangular line around the box of the colorbar white, but keep the tick labels black?
Reproducible code below:
colormap(flipud(autumn(6))); % Create Colormap
cb = colorbar; % Create Colorbar
cb.Ticks = [.1667 .3334 .5001 .6668 .8335]; % Create ticks
...
@LuisMendo Do ticks nowadays have a color property? I haven’t dealt with HG2 a whole lot yet, but I do know a lot of things have become possible that weren’t before.
@CrisLuengo Yeah, I thought about both options. But ticklabels don't seem to have a color property. About plotting the line, it's hard to know where. The colorbar is directly a child of the figure (not of any axes), and its coordinates are with respect o the figure, whereas plot and line use axis coordinates
The former is plenty of work (needs two kinds of sponge cake and stuff) and it's more like a dessert (unless you eat it for two days straight). The latter is more appropriate as a main course, although still very sweet. Less work to pull off too.
Fun fact: "galuska" in itself means a kind of dumplings, similar to gnocchi but made of flour, water and eggs. But in the name of these dishes it refers to the lump shape (aranygaluska means "golden galuska" and is obviously lumped; somlói galuska means "galuska from Somló" and it's often served as spoon-sized lumps)
Needless to say, both dishes need 3x as much chocolate/vanilla sauce as any recipe will tell you
Aranygaluska is definitely of similar fiddliness as your kanelbullar. Except you need to roll the little buggers in margarine and sugery walnuts few at a time.
You just need 1. the appropriate yeast dough, 2. flattened, "cut" into small discs, 3. each dipped into margarine and then rolled in sugary crushed walnuts, 4. put into a jenaer glass (?) dish and baked, 5. drowned in vanilla sauce. I can get you a detailed recipe if you're curious enough. But the somlói looks much better. We also have a recipe for that.
aranygaluska is really really good, but somlói is like an orgasm (your own I mean) in your mouth
(It might be obvious that I have a bit of a sweet tooth :P)
The recipe we have has pretty buffed-up dough. You can even put them down with gaps among them and they'll just POOF fill it all. I think when we first made it we filled the dish to its 2/3, and then the galuska pushed up the lid. Or something along those lines... I can ask the wife.
Here's a recipe that's a lot fancier than what we use, but it's from a dude whose bread recipe we use youtu.be/sIfxFaLUCSI?t=684 . The linked part shows how loosely the galuska are packed at first (you need to let them rise after packing)
And he doesn't dip them in margarine but rather spreads it (or butter) under and over the dough. Way too posh for us :P
Which is just to say that you can make them with a lot less work/mess. And Dr. Oetker vanilla sauce is perfect to go with them.
(or even vanilla pudding with double the milk content)
Our recipe needs flour, yeast, margarine, milk, sugar and eggs for the dough; and walnuts, sugar and margarine for the fur.
@flawr there's some chemistry going on so it's not obvious that it works. It could happen that there's a sharp transition from "vanilla milk" to "vanilla pudding" as you decrease the milk content.
But the sauce version is a safer bet, after all that's designed to be a sauce
Hofstadter's law is a self-referential adage, coined by Douglas Hofstadter in his book Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid (1979) to describe the widely experienced difficulty of accurately estimating the time it will take to complete tasks of substantial complexity:
Hofstadter's Law: It always takes longer than you expect, even when you take into account Hofstadter's Law.
The law is often cited by programmers in discussions of techniques to improve productivity, such as The Mythical Man-Month or extreme programming.
== History ==
In 1979, Hofstadter introduced the law in connection with...