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8:08 AM
 
 
1 hour later…
9:23 AM
@AnderBiguri look at that!
btw you guys certainly have heard of GAN for generating images. there now seems to be a new type of architectures called "diffusion models" that also seem to work for generating images: arxiv.org/pdf/2105.05233.pdf
The idea is crazy: For training you add noise step by step to an image, and train a network to recover the previoius step. To generate a sample you just feed gaussian noise into the network, and then feed the output back into the network etc unit you get a nice image.
 
o wow
 
the paper has way to many formulas though
 
is it like DIP kind of style, where the learning is for each image, or does it generalize well?
 
ah no you train in on a whole set
(my "explanation" is without guarantees, that's just more or less what I could understand)
but you will just generate any image from that set, so far I haven't seen papers where people successfully try to influence this
 
@flawr yeah this sentence is the one that confused me. If this is true, you need a single training per "label", even if its many labels. Otherwise you feed gaussian noise and you don't know if you get a car or a dog
but still great idea in general, interesting approach!
 
9:34 AM
the fun thing is that they always show "selected samples" in the first pages, abut in the back you see the real deal
 
9:46 AM
@AnderBiguri eyyy
@flawr 38 MB :-I
 
@AndrasDeak I also have some "selected samples" for you
 
Fortunately I'm on university broadband!
@flawr there are some pretty nice nightmare fuel images in there
 
10:32 AM
o wow, that second one wiith the cts and the person is japanese horror movie
 
 
5 hours later…
3:04 PM
I remember this happening to me, but I don't remember it being a mystery what the problem was.
0
Q: What is the reason for this many errors in my former MATLAB, now Python code?

MadLabMatLabI am currently translating this piece of MATLAB code to Python code. The code is about calculating fractal dimension of images by turning it to a binary array and using box counting method. But errors such as "found bad_character", "end of statement expected" happen all at once in some part of th...

@flawr You cannot unsee that. Thank you for the nightmare I'll have tonight.
 
@CrisLuengo is it not the break #breakfromthe”col”
ah, chat fixes it, but there are non ascii chars in the code
if you wanta support for non unicode in python you need to add a line in the top
 
Yeah, there are prettified unicode characters everywhere.
 
I know 100% this wil cause problem sin python without that first line
 
I'm sure those are fine in variable names and in comments, but they're not going to be interpreted as quotes or multiplication operators.
 
#!/usr/bin/env python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
 
3:09 PM
I mean var1∗var2?
’post’?
 
without that above, you can not have non ascii in comments either
 
But why is that not default? Not that I ever intend to use non-ascii characters in a program file, but why does it need a special command?
 
no idea
Agreed
 
You either don't support it, and be C, or you support it. Not this "well, we support it but..."
 
Don't you guys use MS Word to write your code???
 
3:21 PM
I remember getting scripts from my Thai coworker
o wow such wiggly much circles in characters
วรรณยุกต์
its just so much more aesthetically pleasing as an alphabet
 
maybe just because we don't understand it?:)
 
It must also be harder to found a font. Our simple letters are what made the printing press feasible.
 
 
3 hours later…
6:49 PM
@CrisLuengo it is, I'm pretty sure
$ cat tmp.py
árvíztűrő = "tükörfúrógép"
print(árvíztűrő)
$ python tmp.py
tükörfúrógép
$ python tmp.py
  File "/home/adeak/tmp.py", line 1
    print('var' ∗ 3')
                ^
SyntaxError: invalid character '∗' (U+2217)
So first you need the correct encoding (utf8 by default) not to get encoding errors. Second, the actual characters must not be syntax errors. Letter-like unicode characters are allowed in identifiers, but a lot of other stuff aren't, and obviously operators must be the proper ascii ones.
@AnderBiguri you too ^
 
 
2 hours later…
9:16 PM
posted on September 03, 2021 by bshoelso

Back in R2016b, we introduced tall arrays to facilitate, among other things, processing arbitrarily large datasets. This works nicely for tables or timetables, for example, and works in conjunction... read more >>

 
9:28 PM
another hijacked spam post ^
 

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