That user simply seems to have their data transfer bungled in an obscure way. Given they changed their CSV contents since last question, I think they should be able to have a much more appropriate way to load and use their data
I just found it funny about how they claim they did not want to publish their code because of ethical concerns. But it's not like you could do similar stuff with photoshop, and I don't think they have any ethical concerns...
But if they write "Google" on their papers this stuff is gonna get published no matter what.
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні sometime thats not even made with GANs, but yeah it is marginally useful. Hugely impactful maybe, but that is arguably a very very niche use case for ML
I just think it won't take long until someone copies/rebuild the whole thing and makes it public anyways. So if they actually want to publish stuff and contribute things they should make it public. If they don't want to make it public they shouldn't pretend to do meaningful research.
@flawr for GPT-3 and so, I think they release the code montsh later
so its not tha tthey don;t do it, they tend to wait what they would consider more or less enough time to replicate it yourself. But also they tend to give you the code if you are a reputable insittution
Also, most research papers in my field relies on code that is never public
@AnderBiguri but then you can't sign off on the code. Who knows whether in their fancy image-warping/filtering paper they haven't simply coded load original.png; imshow(original); load new.png; imshow(new)
Mhm. I'm still trying to solve this question (ignoring it smells badly of XY, as Cris said).
@AnderBiguri yea, which is a problem :P
So is there a way to dynamically create nested field names? One could list all the possible parts{} combinations into a big if statement, but that's not very elegant. One could eval the shit out of this thing, but we don't want that...
I can create a single field in a struct, but even a field within a field in a struct is already posing difficulties
@AnderBiguri That works, but the problem is: there's no fixed number of parts{}. So to do this without eval, you'd need an if length(parts)==1; s.(parts{1}) ; elseif length(parts)==2 etc etc
@AnderBiguri partly; it's not a great idea to create your variables like this (as Cris and I have told the OP), but OTOH building a solution for this would eliminate the JIT-disabling, which is what caused them to ask the question in the first place
@AnderBiguri which I've prompted them for, twice. On their previous, now deleted question and again on this one. They won't say how they create/get the CSV, nor what they use it for.
All to often I hear "yes, I know this has a SQL injection vulnerability, but this is just for myself, if I have to make it secure later I'll do that". 1. no you fucking won't. 2. when you start writing code for prod you also won't remember to use parametrised queries.
Yes, yes, but I don't think its "never use eval for security!", its instead "careful with eval, if this is public code in some cases it may create serious security issues!", which is kinda different
Problem is: how to index into one of those fields... One could of course first collect all unique field names, create those and loop over the whole lot s.a(ii).b or so to fill it.
I think you'd need to to some pre-processing there. If number>1, then remember there are more, store them in sove variable, setfield all of them together
I ended up undeleting my answer, updating it with the use of setfield and suggesting to use a temporary holding cell to collect variables to allow setting all fields at once afterwards
Left a nice 'n fat disclaimer about the XY problem.
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні it seems so. Indexing into the lowest field is fine (setfield(s, parts{:}, [array with data])), but having the index on another field, as in their example, is again a whole different ballgame...
With substruct you can build up a complex indexing operation step by step. .b.c(5).x.y(3,:). Each ., () and {} is an element in the substruct array. You then use subsref or subsasgn to apply the indexing.
@Adriaan I don't remember what the exact syntax is, but it just creates a struct for you, so you could create that struct manually as well using your two cell arrays.
@BillBokeey That certainly helps in answering the question...
@AnderBiguri Oh yeah I need to update that! Yes I got it in Sept. 2019! Then I worked a bit in the industry, and now I'm back into research (hence the time to procrastinate here ^^)
Multiocular O (ꙮ) is an exotic glyph variant of the Cyrillic letter O. This glyph variant can be found in a single 15th century manuscript, in the Old Church Slavonic phrase "серафими мн҄оꙮ҄читїи҄" (serafimi mnogoočitii, "many-eyed seraphim"). It was documented by Yefim Karsky from a copy of the book of Psalms from around 1429, now found in the collection of the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius. It was proposed for inclusion into Unicode in 2007 and incorporated as character U+A66E in Unicode version 5.1 (2008). In Unicode 15.0, it will have 10 eyes instead of 7.
== See also ==
O (Cyrillic), ...
> In Unicode 15.0, it will have 10 eyes instead of 7.