To a degree. The large subreddits, like AskReddit, get far fewer upvotes on the top posts of the week than they used to get. I think there’s a good chunk of folks who left for a replacement, then left their replacement without going back to Reddit.
To a degree. The large subreddits, like AskReddit, get far fewer upvotes on the top posts of the week than they used to get. I think there’s a good chunk of folks who left for a replacement, then left their replacement without going back to Reddit.
I interpreted it as showing that 8 hobbytes were equivalent to a hobbit. I didn’t see that it could be interpreted as saying each little frodo picture under the hobbyte was a hobbit until your comment.
But a byte is 8 bits, not the other way around
Where’s the Julia programmer that hits every one of these with @benchmark and then works for six hours to shave three nanoseconds off of the fastest one?
(Example: https://discourse.julialang.org/t/faster-bernoulli-sampling/35209)
Yeah, that was my favorite one
What works as a phone app instead of Google Maps? The only thing I’ve seen is Magic Maps, but that shares location data with third parties, so that seems like an awful solution.
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Within a loop could be:
for(i in 1:10){
assign(paste0("listNum", i), list(i, someStringVector[i], i:(i+20), i*value))
}```
And you can also use get() in the same way to dynamically retrieve a variable.
I've gone so far into coding debauchery that I've dynamically assigned variables from dynamically retrieved ones, and I've done so fairly frequently.
Eight of the monkeys are still alive and being tested on, it looks like.
Good lord, I hope no one employed at Microsoft reads this. I would bet they institute it if they think of it.
A fellow Julia programmer! I always test new models by asking them to write some Julia, too.