![](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/85b43408-a5bc-4bf0-b3d0-0ea2713319ad.png)
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Now that’s the kind of industry secrets I opened this thread for.
Same person as @[email protected], different instance.
Now that’s the kind of industry secrets I opened this thread for.
A major political agenda of Vim is to support children in Uganda. A message about that is displayed whenever you open Vim’s start page. Bram Moolenaar insisted on users donating to the ICCF charity instead of to him, making Vim a very political editor in my view.
Bookmarked. When the question comes up again, this article will be a good reply because it really brings many of my own thoughts to the point.
This statement is wrong.
The premise is already wrong. No orchestra can play Beethoven’s 9th symphony in 40 minutes, this piece is longer than an hour.
THE MORE YOU SAVE
IEEE 754 is the standard to which basically all computer systems implement floating point numbers. It specifically distinguishes between +0 and -0 among other weird quirks.
Okay, who will go to court for the cereal soup question next?
The fact that every 4-digit pin is in this picture shows quite well how these are pretty easy to crack.
I don’t think I’ve ever seen a game on Steam with “Overwhelmingly Negative” reviews before. Usually “Mixed” is already a good indicator to leave your hands off a game.
That’s wrong, it calculates the surface distance not the distance through the earth, while claiming otherwise. From the geopy.distance.great_circle
documentation:
Use spherical geometry to calculate the surface distance between points.
This would be a correct calculation, using the formula for the chord length from here:
from math import *
# Coordinates for Atlanta, West Georgia
atlanta_coords = (33.7490, -84.3880)
# Coordinates for Tbilisi, Georgia
tbilisi_coords = (41.7151, 44.8271)
# Convert from degrees to radians
phi = (radians(atlanta_coords[0]), radians(tbilisi_coords[0]))
lambd = (radians(atlanta_coords[1]), radians(tbilisi_coords[1]))
# Spherical law of cosines
central_angle = acos(sin(phi[0]) * sin(phi[1]) + cos(phi[0]) * cos(phi[1]) * cos(lambd[1] - lambd[0]))
chord_length = 2 * sin(central_angle/2)
earth_radius = 6335.439 #km
print(f"Tunnel length: {chord_length * earth_radius:.3f}km")
A straight tunnel from Atlanta to Tbilisi would be 9060.898km long.
Very experimental, not just with microtonality but making the singers do noises that few composers dared to put into their music.
I enjoy this meme. Truly a Lemmy original.
When you import circles
in the test file (even if you only select circles_area
) the circles file basically gets executed from top to bottom to run all definitions at the point of the import statement. This executes your for loop which fails, and the actual tests are never run. Just remove that loop in the circles module, and it should work.
Huh? Hexagonal Architecture?
Natürlich! Wo sollen Erdnüsse sonst herkommen, wenn nicht aus der Erde?
While there certainly is some overlap, Python is a scripting language and not a shell language. Some tasks that involve calling lots of different programs and juggling input and output streams are much easier done in bash than in Python.
This blog post goes into some specifics of Rust reusing Vec allocations and some of the consequences. I think it’s really worth a read to better understand Vecs. From what I understand, it is possible that Rust will reuse the allocation of vec_a
in your case, but it ultimately is quite complicated.
I won’t argue with you that bash is janky and easily insecure, but what shell language do you think should replace bash?
Wow, Lemmy is feeling quite gullible today.