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I thought a nice, simple one for Monday.
You are up tomorrow, and no themes this week!
Porky PIG
chaps MEN
bear TED
paint: powder in suspension
PIGMENTED
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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OriginalGriff wrote: no themes this week You got it! (says shiftily)
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You tell em Paul - NO THEMES
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Don't talk to me about life.
Glad I wore a Hitchhiker-themed T-shirt today.
modified 13-Oct-19 21:59pm.
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Life, Life don't talk to me about life...
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Quote: Now the world has gone to bed,
Darkness won't engulf my head,
I can see by infra-red,
How I hate the night,
Now I lay me down to sleep,
Try to count electric sheep,
Sweet dream wishes you can keep,
How I hate the night.
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It'll be horrible it always is
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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It was a good game, the better side won - but I can't blame Scotland for wanting to play instead of taking the default draw.
I've been impressed with Japan this year - I don't think they'll last much longer (too many heavyweight teams in the way and SA is a good team) but very well done on the performance so far!
I feel sorry for Ireland though - they aren't likely to be in the tournament after next Saturday.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Japan beat South Africa in the last World Cup but are unlikely to repeat that. Scotland had too much to do on the day. Wales ( my lot ) were back to dropping and fumbling , forward passes galore ( they actually got away with one of them ) Ireland need a complete work over. Just give NZ the cup.
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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First game I've watched this tournament (not really my sport) but by God, I picked a good one!
Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect. - Mark Twain
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As a not really math familiar individuum, every time I read a math related article and find some matrix formulas I need a mnemonic to imagine what is described there (if they refer e.g. to a matrix element like Aij). In german this mnemonic is "_Z_eile _z_uerst, _Sp_alte _sp_äter" what means "Row first, Column later".
What kind of mnemonic do non German speaking people use?
And yes; no the answer "not german speaking" do not need a mnemonic is out of question
It does not solve my Problem, but it answers my question
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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Back when I studied maths at university (1964 or thereabouts), we referred to row-major or column-major.
Row- and column-major order - Wikipedia[^]
Cheers,
Peter
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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Thank you for this. But in math, is it not _always_ Row, Column? You may see I'm completely noob on this
It does not solve my Problem, but it answers my question
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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Yes, I think the convention of row-first is well established. Of course the underlying mathematics doesn't care where you spray them round the page.
I remember ordering as being the natural counting sequence
11 12 13 ...
21 22 23 ...
... and it accords with the "across the row, down the column" summation in matrix multiplication. The mental image of two forefingers scanning like that is burned into my brain.
If only mathematicians could become zero-based. So often in matrix maths there are subscript expressions like p+q-1
Cheers,
Peter
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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Quote: If only mathematicians could become zero-based I prefer for math the one base aproach which avoid lot of N-1 . I'm that much used to it that I have meanwhile no problem to translate the math to zero based code
It does not solve my Problem, but it answers my question
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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Peter_in_2780 wrote: If only mathematicians could become zero-based. That causes a lot of problems with number lines that do not have a zero. E.g. years go directly from -1 to +1; there never was a year zero. The elevator in our office building goes directly from floor 1 to floor -1. (To ease our minds, we have declared that the building does have a floor zero, but it is virtual, and the elevator is not built to stop at virtual locations.)
My wish is that we go back to the days of Pascal. If your array indexes run from 1950 to 2050, that is perfectly fine! If they run from 0 to 99, or from 1 to 100 - both are perfectly fine. Just tell what you want, and the compiler takes care of offsetting the index you are using in your program so that the element at the lowest index runs from the base memory address of the array. Compilers are quite good at doing that sort of calculations - it is a pity that the C group of languages forces us to do this sort of offsetting in application code.
Some hardware helps with trivialities: I once worked on a machine providing an instruction called MIX3: It decremented the value in the accumulator by 1, then multiplied it by 3. This was in the Fortran days: Fortran arrays are 1-based, and this 16-bit mini, adressing 16 bit words rather than bytes, used a 48-bit (3 word) float format. So MIX3 converted a "logical" (1-based) Fortran array index into a word offset from the (0-based) memory base address.
Handling discontinous number series, such as years around the start of our "Common Era", will always require special handling, though.
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Perhaps I should have been more explicit. "Practitioners of linear algebra...." i.e. those who deal in vectors, matrices, tensors and their ilk.
Yes, Pascal arrays were nice. A large C project I worked on, someone wrote a bunch of macros to try and emulate that. Very clunky; modern C++ could do a much better job, I'm sure.
Oh, and here, floor numbering includes an implicit zero. A local example goes 2 1 G B1 B2
A lot of (old) instruction sets included features to "help" compilers. One of my favourites was "back axle" BXLE in the IBM 360 and derivatives. Intended to be the bottom of a FORTRAN do-loop, it used 3 consecutive registers to hold the running value, increment and limit. Do the incrementing, and branch if still looping (less or equal to limit). None of the FORTRAN compilers I saw ever used it though!
Cheers,
Peter
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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perhaps off topic, but I suddenly thought about this mnemonic from vector analysis
"curl of a curl equals to a gradient of divergence minus Laplacian"
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That's not a mnemonic, that's a book
It does not solve my Problem, but it answers my question
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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0x01AA wrote: What kind of mnemonic do non German speaking people use?
Row, row, row your boat
Gently down the stream
Columny, columny, columny, columny,
Math is but a dream…
(Just kidding)
But I do remember the meme for sin, cos, and tan math my 10th grade teacher taught us:
Oscar Had A Heap Of Apples and Sally Counted Them
O/H = S(in)
A/H = C(os)
O/A = T(an)
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The one that was drummed into my skull was WW2 surplus: Old hands always help other airmen. I hadn't met counting Sally before.
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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Not kidding:
Quote: Row, row, row your boat
Gently down the stream
Columny, columny, columny, columny,
Math is but a dream…
I like it and I'm sure it is a "brain burner" (1:1 german english translation) at least for me.
Thanks.
It does not solve my Problem, but it answers my question
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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Call it "Fortran" vs. "Pascal" ...
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