There is this new and very promising package that adds interactivity to plotnine graphs https://y-sunflower.github.io/ninejs/. Disclaimer: I am the author of plotnine.
Sorry for the confusion. Though, it is a mango tree in a mango garden! The continued development and maintenance of plotnine is supported by Posit, PBC, the same company behind the Tidyverse. Disclaimer: I am the author.
If you already use plotnine, or if this has piqued your interest, the next release (v0.16.0) will bring nice capabilities. You can get a sneak peek by installing the pre-release: pip install --pre plotnine Details here:…
It is a summary of a rather well known book of the same title.
See this [1] article by Martin Fowler. UML promised and pushed for more control over how much of the program it could sketch/model. 1. https://martinfowler.com/bliki/UmlMode.html
It depends on how many decimal places you are printing >>> f'{b:.54f}' 0.299999999999999988897769753748434595763683319091796875 >>> f'{x:.16g}' 0.3 >>> f'{x:.17g}' 0.29999999999999999
Plotnine uses other packages in the scientific Python ecosystem. That is probably where the abbreviations that irk you come from. In some cases those "abbreviations" have roots 20 years deep!
There is geothermal energy if it has a molten core.
An interesting note is, the footprints where formed on the supercontinent Pangea.
I think it would be helpful for discourse if you read the article in full.
May be strange at a first glance but binary/boolean logic/reasoning/quantification is just a special case of probability theory. This is covered exhaustively in Probability Theory: The Logic Science, by E.T Jaynes. And…
"One of history’s fews iron laws is that luxuries tend to become necessities and to spawn new obligations." Sapiens, By Yuval Noah Harari This quote stood out for me when I read Sapiens.
Given that Chroloquine has been around for a long time and that it is well studied, is there any merit to assume that using it was not a random idea and that it works against some other known RNA viruses?
It is not straight forward but look into the Second-Digit Benford's Law (2BL-test).
I have been through this path of trying to figure out why pandas Groupby is slow. It is a big bottleneck when building packages on top of pandas.
Water is a good insulator, but not a perfect insulator. If the temperature difference between the bottom and top changes so does the heat transfer and given time the effects will spread. But most important is, warm…
> or artificially cool surface ocean water Good curiosity, but they would have to put out atleast an equal amount of heat into the atmosphere! (2nd law of thermodynamics).
I recall reading a story of some bank robbers taking beta-blockers prior to the "job".
It seems unethical if you do it by gene drive. But what if you add some natural randomness to the process and other desirable objectives. Imagine a dating service with a DNA database and you can match up people whose…
Thank you, very interesting geography. Any theories on how the river broke through the mountain range, i.e. the timeline for the erosion? From my speculative chair, it looks like the river existed before the ranges.
You cannot choose your allegiance and stick with it. The reality is that there is always various types of evidence to contend with. Chances are if you were a physicist/cosmologist you would be of the same opinion as the…
> if you're calculations don't fit, then your mathematics is not suitable, so change the math before you change the physical description Physics is littered with mathematical formulations predicting new phenomenon…
Thanks for the excerpt of the study, it is interesting. As persistent stress causes visible signs of aging, for example the seemingly accelerated growth of gray hair and wrinkles of U.S presidents, it is not big a leap…
It is possible to imagine a potential casual process that leads to earlier death. What if pessimism creates a constant presence of key stress hormones (Adrenaline, Cortisol and Norepinephrine) and these are already…
To me it does not seem like it is proof by contradiction, or maybe not in the straight forward way that contradictions are used in proofs. It just happens to think about the problem in a complementary (of complement…
There is this new and very promising package that adds interactivity to plotnine graphs https://y-sunflower.github.io/ninejs/. Disclaimer: I am the author of plotnine.
Sorry for the confusion. Though, it is a mango tree in a mango garden! The continued development and maintenance of plotnine is supported by Posit, PBC, the same company behind the Tidyverse. Disclaimer: I am the author.
If you already use plotnine, or if this has piqued your interest, the next release (v0.16.0) will bring nice capabilities. You can get a sneak peek by installing the pre-release: pip install --pre plotnine Details here:…
It is a summary of a rather well known book of the same title.
See this [1] article by Martin Fowler. UML promised and pushed for more control over how much of the program it could sketch/model. 1. https://martinfowler.com/bliki/UmlMode.html
It depends on how many decimal places you are printing >>> f'{b:.54f}' 0.299999999999999988897769753748434595763683319091796875 >>> f'{x:.16g}' 0.3 >>> f'{x:.17g}' 0.29999999999999999
Plotnine uses other packages in the scientific Python ecosystem. That is probably where the abbreviations that irk you come from. In some cases those "abbreviations" have roots 20 years deep!
There is geothermal energy if it has a molten core.
An interesting note is, the footprints where formed on the supercontinent Pangea.
I think it would be helpful for discourse if you read the article in full.
May be strange at a first glance but binary/boolean logic/reasoning/quantification is just a special case of probability theory. This is covered exhaustively in Probability Theory: The Logic Science, by E.T Jaynes. And…
"One of history’s fews iron laws is that luxuries tend to become necessities and to spawn new obligations." Sapiens, By Yuval Noah Harari This quote stood out for me when I read Sapiens.
Given that Chroloquine has been around for a long time and that it is well studied, is there any merit to assume that using it was not a random idea and that it works against some other known RNA viruses?
It is not straight forward but look into the Second-Digit Benford's Law (2BL-test).
I have been through this path of trying to figure out why pandas Groupby is slow. It is a big bottleneck when building packages on top of pandas.
Water is a good insulator, but not a perfect insulator. If the temperature difference between the bottom and top changes so does the heat transfer and given time the effects will spread. But most important is, warm…
> or artificially cool surface ocean water Good curiosity, but they would have to put out atleast an equal amount of heat into the atmosphere! (2nd law of thermodynamics).
I recall reading a story of some bank robbers taking beta-blockers prior to the "job".
It seems unethical if you do it by gene drive. But what if you add some natural randomness to the process and other desirable objectives. Imagine a dating service with a DNA database and you can match up people whose…
Thank you, very interesting geography. Any theories on how the river broke through the mountain range, i.e. the timeline for the erosion? From my speculative chair, it looks like the river existed before the ranges.
You cannot choose your allegiance and stick with it. The reality is that there is always various types of evidence to contend with. Chances are if you were a physicist/cosmologist you would be of the same opinion as the…
> if you're calculations don't fit, then your mathematics is not suitable, so change the math before you change the physical description Physics is littered with mathematical formulations predicting new phenomenon…
Thanks for the excerpt of the study, it is interesting. As persistent stress causes visible signs of aging, for example the seemingly accelerated growth of gray hair and wrinkles of U.S presidents, it is not big a leap…
It is possible to imagine a potential casual process that leads to earlier death. What if pessimism creates a constant presence of key stress hormones (Adrenaline, Cortisol and Norepinephrine) and these are already…
To me it does not seem like it is proof by contradiction, or maybe not in the straight forward way that contradictions are used in proofs. It just happens to think about the problem in a complementary (of complement…