Some things cause (or have the risk of causing) acute damage, with others, it's chronic.
I think you could make a case that charging the highest price for something that the market will bear corrects an inefficiency in the market. http://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/inefficientmarket.asp It's not that they…
> OCR itself is a pretty CPU intensive activity and takes a significant time to complete for many documents. Leaving the quality part aside -- this job itself is easy to parallelize in that you can split it up by…
Literally the first sentence after the preamble is: I use the term “computational thinking” as shorthand for “thinking like a computer scientist.”
> The Democrats were happy to keep importing voters I think it's important not to discount the difficulty of securing the border because of the size of it. And as you mention, American companies (like Smithfield) are…
Hey, Gradescope dev here. What detaro said is on the money -- we're able to group identical short-answer responses so that they can be graded in one shot. It's not necessary to analyze the answer content for this. Many…
Thanks for the thorough answer, Dan. (Had I not followed the prescription for the sake of being future-proof, I probably would have had a painful debugging session over #3. And possibly #1 too.)
I'd like an answer to this as well. I've only ever needed string refs, and the callback refs are noisy. I can see where the React team may not want to support both, but are string refs actually bad in some way?
I can't follow Jacques' reasoning when it comes to any of this. His first choice would have been a PHP framework (in 2014!), yet he goes on to criticize a bunch of languages which have sane == operators seemingly on the…
Some things cause (or have the risk of causing) acute damage, with others, it's chronic.
I think you could make a case that charging the highest price for something that the market will bear corrects an inefficiency in the market. http://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/inefficientmarket.asp It's not that they…
> OCR itself is a pretty CPU intensive activity and takes a significant time to complete for many documents. Leaving the quality part aside -- this job itself is easy to parallelize in that you can split it up by…
Literally the first sentence after the preamble is: I use the term “computational thinking” as shorthand for “thinking like a computer scientist.”
> The Democrats were happy to keep importing voters I think it's important not to discount the difficulty of securing the border because of the size of it. And as you mention, American companies (like Smithfield) are…
Hey, Gradescope dev here. What detaro said is on the money -- we're able to group identical short-answer responses so that they can be graded in one shot. It's not necessary to analyze the answer content for this. Many…
Thanks for the thorough answer, Dan. (Had I not followed the prescription for the sake of being future-proof, I probably would have had a painful debugging session over #3. And possibly #1 too.)
I'd like an answer to this as well. I've only ever needed string refs, and the callback refs are noisy. I can see where the React team may not want to support both, but are string refs actually bad in some way?
I can't follow Jacques' reasoning when it comes to any of this. His first choice would have been a PHP framework (in 2014!), yet he goes on to criticize a bunch of languages which have sane == operators seemingly on the…