> No distinction between categorical data and strings. R thinks your strings are categories, and Pandas thinks your categories are strings. I think this is more of an R-ism than a standardization issue. Strings are a…
> That is rather rude Not my intention at all, and honestly I don't see how my comment conveys this. > Your single data point Sure, plus the countless others who lead a healthy, low-carb lifestyle. > 99.9% of humans…
> your body needs a fair amount of carbs every day, and people are cutting bad carbs without replacing them with good carbs, and thus experiencing an inescapable craving for carbs. I'm sorry but this is simply not true.…
Any thoughts on rewriting iTerm2 in Rust?
> The most sensible thing to do is to kill Go, not to improve it. Care to expand this? It's pretty clear that you don't find Go suitable for your own use cases, but I've found it to be an extremely productive language,…
> No distinction between categorical data and strings. R thinks your strings are categories, and Pandas thinks your categories are strings. I think this is more of an R-ism than a standardization issue. Strings are a…
> That is rather rude Not my intention at all, and honestly I don't see how my comment conveys this. > Your single data point Sure, plus the countless others who lead a healthy, low-carb lifestyle. > 99.9% of humans…
> your body needs a fair amount of carbs every day, and people are cutting bad carbs without replacing them with good carbs, and thus experiencing an inescapable craving for carbs. I'm sorry but this is simply not true.…
Any thoughts on rewriting iTerm2 in Rust?
> The most sensible thing to do is to kill Go, not to improve it. Care to expand this? It's pretty clear that you don't find Go suitable for your own use cases, but I've found it to be an extremely productive language,…