I feel the exact same way. Never will anything in my home needlessly connect to some cloud service and give away my data. And even less would I be willing to pay for that...
It is definitely useful, but it severely reduces readability in my opinion. Your example is also a great example for this. The first version in way more readable than the second version with the walrus operator.
I am in the exact same situation. I moved to Canada from Europe and it has been really tough thanks to three measly weeks of vacation. I can't remember the last time I have been on a real two+ weeks vacation somewhere…
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the standard model makes no prediction for the masses of any of the fundamental particles. To my knowledge, they are all input parameters. It might put certain bounds on them, but in the end…
Finally no Python 2.7 anymore!
Never. It's either no units (theoretical physics), eV (particle physics) or Kelvin/Celsius for experimental physics.
I don't really get this argument. People will still want to own their own car to use whenever and whereever they want. If one currently owns a car, I don't see that this would change just because one doesn't have to…
Frankly, I think the country that one should be the most concerned about pulling off a first strike is the USA, not China or Russia...
Looks about right for early high school math.
The standard model is definitely flawed in a couple of known ways.
I feel the exact same way. Never will anything in my home needlessly connect to some cloud service and give away my data. And even less would I be willing to pay for that...
It is definitely useful, but it severely reduces readability in my opinion. Your example is also a great example for this. The first version in way more readable than the second version with the walrus operator.
I am in the exact same situation. I moved to Canada from Europe and it has been really tough thanks to three measly weeks of vacation. I can't remember the last time I have been on a real two+ weeks vacation somewhere…
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the standard model makes no prediction for the masses of any of the fundamental particles. To my knowledge, they are all input parameters. It might put certain bounds on them, but in the end…
Finally no Python 2.7 anymore!
Never. It's either no units (theoretical physics), eV (particle physics) or Kelvin/Celsius for experimental physics.
I don't really get this argument. People will still want to own their own car to use whenever and whereever they want. If one currently owns a car, I don't see that this would change just because one doesn't have to…
Frankly, I think the country that one should be the most concerned about pulling off a first strike is the USA, not China or Russia...
Looks about right for early high school math.
The standard model is definitely flawed in a couple of known ways.