theoretically you can introduce new words to be more precise, for example eskimos have many words for snow, from (1) that is because they use polysynthesis: a base word is attached to many different suffixes which…
I think that when law is introduced the consequences are not clear so the small print is used to introduce modifications to the rules, so the problem is about adapting a rule to the everyday use of it.
> What does volume mean in higher dimensions? I think you need a scalar product to define volume. But fuzzy thinking an analogy: Think friendship, define three concepts related to friendship and that they are…
> Like, you can inscribe a circle inside a square and have it touch all sides without extending outside the square, and you can similarly “inscribe” a sphere inside a cube such that the sphere touches all sides of the…
I tried to use the demo of the github page, but it doesn't work. It seems the page is stalemate since 2013.
What language don't require type annotations to achieve good performance?, more specifically tell me any programming language that can beat sbcl at speed without using type annotations.
theoretically you can introduce new words to be more precise, for example eskimos have many words for snow, from (1) that is because they use polysynthesis: a base word is attached to many different suffixes which…
I think that when law is introduced the consequences are not clear so the small print is used to introduce modifications to the rules, so the problem is about adapting a rule to the everyday use of it.
> What does volume mean in higher dimensions? I think you need a scalar product to define volume. But fuzzy thinking an analogy: Think friendship, define three concepts related to friendship and that they are…
> Like, you can inscribe a circle inside a square and have it touch all sides without extending outside the square, and you can similarly “inscribe” a sphere inside a cube such that the sphere touches all sides of the…
I tried to use the demo of the github page, but it doesn't work. It seems the page is stalemate since 2013.
What language don't require type annotations to achieve good performance?, more specifically tell me any programming language that can beat sbcl at speed without using type annotations.