The {summarytools} #rstats 📦 aims to:
“Provide a coherent set of easy-to-use descriptive functions [like] those in commercial statistical software suites such as SAS, SPSS, and Stata
“Offer flexibility in terms of output format & content
“Integrate well with commonly used software & tools for reporting”
Results can be displayed in console or rendered/saved as HTML, plain text, or R Markdown. By Dominic Comtois https://htmlpreview.github.io/?https://github.com/dcomtois/summarytools/blob/master/doc/introduction.html #EDA@rstats
The plotting, statistical, and data selection tools in the mapdata.py data explorer (https://pypi.org/project/mapdata/) can be used even if you don't have any map data. Just add dummy latitude and longitude values to the data table. Zeroes will do. The map and the dummy columns can both be hidden, and you can then explore the data table with the other available tools.
Sounds like a healthy majority, right?
The obstructive Republican controlled House went on recess without addressing the bill. Speaker Johnson has said he would not bring it to a vote.
Is it hopeless for Ukraine?
Turns out: not entirely.
The US is selling #Greece $ 8.6 bn worth of fighter planes. As a deal sweetener, Biden is throwing in, for “free”, a bunch of military vessels / vehicles / planes.
All this hardware is U.S. military surplus—and Biden can dispose of it under a U.S. legal authority called “excess defense articles.”
The law caps annual #EDA transfers at $500 million. The same law doesn’t dictate the value the president assigns to surplus weapons.
The {explore} #rstats 📦 aims to offer “faster insights with less code for experienced R users.” It features interactive data exploration, automated reports, and a few key functions like describe, explain & abtest.
“Exploring a fresh new dataset is exciting. Instead of searching for syntax, use all your attention searching for interesting patterns in your data, using just a handful easy to remember functions.” By Roland Krasser https://rolkra.github.io/explore/ #EDA@rstats
The terrible human toll in Gaza has many causes.
A chilling investigation by +972 highlights efficiency:
An engineer: “When a 3-year-old girl is killed in a home in Gaza, it’s because someone in the army decided it wasn’t a big deal for her to be killed.”
An AI outputs "100 targets a day". Like a factory with murder delivery:
"According to the investigation, another reason for the large number of targets, and the extensive harm to civilian life in Gaza, is the widespread use of a system called “Habsora” (“The Gospel”), which is largely built on artificial intelligence and can “generate” targets almost automatically at a rate that far exceeds what was previously possible. This AI system, as described by a former intelligence officer, essentially facilitates a “mass assassination factory.”"
"The third is “power targets,” which includes high-rises and residential towers in the heart of cities, and public buildings such as universities, banks, and government offices."
It was easier to locate the individuals in their private houses.
“We were not interested in killing operatives only when they were in a military building or engaged in a military activity. On the contrary, the IDF bombed them in homes without hesitation, as a first option. It’s much easier to bomb a family’s home. The system is built to look for them in these situations.”
“There is no one perfect EDA package that suits all needs for any dataset. DataExplorer has some robust features, particularly in this usecase the correlation heatmap and the scatterplots. I loved the native reports and shiny app in explorer. … skimr is also very useful.” A look at exploratory data analysis in R by @Greg_Dubrow: https://www.gregdubrow.io/posts/exploring-happiness-eda/
These releases bring some bug fixes, as well as a workaround for extremely broken aperture macro handling in the software stack of a certain cheap pcb fab when rotating KiCad nightly files using gerbonara.
The bug in question affects JLCPCB. When you present them with a Gerber aperture macro that contains arithmetic expressions, they will parse and render the file without any hint that something is wrong, but will simply ignore all parentheses in the macro's arithmetic experessions, resulting in complete garbage for most non-trivial expressions. Gerbonara-generated files would be affected by this since KiCad nightly started to extensively use aperture macros for everything.
I'm a third year PhD student in Computer Science at an R1 university (completed MS coursework), and a dual citizen USA/EU :) Thanks for boosting! #GetFediHired
The YOLO Message-Driven architecture became a standard way of doing Messaging and is pretty straight forward to follow. Yet it does not follow the basics rules of Messaging
#Tcl (also known as Tool Command Language; pronounced as either "tickle" or as an initialism) is a high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, dynamic programming language.
It was made in 1988 by John Ousterhout and it was inspired mainly by #C, #Lisp, #Shell, #Awk and has served as one of the inspirations of #PowerShell and #Python due to its simplicity and elegance.
Tcl was designed and "born out of frustration" because John Ousterhout wanted a better language for #EDA (and especially the #VLSI tool Magic). Tcl to this day has a strong foothold in EDA. Tcl was made to be easily embeddable in #C for rapid prototyping, scripted applications, GUIs, and testing. You can find Tcl implementations for almost every operating system and due to it being lightweight it can be also seen in embedded development.