Any european competiton to OpenAI is welcome , good to see Mistral coming with a new model for programming, Codestral. https://mistral.ai/news/codestral/
The TidyDensity package now includes new functions to calculate the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) for various distributions, streamlining model quality assessment. Use functions like util_negative_binomial_aic() to automate AIC calculations, ensuring precise model evaluation.
To be completely fair, thread safety and atomics are advanced topics.
Several humans I have interviewed for engineering positions would also have a lot of trouble answering these questions. I couldn't write this code on a whiteboard without looking at the Rust library docs.
The main problem here is that the model is making up poor excuses to justify Arc<AtomicUsize>, showing poor reasoning skills.
Larger models like #GPT4 should do better with my #Rust#coding questions (haven't tried yet).
📊 Enhance Your Excel Skills with R! 📊 I wrote an R function using RDCOMClient to count sheets in an Excel workbook.
This tool automates Excel tasks, boosting productivity. Learn more techniques like this in my new book co-authored with David Kun: "Extending Excel with Python and R." Discover practical tips to enhance your data analysis skills. Get your copy here: https://packt.link/oTyZJ
Easily retrieve and analyze CMS metadata with customizable searches using .title, .keyword, and .modified_date. Choose data versions ("current", "archive", "all") and filter by media type ("all", "csv", "API", "other"). It returns a tidy tibble with essential metadata.
»Prusti is an automated program verifier for Rust, based on the Viper infrastructure. It leverages Rust's strong type guarantees to simplify the specification and verification of Rust programs.«
Do any of you know this and use it or are there "better" or even integrated tools for this, if such a thing is needed at all?
Trying to work on my couch for the day. See how it goes.
I usually have two 4K monitors attached to the MacBook and have the MacBook open to use the additional space. But I usually have to manage a dev team. On Friday it’s usually much quieter and I can focus on my dev stuff.
If I work on private projects I do it often from the couch so I know it's doable in theory.
I always have the option to switch to my desk so I guess it's fine.
But the goal is to find a good workflow to only work on one screen from time to time to be more flexible with where I work. For example: I never worked in a café and would like to try this one day.
Learn how to handle rows in R containing specific strings using base R's grep() and dplyr's filter() with str_detect(). Select or drop rows efficiently and enhance your data manipulation skills. Give it a try with your datasets for better data cleaning and organization.
Basically its some PHP that generates very simple/awful web pages with a CSV file as a data source (yeah it should be an SQLite DB or just statically generated data - I know) to act as random bingo cards to play along with the election, cross them off as they lose their seats :)
Code drunk, debug sober. Bah! Just fixed three bugs after a pint of Tundra.
(This is in no way meant to be role model behaviour. There just happens to be a lovely pub by the seashore in Bray where you can sit outside and it’s a nice distraction in the evenings when the weather is good and I don’t feel I’ve done enough in the day* and need a change of scene.)
It doesn’t help that I never think I’ve done enough in the day. 🤷♂️
I did a write up of setting up Webmentions on my site! I had mentioned it earlier, but there was one stumbling block that took me longer to figure out.
Webmentions let me get notified when people share my posts, respond to my comments on other sites, etc., and lets me use my site for a lot of the kinds of interactions I'd otherwise have to do on social media.