This is so cool. I will definitely be keeping an eye on this!
This is so cool. I will definitely be keeping an eye on this!
Well of course. Those bastards want everyone to use their stupid WebP format.
On a related note, how does JPEGXL compare to PNG? Does it support layers?
Thank you for explaining!
versus globally
So is this a matter of personal profiles? Userspace would be anything within a particular user’s space, if you will?
Not OP, but speaking as a Linux newb, what is a “userspace” exactly?
Lmao, that tldr is fucking GLORIOUS.
This isn’t IRL, though.
Goddammit why are there so many YouTube videos being posted lately…?
But then with Python we can have more complex “formulas”. For example, we can say laugh = “Ho” * 3
Yeah, you can multiply a string. The result is that print(laugh) prints “HoHoHo”.
Okay, that’s just fucking cool. :3
That’s a good point! That is something I’ve noticed. Traditional mathematics uses PEMDAS, which is bidirectional, but Python uses…PEMDRAS, I guess, which is...bi-monodirectional(?), that is, left-to-right in all cases, except in the exception of variables which is right-to-left.
I swear this makes sense to me. My brain just thinks weirdly. Haha.
Oh!
I think I’ve not quite gotten to that part yet in the lesson. Lol.
But it’s good to know, so thanks for pointing that out! I’ll be sure to remember it when I get to that point. Haha.
Thanks!
That’s pretty cool. It’s almost like a…time-based Excel function! Lol.
That’s so cool! Thank you!
...I am confuzzled and slightly afraid. :|
So input(x) prints out x and then puts itself into a waiting mode of sorts, waiting for the user to supply a value, and then once it has that value it outputs that particular value.
Am I right?
I think I misworded my thoughts, to be honest.
As I understand it:
int(2.1) would print out 2 since it just converts it to an integer by truncating it.
float(2) would print out 2.0 since it just converts it to a floating-point value by appending a .0 to the end.
Oh! I get it now!
It’s because while int() and float() are instantaneous, while input() uses the fourth dimension, time, and thus depends on a future input by the user. (May not make sense the way I’m putting it, but it makes sense to me. Lol.) In other words, while float() and int() have all the data they need to produce an output (i.e. what’s in the parentheses), input() “outputs” the text in the parentheses, then puts itself into a pending state to await further user input, then outputs that second user input.
Am that about the right of it? :)
I will check that link out. Thank you. :)