artha.org
sham_blog
http://www.artha.org/blog
Wed 21 Apr 2010 @ 12:18 (1271848683). Sometimes I need to open a few links from the terminal which are just words, so it's almost impossible to have them recognized by urxvt url matcher. This is why I've done this small script which allows you to open into your browser a piece of text previously selected on the terminal. I'm far from being an urxvt expert so if you have better solutions please write me! I have this script saved as a file named selection2browser. In my /.urxvt/perl/. 1] o, e (o(. After pl...
frank-buss.de
Triangles Challenge
http://www.frank-buss.de/challenge/index.html
This challenge is over, see Marsrescue. For a new challenge. The challenge is to write a program, which counts all triangles with area 0 in this figure: (all figures are available in PDF and Postscript, too, for printing, if someone wants to use it as a homework assignment or something like this). Graphic output is not needed, but you can do what you want. If a GUI or something else is included, would be nice to write each times: how long you needed for the pure algorithm and for the rest. Algorithm only...
guillaume-nargeot.blogspot.com
Guillaume Nargeot's Technical Blog: August 2009
http://guillaume-nargeot.blogspot.com/2009_08_01_archive.html
Guillaume Nargeot's Technical Blog. Saturday, August 22, 2009. Think twice before naming your new programming language. Smart people invent new programming languages, with powerful features, that perform really well. What else do we need? When you want to learn and use these new programming languages, you might want to buy books or to search for tutorials, code examples, blog articles, etc. I am one of those: recently, I am learning the Factor. Some work have been done to make C and C easy to search on t...
guillaume-nargeot.blogspot.com
Guillaume Nargeot's Technical Blog: On solving Project Euler - Part 2
http://guillaume-nargeot.blogspot.com/2009/09/on-solving-project-euler-part-2.html
Guillaume Nargeot's Technical Blog. Sunday, September 27, 2009. On solving Project Euler - Part 2. In the previous post. We saw that some of the Project Euler. Challenges could be solved using naive brute-force algorithms directly transcribed from their description. Today, I would like to introduce another category of problems, which is an extension to the previous one: problems that can be easily solved using mathematical software. Can handle them without you notice it. Let's take the problem 16. This i...
grammarware.github.io
Alphabet by @grammarware
http://grammarware.github.io/a-z
Alphabet created and maintained by Dr. Vadim Zaytsev.
edkeith.blogspot.com
Ed Keith: Using J : Part I - A Super Calculator
http://edkeith.blogspot.com/2010/04/using-j-part-i-super-calculator.html
Software Development, cooking, Aikido and other unrelated subjects. Tuesday, April 20, 2010. Using J : Part I - A Super Calculator. J is a VERY complex language, which takes a lot of effort to master, but doing simple things with it is easy. In this post I will demonstrate how it can be used as an advanced calculator. If you type '2 2' into J you will get the expected result of '4'. Similarly '3-2' will give the expended '1', '2*3' yields the expected '6'. Is it 4 or is it 0? Two other unusual representa...
edkeith.blogspot.com
Ed Keith: February 2007
http://edkeith.blogspot.com/2007_02_01_archive.html
Software Development, cooking, Aikido and other unrelated subjects. Monday, February 26, 2007. If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization. - Gerald Weinberg. I have heard many times that computer programs are the most complex structures ever built by man. I'm not sure what this claim is based on, but I find it hard to believe. If it were true we would see a lot more software failures than we do. Links to this post.
ewartshaw.com
Mathematics pages (Ewart Shaw)
http://ewartshaw.com/maths.html
Ewart Shaw, Keble. The story behind the photo is on facebook.
ewartshaw.com
Ewart Shaw (Dr.J.E.H.Shaw): statistics, mathematics, art, etc.
http://ewartshaw.com/index.html
Ewart Shaw (J. E. H. Shaw). I am a lecturer in statistics at Warwick University. Professional interests include Bayesian inference, medical statistics, education, computation and numerical integration. I now mainly program in J. But have in the past used C , Fortran, Pascal, Python and the other usual suspects. Personal interests include painting, photography and go. This section will eventually summarise and link to new, updated and/or popular sub-pages. Assuming, of course, that there are some. Mdash; ...
ewartshaw.com
Photography pages (Ewart Shaw)
http://ewartshaw.com/photo.html
Some of my abstract photographs, cropped to squares (click for larger image). More to come. Real soon now.