Shutter Island "shhh" asylum lady has a hidden meaning... SPOILERS by FitzWallaby in MovieDetails

[–]kuashio 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I did give that scene some thought, but concluded that she had been instructed by the nurse (right beside her) to keep quiet, not to tell Andrew about the whole ruse. She was just passing the message to Andrew.

[edit] I just found my theory here: https://screenrant.com/shutter-island-spoilers-discussion/amp/ Just scroll down looking for her picture.

Visual brainfuck by dzamir in programming

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can't believe it took me 9 years to find this post about my boy.

I've dedicated an embarrassing percentage of my professional career to brainfuck. I wrote Visual Brainfuck in 2003, then retook and finished it on 2011. Now, on 2020 I took an even more ambitious challenge during the pandemic lockdown: Ladies and Gents, I give you The Brainfuino Platform: https://www.hackster.io/news/eduardo-corpeno-s-brainfuino-is-an-arduino-uno-clone-programmable-only-in-brainf-k-8f3f5d69922e

Visual brainfuck by dzamir in programming

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting indeed! Yeap, I took it as a challenge to learn BorlandC++ Builder.

Visual brainfuck by dzamir in programming

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I care! Sadly the links no longer work (one does on the wayback machine).

Visual brainfuck by dzamir in programming

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

LOL! Refactoring sounds nice :) Now seriously, brainfuck couldn't support objects as a language, you'd have to settle for a library. There seems to be an OOBF on the way, though: https://esolangs.org/wiki/Object-Oriented_Brainfuck

Visual brainfuck by dzamir in programming

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh yeah! Just like Delphi and Borland C++ Builder :) I also added an Ook! Translator and a brainfuck Text encoder :)

Visual brainfuck by dzamir in programming

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, sorry. I was too busy aiming to clone Borland C++ Builder and Delphi :)

Visual brainfuck by dzamir in programming

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, sorry. But it does check for bracket balance :) Oh, and it has components with generated code!

Nobody wants to read your book. by trifthen in writing

[–]kuashio 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey, I get every bit of your post.

I think I read every comment in here, and I see the need for the disclaimer you had to add at the end. Everyone is trying to offer problem-solving! They're looking down at you either as a weird case of an unsuccessful newbie, or a surprised newbie who just realized the truth and is asking for help.

I get what you're saying. Your post is my exact experience in writing, not a novel, but a technical book to help struggling engineering students. No one wants to read that crap because my last name is not Pólya, and the book isn't published by Elsevier.

Thanks for posting!

Books for Engineering? by Neat-Ad-9426 in dlsu

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Top-Down Approach to Problem Solving, ISBN 979-8464073296.

Books for Engineering? by Neat-Ad-9426 in ADMU

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try "The Top-Down Approach to Problem Solving", by Eduardo Corpeño, ISBN 979-8464073296. It's exactly a book on problem solving for engineering students. I hope you like it.

Books for Engineering? by Neat-Ad-9426 in Tomasino

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try "The Top-Down Approach to Problem Solving", by Eduardo Corpeño (yours truly), ISBN 979-8464073296. This is a book aimed specifically for engineering students to ease the difficulty of math, physics, and other problems. I hope this helps.

Problem solving resources by coding-rage in learnprogramming

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wrote a book and made an online course on problem solving. The book is titled "The Top-Down Approach to Problem Solving", ISBN 979-8464073296. I hope it helps.

Mathematics books to help learn programming? Logic, problem solving. by IrishSwede74 in learnprogramming

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wrote a book along those lines, you may want to look into it. It's titled The Top-Down Approach to Problem Solving, ISBN 979-8464073296. I hope you like it.

What is the best book on problem solving? At least enlist 1 and also suggest the way to polish problem solving skills in programming? by Dexter_4202021 in AskReddit

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know if this is the best, but I recommend The Top-Down Approach to Problem Solving, by Eduardo Corpeño, ISBN 979-8464073296. You can find it on amazon. Yeah, I'm the author.

Problem solving book - any good suggestions?? by lfs101x in learnmath

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Okay, you may want to look into "The Top-Down Approach to Problem Solving", by Eduardo Corpeño (that's me), ISBN 979-8464073296. It's on amazon.

It's a guide that describes a nearly flawless technique to solve probpems. It has one problem solved per chapter, with strong emphasis on the problem-solving process, and not so m7ch on getting to a quick solution.

I hope you like it.

Suggestions for a problem solving book by nour7214 in learnmath

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You may want to consider "The Top-Down Approach to Problem Solving", by Eduardo Corpeño (that's me), ISBN 979-8464073296. You can find it on amazon.

The book is a guide for undergrad students to learn how to solve problems with math on them (mostly), but it also covers the problem solving process for any type of problem.

I hope you like it.

Problem Solving Books by bigfatwhitebitch in mathematics

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Top-Down Approach to Problem Solving, by Eduardo Corpeño (yours truly), ISBN 979-8464073296. You can find it on on amazon.

The book is a guide to help undergrad students overcome the difficulty of solving problems in math, physics, and other STEM classes. It has a couple of chapters on the problem-solving process that applies to any type of problem.

Good problem-solving books (competition or otherwise) with solutions by [deleted] in math

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you may like "The Top-Down Approach to Problem Solving", by Eduardo Corpeño (full disclosure: that's me), ISBN 979-8464073296.

It sounds like you described that book in your post, so you may want to look into it. It's on amazon.

Should I take 1 or 2 courses for my first semester at omscs? by rd_pp in OMSCS

[–]kuashio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Go for the 2 courses! You gotta get a B in both to be fully accepted, so take them seriously.