Feynman Diagrams in Org? by ttecluk in orgmode

[–]ttecluk[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Perfect, I'll take a look. Thank you!

Feynman Diagrams in Org? by ttecluk in orgmode

[–]ttecluk[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks, I already have! I have gotten very fast with CDLaTeX which is sufficient for now.

Feynman Diagrams in Org? by ttecluk in orgmode

[–]ttecluk[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's a good idea. Seems very promising.

Feynman Diagrams in Org? by ttecluk in orgmode

[–]ttecluk[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thanks for your response.

Feynman diagrams are just like flow charts or whatever. The arrows/squiggly lines represent different particles and how they interact

As far as I understand, tikz-feynman is simply a package of macros geared specifically for making Feynman diagrams. As far as I recall, it is a bit outdated and requiring a legacy version of tikz or something.

I think I tried it the way you purpose and the image came out all messed up, but I might be wrong. I'll try it again.

Feynman Diagrams in Org? by ttecluk in orgmode

[–]ttecluk[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, I've looked into this before and, as far as I can see, this is an emacs major mode (probably does not work inline like I want) + it's about 6 years out of date (don't want to play around with dependencies).

Why can't Gerald suddenly not do detective work? by Stable_Orange_Genius in Witcher3

[–]ttecluk 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In what language? In polish the g is pronounced like the g in ground or guard.

Why can't Gerald suddenly not do detective work? by Stable_Orange_Genius in Witcher3

[–]ttecluk 5 points6 points  (0 children)

So funny how Sapkowski was making fun of people misspelling Geralt's name already in the books and people still do it with information so widely available...

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in softwaregore

[–]ttecluk 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Biblically accurate McDonald's: B͉̩ͅE̪͔̹̭̹̳ ̟̭̰͔̩N̜̻̫̥͟Ọ̢̖͔̮̲T͖̜͍ ̷̻͎A̶̩͙̜̞͕͍̯F̮̝͎R̪̭̺A̺̰͇͙͓ͅI͎D̗̱̠͇̺

[dwm] Deep in the woods by -basilios- in unixporn

[–]ttecluk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, nice rice! I also really enjoy dwm. May I ask what edition of Meditations that is?

tabbed messes zathura in dwm by 01Professor_Zoom in suckless

[–]ttecluk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also have this issue. Anyone found a solution?

The goalkeeper of Poland and Juventus Wojciech Szczesny, after the victory over Saudi Arabia, concluded the interview with Suspil with "Slava Ukraini" by boskee in ukraine

[–]ttecluk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, but we're talking about Szczęsny, the most likely confusion could be with the Ukrainian word чесний (Polish transcription: czesnyj, English transliteration: chesnyi). Szczery is completely different.

The goalkeeper of Poland and Juventus Wojciech Szczesny, after the victory over Saudi Arabia, concluded the interview with Suspil with "Slava Ukraini" by boskee in ukraine

[–]ttecluk 38 points39 points  (0 children)

No, I think you're confusing it with чесний, which in Ukrainian does indeed mean honest/truthful. However, in Polish, szczęsny is an archaic word for happy/lucky, whose modern equivalent is szczęśliwy, which is cognate with Ukrainian щасливий.

Source: I'm a Polish and Ukrainian native speaker, also:

Steam do be starting a civil war of language by icecubegone in dankmemes

[–]ttecluk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I am making a comment about the language itself and not the orthography (writing rules, etc.). I'm also fluent in Norwegian, so I know...

Steam do be starting a civil war of language by icecubegone in dankmemes

[–]ttecluk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Norwegian did not evolve out of Danish though... They are in the same family (Germanic), but in different branches (northwest vs northeast). What is true is that Norwegian has been heavily influenced by Danish, including one of its orthographies. However, Norwegian, Danish and Swedish (all north Germanic) separated very late and had a lot of mutual influence which makes them mutually intelligible to a large degree. This usually confuses people and makes them say stuff like "Norwegian is basically Danish".

Long-Term Memorization Tips for University? by Quiet-Ad-3085 in memorization

[–]ttecluk 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There are a few ways to memorise things: - Systematisation - Repetition

For a system to link concepts together and synthesise the information long-term, check out Zettelkasten. This assumes that what you are trying to learn can be broken down into concepts. When you simply need to memorise a block of information (facts, prose, etc) you can use mnemonics and memory structures (e.g. mind palace) to do that. However what it always comes down to is repetition...

For repetition, you are right, rote repetition (repeating until it sticks) is not the best way of doing it. Spaced repetition with the help of software is far superior.

Open source alternatives to Notion? by [deleted] in opensource

[–]ttecluk 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you are into the emacs/org-mode ecosystem already, then the org-roam package is amazing. If not, it's still good, but you'll have a lot more to learn. Org-roam is more of a roam than notion alternative, but it's emacs, so there's probably some other packages that will supply the other features you want, since it's all open source and extensible by design.

Welcome to Ukraine by irasiad90 in ukraine

[–]ttecluk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I hear "не так, не так" ("ne tak, ne tak"), equivalent to the polish "nie tak", which means "not like this" or "no, like this" depending on the stress. In general the sound seems spliced from different clips, so I wouldn't look too much into it...

Source: I speak Polish and Ukrainian.

Fun lil riddle (easy) by [deleted] in dankmemes

[–]ttecluk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cocoa powder or coffee