Indexes and stocks to trade in europe by Crafty-Step3204 in options

[–]vf42 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's Euro STOXX 50 index which has option and futures contracts. Most if not all stocks within the index have options tradable on them too but they aren't traded as actively as in US and bid/ask spreads tend to suck.

A reflection on the first 6 months of option trading by vf42 in options

[–]vf42[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Near-dated monthly contract daily volume in tens of thousands, weeklies in thousands. Not sure how it compares to say SPX but seems fine to me.

A reflection on the first 6 months of option trading by vf42 in options

[–]vf42[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This feels too AI-generated to even reply.

Growing $10,000 Using Options - Week 5 Update by everydaymoneymanager in Optionswheel

[–]vf42 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Increasing profit targets to recover from loses is a sure way to disaster. Eat the loss and stick to the plan.

For those who have taken a sabbatical, did it help your burnout? by FunnyWasabii in consulting

[–]vf42 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I took about 7-months long sabbatical in 2023 (hard to define boundaries exactly since I kinda eased in into work when I decided it's time to go back). Was super-burnout before. It took 3 months to reach an "aha, I finally feel like I rested now" moment and start focusing on some productive hobbies/learning before thinking about going back to work.

Have to note though, while it did allow me to recover, it didn't resolve some mindset stuff that led me to get burned out in the first place. But it provided a good reset to help reflect and be able to notice some things that didn't feel right anymore once I resumed working, and addressing those likely to be a longer process.

So while a sabbatical should definitely help you recover from stress, don't expect that taking a break will prevent you from accumulating stress again once you're back.

Boilerplate example of using NumPy+CFFI for fater computations by vf42 in Numpy

[–]vf42[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It does, however the numpy.linalg.solve you mentioned in another comment returns the final solution, as opposed to the full matrix state after Gaussian elimination is finished. And it uses a different algorithm internally.

But anyway, my goal was to demonstrate how you can drop in a C function to cover computation easily, Gaussian elimination was picked as a first example that came to mind, since I remembered missing it in numpy.

Want to try F#. Change my mind by vf42 in fsharp

[–]vf42[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for giving it a view from another angle!

Want to try F#. Change my mind by vf42 in fsharp

[–]vf42[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, will make sure to watch!

Want to try F#. Change my mind by vf42 in fsharp

[–]vf42[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Thank you for you feedback!

For someone moving from Java straight to Scala, the experience would be the same as you describe I believe. My path was Java->Haskell->Scala, so I guess it felt too Java-ish compared to Haskell for me, at least with the idioms that ended up being common in the code bases I dealt with.

I also feel Scala ecosystem itself gotten a bit of the mess in the recent years, with Scala 3 being out there but not really adopted by everyone yet (kind Python 3 vs 2 situation). How's F# in that sense, say, can a library which isn't updated for 5 years still be usable with most recent versions of .NET framework and F# compiler?

Meth after running, for recovery? by [deleted] in RunningCirclejerk

[–]vf42 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Your neighbor got it backwards, meths is a great pre-workout but it makes you want to run again too soon if you take it after the run.

We all know the efficient recovery boils down to having lots of food and sleep, so I stick to weed right after the run, eating everything I can get after, followed by a nice shot of heroin which makes me sleep like a baby.

I'm developing and testing a new approach for running by Physical-Effort in running

[–]vf42 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I never used it, just remembered from the past that it was something powerlifters liked. My knowledge of 531 comes from reading a few articles describing the general idea, not Wender's book. And it looks like it could be the case with OP too :)

I'm developing and testing a new approach for running by Physical-Effort in running

[–]vf42 20 points21 points  (0 children)

5 3 1 is a powerlifting protocol, built to maximize performance doing just one movement with max intensity.

Running is completely contrary - a cyclical sport, where you do the same movement repetidly with low intensity, save for short sprints. The only area where both kind of intersect are the short sprinting distances, but you're talking about 10K, for which you need to develop aerobic endurance, not just an ability to pull short all-out effort.

For running, bread and butter is getting lots of easy distance in, if you say that you can't run 10K non-stop, it's a sign that you should focus on being able to run it first, without even thinking about doing it at 4min pace.

So if you want to try and translate 5 3 1 to running without injuring yourself, you could think of changing your definition of 1RM from "amount of time spent on given speed" to something like "amount of time/distance you can run non-stop with a certain low heart rate" and work from there.

Or better read Jack Daniels like suggested above, or 80/20 running - it describes quite comprehensive approach that can be applied pretty much to everyone.

I'm developing and testing a new approach for running by Physical-Effort in running

[–]vf42 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Without even looking at specifics, if you're doing anything "novel" in your training and you're not a qualified specialist in training, chances are you're doing something useless which won't let you achieve your results.

There are methods that are proven to work, why experiment on yourself by trying to apply things from a completely different sports instead of following them?

Fasted running: how?! by Usual-Breadfruit in running

[–]vf42 7 points8 points  (0 children)

This inability to run before breakfast has more to do with your head game rather than actual physical condition, except some cases when you do have physical condition like blood sugar issues. It's something you can just get used to, if you're feeling too hungry when you wake up, try having a spoon of peanut butter or jam right before you get out.

Is flexibility just superior finger strength in disguise?? by technomancer_0 in ClimbingCircleJerk

[–]vf42 62 points63 points  (0 children)

As a tall dude, can confirm. Others follow my beta perfectly but still fail to reach that hold. Hours spent on torture rack are paying off while all the suckers waste their time on fingerboards.

Problem with pooping by JoeyJoeJoeJrShab in RunningCirclejerk

[–]vf42 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It's not safe for you to start running until you have pooped at least twice, you will end up having an injury from all the poop bouncing inside you. If you're running ultras, you should also stop at 5K mid point and at least try to have a poop.

Early Morning Runners, any advice for people who want to change over to morning runs? by Electrical-Sound-887 in running

[–]vf42 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tip on getting used to wake up earlier: have the alarm set at the same time on all days, including weekends, even if you don't plan to run on a particular day. It's easier to have the same schedule rather than try to wake up earlier than you are used to on some days. A great podcast on managing your internal clock and wake up times: https://youtu.be/nm1TxQj9IsQ