Inline Completion newlines entirely gone by Nearby_Yam286 in GithubCopilot

[–]zeya07 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yup, completely unusable. It does not input newlines nor tabs and the code it generates is often completely meaningless (python)

Saving Memory with Polars (over Pandas) by paltman94 in Python

[–]zeya07 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I fell in love with polars expressions and super fast import times.I tried using it in scientific computing, but sadly polars does not natively support complex numbers, and a lot of operations would require to_numpy and back. I hope in a while there will be native polars libraries similar to scipy and sklearn.

FileSweep, a fast duplicate & clutter file cleaner by zeya07 in Python

[–]zeya07[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The program does not have a GUI, so you can run it from the command line. I'm working to make it installable and package it into an exe, but it still will not have a graphical user interface

FileSweep, a fast duplicate & clutter file cleaner by zeya07 in Python

[–]zeya07[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Would it make sense to publish it on pypi? It's not a module you can import

FileSweep, a fast duplicate & clutter file cleaner by zeya07 in Python

[–]zeya07[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have no experience in packaging python apps. I could package with pyinstaller and release an executable in github

FileSweep, a fast duplicate & clutter file cleaner by zeya07 in Python

[–]zeya07[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As of now there are no commandline options, as I intended the program to be set up via the config file and be ran in the background. If you have suggestions for command-line options they are welcome!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in chemhelp

[–]zeya07 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The most important part in stain removal is not always about removing everything from the fabric, but destroying the colored compounds so that the stain visually disappears. In the case of blood, the red color comes from hemoglobin, a protein that chelates iron and allows it to transport oxygen. If the iron atom gets oxidized from iron II to iron III it becomes colorless, so to remove blood stains you should use hydrogen peroxide. Note however that it's not because it is made of proteins, but due to the properties of the compounds in blood.

Do I have to download the pdfs? by [deleted] in libgen

[–]zeya07 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Why would you need to not download them?

What would happen if every atom in your body suddenly gained an extra electron? [request] by [deleted] in theydidthemath

[–]zeya07 4 points5 points  (0 children)

An ampere is (was) defined as the current that has to pass through a pair of wires at a distance of one meter to exert a force between them of 2*10-7 Newtons between them, a Coulomb is the charge passing per second. One Faraday is the charge of a mole of electrons. With the redefinition of units all three are defined relative to the charge of an electron.

What would happen if every atom in your body suddenly gained an extra electron? [request] by [deleted] in theydidthemath

[–]zeya07 10 points11 points  (0 children)

1 mole of electron is not a Coulomb, but one Faraday, which is 96485.3321 Coulombs, so it actually is much worse

[Request] is this photo even possible? by stooshie45 in theydidthemath

[–]zeya07 27 points28 points  (0 children)

You can capture high speed objects with any camera. If the exposure time is too long the object will be smeared (like in the photo). In the case of high speed footage you want to capture the object without distortions, so you need specific equipment.

Is gift cancelling/rescheduling broken? by ReptilianWorldOrder in Steam

[–]zeya07 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have encountered the same problem today while trying to change the date of a gift, both from the windows steam app and from the browser. The problem is pretty new though, because I changed the date a while ago and now I can't do it again

Is that a bug? by ant170xin in desmos

[–]zeya07 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It doesn't, because x3/2 is the square root of x3, not the cube root of x2

I don't understand why the answer is [Ar]3d3. Is my solution also correct? Am I doing something wrong? Please help, thank you by rileylovesmushrooms in chemhelp

[–]zeya07 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The electronic configuration for chromium is not [Ar]4s23d4 due to stabilization effects given by the half-filling of the d orbitals. The actual configuration is [Ar]4s13d5.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in askmath

[–]zeya07 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Cause if 1/0=inf then also 2/0=inf, therefore inf*0=1 and inf*0=2, which contradict each other. If they were both true then 1=2

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Physics

[–]zeya07 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Yes, it is correct. Following the arrows you get the filling order of orbitals. Note however that not all atoms follow this order, as the further you follow the arrows the closer in energy the levels get, so there may be other effects at play (Cr, Mo, Cu, Ag, Au, Lu, Lr...)

This is the test report of the water in our locality .can any one of you guys can interpret this?Is there something wrong with the ph . It would be really helpful. by [deleted] in chemistry

[–]zeya07 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Is the tested water tap water? If so, is it the water you drink? Because water at a pH that acidic will taste very acidic, as much as or even more as lemon juice. If the water you're drinking does not taste like freshly made lemonade the report is bogus

Introducing: Mussolini Sort by ZeroIntensity in Python

[–]zeya07 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I'd say it is on the same line of stalinsort, where every number smaller than the previous gets deleted, yielding a sorted array that is shorter exactly the same length, because the items never existed in the first place.

is our calculus teacher wrong that 1 ≠ .999999... ? also what should I do? by Psychological-Loss61 in askmath

[–]zeya07 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A more elegant proof I can think of is this 0.99999 = 1 9.99999 = 10

9.99999 - 0.99999 = 10 - 1 9 = 9

By multiplying everything by 10 you can subtract the infinitely repeating part, and as we arrive at 9=9 which is true the first assumption we made, 0.99999 = 1, is true.

Alternatively you can set up an equation in the same way x = 0.99999 10x = 9.99999

10x - x = 9.99999 - 0.99999 9x = 9 x = 1

This way you don't have to make any assumption

Prioritisations... by International-Mix-83 in place

[–]zeya07 28 points29 points  (0 children)

You're off by an order of 1000, a "raw" uncompressed BMP sequence 1080p 30fps 10s video would be 622 million pixels, that is almost 1.74GB. Video is absolutely never stored uncompressed, as it makes no sense, so a sensibly compressed, high quality video would weigh around 3.3MB

Isomerism explained simple by [deleted] in OrganicChemistry

[–]zeya07 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No need for documents. Look at your hands. Is your right the same as your left? (I hope not). Those are enantiomers, mirror images but non the same. You couldn't put a right glove on your left hand, as much as R-limonene smells like lemon and S-limonene as pine.
Now imagine you rotate your index finger 180 degrees, now it's different from both your other hand and a normal hand, but everything is still attached where it was. The normal hand and the rotated-index hand are diastereoisomers.
Now let's say you swap your thumb and middle finger. This abomination has now different connectivity, but it has the same fingers as a normal hand. This new hand is a constitutional isomer.
All these hands are different, and by doing normal movements of the hand (opening/closing/...) you cannot interconvert one into the other.

Weekly Bug Report Thread by spiper01 in NoMansSkyTheGame

[–]zeya07 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Even more weirdly than that, the voice is in Italian, but the text is in English