Machine learning models in medicine has biases against darker skins for identifying diseases. So I’m guessing lot of that will be there too
Machine learning models in medicine has biases against darker skins for identifying diseases. So I’m guessing lot of that will be there too
\1 is group 1 which is inside ()
, so second part is repeated 2 or more times of 2 or more char.
You forgot empty line. Since first part is ^.?$
it’s one or zero of any character.
Also, for printing configure footnote for links.
For example in latex, if I’m printing something I redefine \href
as \fn
so the text is the same but the link is on footnote.
And is harmful for people like me, who like to copy paste the pdf into a markdown file write answers there and send a rendered pdf to professors. While I keep the markdowns as my notes for everything. I’d read the text I copied.
Idk why this is so low. Kdeconnect is all about sharing information between devices, url/file even notifications. It also has remote control and ping devices.
The subtitle could have been not literal translation. The dialogue could have been “this is kanji for japan” or characters for japan. But the subtitle wrote Chinese for japan, because the movie/speaker was Chinese… Maybe
Just give cash with a note saying “money for the ski trip” or sth.
Well apple is succulent stem of apple tree. Potato is succulent root of potato plant. Root is stem inside ground. Q.E.D.
Not just semantics. PDFs doesn’t even have segmentations like spaces/lines/paragraph. It’s just text drawn at locations the text processor/any other softwares inserted into. Many pdf editor softwares just detect the closeness of the characters to group them together.
And one step further is you can convert text to path, which basically won’t even have glyph (characters) info and font info, all characters will just be geometric shapes. In that case you can’t even copy the text. OCR is your only choice.
PDF is for finalizing something and printing/sharing without the ability to edit.
Considering humans did sell humans.
Considering the current division, yes. There’s also a lot of homeschooling because they don’t want their children taught anything from ‘state’.
I’d like to say people don’t understand the difference between torturing animals vs just being curious about animals. Helping the live ones, but also looking at dead ones. Many children get bullied for that.
Cap is a genZ term. That’s cap = that’s a joke/lie/ something along that. I’m not fluent in the language.
Sorry, I forgot about this. I meant to say any sane modern language that allows unicode should use the block specifications (for e.g. to determine the alphabets, numeric, symbols, alphanumeric unicodes, etc) for similar rules with ASCII. So that they don’t have to individually support each language.
Waiting both sneezing or trying to hold back is dangerous? What are we supposed to do half-ass it?
I was thinking that exact thing lol. I’m like, yes ‘distributions’ are distributing new softwares with the new kernel.
And the improvement in desktop environments does feel like a good improvement considering the user is interacting most with it.
Or maybe I’m just apathetic to these things because most things I care about my distribution are that it provides me a good package manager for external and self made programs. And everything else is just programs installed through said package manager.
What’s called pastries though.
I thought the most mode sane and modern language use the unicode block identification to determine something can be used in valid identifier or not. Like all the ‘numeric’ unicode characters can’t be at the beginning of identifier similar to how it can’t have ‘3var’.
So once your programming language supports unicode, it automatically will support any unicode language that has those particular blocks.
For a second I didn’t think he did that because he said it, but rather he said it because he knew it the waiter should enjoy his last meal.