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For me it's Alien (a horror film in outta space) & Aliens (A war movie in the style of Zulu) Alien3 and on are not worth a Cinema ticket in my view.
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I agree
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Too scary for me
In a closed society where everybody's guilty, the only crime is getting caught. In a world of thieves, the only final sin is stupidity. - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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OriginalGriff wrote: Romulus
Given the name, I was expecting another Star Trek movie/show.
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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or Ridley Scott still on a Roman vibe with a sequel called Remus.
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So, a follow-up to Star Trek: Nemesis[^] then?
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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I'm quite a fan of the Alien/Predator/Prometheus movies. Prey didn't have much of a story either but I still enjoyed it.
Hopefully this adds a bit more to the AvP universe.
// TODO: Insert something here Top ten reasons why I'm lazy
1.
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Mind you just thinking about, the ship in Prometheus was the original design for the bridge in Alien, just cost too much money to build so they went for lots of small light bulbs and industrial look. Which to my mind is how it should look, container ships look that way as they are functional rather than pretty. Which follows my mantra of Pretty's nice, ugly works!
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Until a light on an all-black panel lights up black...
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Dang, the target users were not Voguns or have a lack of taste, so black on black not sure an issue!
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Message Removed
modified 21-Mar-24 2:04am.
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Message Removed
modified 21-Mar-24 2:04am.
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but I stand corrected.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Not sure if this counts as a programming question, since I'm not asking for code but rather preference. I'm in a project that requires complete accuracy on numbers. So, given the following...
We all know the famous of examples of stuff like this:
0.1 + 0.2
Up until now, I've been content with rounding off any operations after the fact and calling it a day, as close enough was good enough. For applications, say that deal with currency, the age old trick is to just use integers based on a cent value. So, a $1.23 would be stored as 123 in a variable. Sweet, but, consider this:
12345 / 225
If I move along powers of the base, I never run into issues. But for your typical run of the mill calculations, even with integers, you still have to deal with fractional floating points in the arithmetic.
So, I've been using integers and rounding off any calculations to their nearest integer value. Maybe sometimes I'll floor or ceil depending on context, but that's been my current solution, which is a lot more accurate but not 100% accurate. But, good enough-ish.
Soooo....
1) You guys prefer using a library to handle stuff like this? IMO I don't use one for arithmetic because most libraries for this (at least in JavaScript) are clunky and slow and don't really do a better job anyway.
2) You think integers and rounding is also the way to go? Keeps crap simple and all that, despite needing to remember to always round after division calculations or calculations against fractional types.
3) Never do arithmetic? Tell the user to go home.
Jeremy Falcon
modified 20-Mar-24 22:18pm.
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integers with rounding (really a form of fixed decimal) is ok, but with money there may be accounting rules for rounding.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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jmaida wrote: but with money there may be accounting rules for rounding Yeah, fortunately, for this application at least... that's not a concern. I think...
Jeremy Falcon
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Then I agree, integers with rounding is simple and should work for most applications.
Consistency is key. Pick a precision and stick with it.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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I would argue that “complete accuracy on numbers” doesn’t exist. 1/3 cannot be represented exactly. You can do tricks like working with fractions and postponing the actual division until the very end, but in the end, if you have to print the result, you will have to print an approximation.
Mircea
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Fair enough. But the approach of using integers and rounding after the fact... that be your favorite? Does it give you warm fuzzies?
Jeremy Falcon
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No, my favorite would be to work with rational objects (I use c++ most of the time). A library for operations with those can probably be found easily, or I can whip my own without much effort.
Edit: As expected, first Google hit was Rational Number Library - 1.58.0[^]
Mircea
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If I understand you correctly, then you'd be in favor of your own library/class/etc. to wrap this then? For JavaScript, there's no way I'd use most libraries as they're too bloated for this. Rolling one's own would be an option, but the end result would still use approximation inside the rational class right, if there was an expression that involved a floating point?
Keep in mind, I'm not a math major.
Jeremy Falcon
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No approximation until the very end. You keep numerator and denominator integer values and you operate with those as you learned to do it with fractions in high school.
Edit again: a few days ago I had to do something like that in JavaScript but for complex numbers. If you are interested, it’s here: Numerical Examples - Modified Stereographic Conformal Projection[^]
Mircea
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Gotcha
Jeremy Falcon
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I found the good link for the JS code I was talking about before: https://neacsu.net/js/mod_stereo.js[^] Look at the complex class and you can probably model a rational one based on that.
Mircea
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Thanks for the link. My only concern with doing stuff like that, is if I start using arrays to store the fractional parts, this app is gonna slow down. Keep in mind, for this app it'll need to do thousands (potentially) of calculations per second. I may just have to settle for close enough, for this specific app.
Jeremy Falcon
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