• 35 Posts
  • 31 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: August 18th, 2023

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  • What do you typically use your computer for? That’s going to have a major impact. If it’s pretty basic stuff (web browsing, text editing, etc) you shouldn’t have any issue. If it’s something that’s more complicated or unusual, then sometimes it’s easy to do and sometimes not, depending on what you want to do. In general, a little bit of comfort searching the web and working in the command line helps a lot with troubleshooting Linux






  • SandbagTiara2816@lemmy.dbzer0.comOPtoMemes@lemmy.mlI hate excel so much
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    2 months ago

    Every time I’ve asked ChatGPT for help coding, I’ve wound up needing to rewrite it all for myself. LLMs make baffling design decisions (because they are just paraphrasing Stack Overflow, not making actual decisions).

    I have found them helpful for turning error messages into more legible explanations of what went wrong, but AI-generated code has not been effective, in my experience


  • SandbagTiara2816@lemmy.dbzer0.comOPtoMemes@lemmy.mlI hate excel so much
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    2 months ago

    I’m not a power user, so I’m often frustrated by Excel trying to do things I don’t want it to and by its abundance of features that I’ll never use.

    And at least at my workplace, a lot of work processes use poorly-designed Excel spreadsheets for critical tasks, because it’s such a simple way to manipulate data.

    I also find that when I need to do more complicated data analysis, Excel starts to become limited, and I find Python to be a more powerful and flexible tool.


















  • It’s convention, I think. If I remember correctly, you always put y on the left, because you can also write equations as functions of a variable, x, with the symbology f(x) = mx + b. That way you can integrate and derive the function easily, since m and b are constants, and all your x variables are on one side.

    If I were to encounter x = my + b, the first thing I would do, just by nature at this point, would be to convert it to y = (x - b) / m.

    It’s been a while since I took math, and I was never the best, so others should feel free to correct me.