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Feb 19, 2020 - JavaScript
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Feb 19, 2020 - Go
Git Merge 2020
March 04, 2020 • Los Angeles
This issue will use computer science algorithms as an example but the issue is not about that specific topic but rather the implementation of ANY "track".
In addition to the three skill based tiers there should be knowledge pursuit tracks allowing new learners to move through those tiers onto related app-projects. This differs from #34 by focusing on a self directed educational go
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Feb 19, 2020 - JavaScript
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Some markdown bold syntax is incorrectly displayed.
- 예를 들면 **alt-.**같은 경우
- ctrl-v **[Tab]**키를 누르거나
It should be modified as follows.
- 예를 들면 alt-. 같은 경우
- ctrl-v [Tab] 키를 누르거나
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Feb 19, 2020 - Python
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Feb 19, 2020 - Vue
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Feb 19, 2020
A description is incomplete. It should mention:
These patterns are not competing, but complementing each other. To achieve availability, one needs both fail-over and replication.
right after
"There are two main patterns to support high availability: fail-over and replication. "
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Feb 19, 2020 - C++
One very popular alternative to these services is of course iCloud.com which offers collaboration & synchronisation with Apple devices (note that an Apple device is not required to use iCloud.com)
Currently --quiet and --verbose are opposites, where --quiet is the default option.
Given the number of websites covered by Sherlock, should --quiet be altered so that it is not the opposite of verbose but an option that displays only websites where the username has been found?
This way no options remains as it is, -v as it is, and -q as described above.
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Feb 19, 2020
I would be great to have a few real-world examples, e.g.:
- go to page
- wait for it to load
- select a specific
input[name=username] - type a username into it
- select a specific
input[name=password] - type a password into it
- take a screenshot
- select
button[name=submit](or submit) - wait for next page to load
The boilerpate for a newbie may be devastating.
E.g. the first
When a notebook is sorted by title, special chars like the German “ä”, “ö”, “ü” are placed at the very end of the list e.g.
wasser
zweifel
äpfel
They should be handled like normal char e.g. ä => a while sorting notebooks:
affe
äpfel
bett
Probably too minor to mention, but just wanted to point out in case people notice it: since the notebooks indent with two spaces and Colab expects four spaces by default, Colab will make indented text red as a warning. e.g. from lab1/Part1_tensorflow.ipynb:
, it would be helpful if you could provide examples for more advanced machine learning tasks. An outstanding feature of tensor2tensor are the numerous (and useful) examples which Trax is currently lacking. Such examples would especi