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Joe Woodbury wrote: Did you protest this as well?
Wow - way to go entirely off-topic!
PooperPig - Coming Soon
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_Maxxx_ wrote:
Wow - way to go entirely off-topic!
I thought you were embarrassed by people being persecuted for their religion. If this isn't true, then clarify your indignation.
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I apologise - I saw the source of your link & thought the incident was in the uk
The two things, still, are entirely different IMO. In one, a small number of people beat one other up, and we don't know the true reasons; they have not come forward and expressed their opinions.
In the other, a large group of bogans openly and publicly ranted their ill-thought-out opinions.
People get beaten up all the time by others for a variety of reasons. I don't condone it, I don't applaud it, but I don't scour the newspapers for examples and post about it either.
Large groups of bogans on the Sunshine coast don't regularly band together and protest opening of a church
PooperPig - Coming Soon
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNEeq5qGh8I[^] Especially the bit at 56 seconds.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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hah - the only truly dangerous things here in Aus are
politicians
lawyers
...
'g'
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Don't forget the Drop Bears
PooperPig - Coming Soon
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Death held out a hand. I WANT, he said, A BOOK ABOUT THE DANGEROUS CREATURES OF FOURECKS
Albert looked up and dived for cover, receiving only mild bruising because he had the foresight to curl into a ball.
After a while Death, his voice a little muffled, said: ALBERT, I WOULD BE SO GRATEFUL IF YOU COULD GIVE ME A HAND HERE.
Albert scrambled up and pulled at some of the huge volumes, finally dislodging enough of them for his master to clamber free.
HMM... Death picked up a book at random and read the cover. "DANGEROUS MAMMALS, REPTILES, AMPHIBIANS, BIRDS, FISH, JELLYFISH, INSECTS, SPIDERS, CRUSTACEANS, GRASSES, TREES, MOSSES, AND LICHENS OF TERROR INCOGNITA, " he read. His gaze moved down the spine. VOLUME 29C, he added. OH. PART THREE, I SEE.
He glanced up at the listening shelves. POSSIBLY IT WOULD BE SIMPLER IF I ASKED FOR A LIST OF THE HARMLESS CREATURES OF THE AFORESAID CONTINENT?
They waited.
IT WOULD APPEAR THAT...
"No, wait master. Here it comes."
Albert pointed to something white zigzagging lazily through the air. Finally Death reached up an caught the single sheet of paper.
He read it carefully and then turned it over briefly just in case anything was written on the other side.
"May I?" said Albert. Death handed him the paper.
"'Some of the sheep'"
Terry Pratchett, The Last Continent
The only reason you don't have more lethal snakes in OZ: they have been eaten by the spiders...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Terry nailed it!
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yep, they're the worst !
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In my opinion the bit at 29-35 s. is the best
When the song is: "you may... get killed...", the true story "how to become a skeleton" is displayed.
Worth to see!
Very good tourism ad!
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I have a range of values (voltage) over time (thousands of minutes, one value per minute). I am trying to chart these. Determining the length of my Y axis is quite a problem for me. If I take a minimum and maximum, and use that as the axis height, one or two zero values result in all the others being scrunched up at the top of the chart. If I remove zeroes, it looks much better, and for a chart, they aren't very important, I'll give all real values in a tabular report.
What I would like to do is determine the average height of the band of data points, sort of the space between the moving average of the low points and that of the heigh points. I figure to do that, I would need a median series, so I could determine a smoothed series of points above and below median, and make my Y axis 's' higher and 's' lower than those.
How do people normally do this?
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Yeah, a but much for a simple charting app. Why a low pass, by the way?
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I would post a question in the Algorithms forum here on CodeProject.
« I had therefore to remove knowledge, in order to make room for belief » Immanuel Kant
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Can you exclude the zeroes as 'out-of-statistic' or are they just 'the interesting pieces of data in the data set'?
THESE PEOPLE REALLY BOTHER ME!! How can they know what you should do without knowing what you want done?!?!
-- C++ FQA Lite
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It gets quite sweet when I exclude the zeroes. The chart then spreads across the Y axis nicely.
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I see. But what is the physical reason of such zeroes (e.g. spurious measure values, ...) ?
THESE PEOPLE REALLY BOTHER ME!! How can they know what you should do without knowing what you want done?!?!
-- C++ FQA Lite
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Maybe that, maybe power outages. We get zero volts in the house quite frequently.
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Brady Kelly wrote: It gets quite sweet when I exclude the zeroes. The chart then spreads across the Y axis nicely
Sounds like you want an arbitrary axis scale. Assuming you're using Excel, here's a link to a page on how to do that. I've not had occasion to use it, and it's trying to make a Microsoft tool do something that it's not designed to do, which as we all know is fraught with pain.
We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.
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Looks like that project has been abandoned for some time.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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Doesn't look like it does WPF though. OxyPlot also provides source, and operates on most .NET platforms.
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