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Comments
40
Joined
2 yr. ago

I model and doodle stuff

  • Yea, and thank you! I got probably a dozen of snout close ups in the screenshots, it's a unique perspective to say the least

  • Shame if allies don't count. It would sound fun beating enemis with a rainbow sword and the power of gay by my side

  • I'm not great of any of these so I'll be a commoner. Unless LGBT+ Paladin counts

  • Furry @pawb.social

    Blender ragdoll physics test

  • No dragons were lift in this image, but if they are yapping too much, you got to hold their snout and give a smooch

  • Furry @pawb.social

    Hold dragon gentle like hamburger

  • This could mean that OP has either +100 usb chargers, or a fraction of a non-USB-C charger

  • Nah, Grok took 3 minutes and said along the lines "Something went wrong, try again later"Probably failed at tokenization or hit a fail safe

  • I substituted every single include into a single 166 000 line file and sent it. Grok froze :(

  • math @lemmy.world

    [deleted]

  • Thank you! After the flag I was thinking I'd leave it at simple shading, but then I decided to do do some muscle anatomy learning. Shading is my fav part of drawing, it adds so much depth

  • Furry @pawb.social

    Happy pride! Art by me

  • It's condensed content with simpler terms and plain English, which is helpful for those who aren't native speakers, like Gamba said.Simple wiki also comes in handy in topics like biology, which can have very specialized vocabulary.

    But in this context, the people who unironically believe in things like the moon not being a reflector can't be reasoned with. They won't change their mind no matter how simple English you explain the fact.

  • Finnish bank osuuspankki logo comes close to qp outline, but it has extra shaft at the top

  • Google search results are often completely unrelated so it's not any better. If the thing I'm looking for is obscure, AI often finds some thread that I can follow, but I always double check that information.Know your tool limits, after hundreds of prompts I've learned pretty well when the AI is spitting bullshit answers. Real people on the internet can be just as wrong and biased, so it's best to find multiple independent sources

  • thankfully modern ones like molten salt reactors have passive safety, where they stop the reaction if overheating occurs.edit: My mistake, there's no active commercial molten salt reactors.But nuclear power is very safe nowadays because of the multiple fail-safes, which some can still be passive like emergency cooling.I much rather get electricity from magic rocks than destroying rain forest in developing countries drilling oil, gas or mining coal.The biggest risk in nuclear is environmental disasters like in Fukushima's case, which is the last significant nuclear incident in past 13 years

  • It appears to always run in ~30 milliseconds regardless of the tested number, so this might be O(1) until some bottleneck kicks in. Though I have yet to verify the complexity as the quality of division rule depends on a,b and c ranges.Edit: after some testing it's some logarithmic complexity when P is bigger than 10^2000

     
        
    P size, time seconds
    10^3000, 3.11
    10^4000, 6.43
    10^5000, 11.27
    10^6000, 17.69
    10^7000, 26.31
    10^8000, 37.09
    
    
      

    Plotting these gave about O(log(P)2.5) The bRange, math.gcd() and reciprocal scale with P digit count but rest of the calculations are O(1). I have no idea why you would need 108000 divisibility rule designed hand calculations, but you can get one under a minute and this isn't even multithreaded!

  • Funnily enough, I just sped up my own solution by 25000% without compromising anything.https://pastebin.com/Dkbq2chV

    I realized that multiplying the divisor P by its non-zero reciprocal digits, gets you near 10n which are ideal numbers for the divisibility rules. Which should have been obvious since ```n * (1/n) = 1```, and cutting off the reciprocal results in approximation of 1, which can be scaled by 10b.e.g. finding divisibility rules for 7

     
        
    1/7=0.14285...
    7*14=98
    7*143=1001
    7*1429=10003
      
    
      

    The first script was very naive brute force approach.So instead of searching every combination of a, b and c, I can just check the near multiples of P*reciprocal.The variables can be solved by P*N = a*10^b + c when b is given and a is 1 to 97*1429=10003 would expand to P*N=1*10^4+3

  • I wrote some terrible python code to search divisibility rules for a given number and it tests example product divisibility

    Edit2: https://pastebin.com/Dkbq2chV Yet another revision, I got caught up in this project but I think it has enough features now. I added few command line options and details you can edit in the script.I need to stop before I add more features. Here's example output:

     
        
    $ python ./findDivRules.py -h
    
    python ./findDivRules.py [Integer or "(Start,End)"] [Show example? (0,1)] 
       [Example is divisible? (0,1)] [Parker style? (0,1)] [Rule count] [Rule index]
    Default command : python ./findDivRules.py 313 True False True 10 0
    Range example   : python ./findDivRules.py "[1,11]" 0 0 1 2 0
    
    $ python ./findDivRules.py 313 True True True           
    
    Found 3 rules for 313, showing first 10:
      P    N    a    b    c     P*N
    313   16    5    3    8    5008
    313   32    1    4   16   10016
    313  639    2    5    7  200007
    
    313 has following divisibility rule using B*a-A*c
    Split the tested number into A and B after 3rd digit.
    Multiply A by 8 and multiply B by 5
    Subtract A from B = B*5-A*8
    
    Example:
    Using rules P=313 a=5 b=3 c=8
    Testing 700807 divisibility by 313
    
    A|B      B*a-A*c        Intermed
    700|807  807*5-700*8       -1565
    -2|435   435*5+2*8          2191
    2|191    191*5-2*8           939
    0|939    939*5+0*8          4695
    
    Smallest iteration 939 = 313*3
    700807 is divisible by 313
    
      
  • math @lemmy.world

    I generalized constructing divisibility rules by any prime

  • Thank you so much! ^^Pixel art has very different techniques to other art but I still spent lot of time tweaking the proportions and line gradients pixel by pixel. Gen 2 pokemon sprites are an other impressive example what you can do with just 4 colors and 56x56 sprite.

  • Furry @pawb.social

    Pixel art logo of my Dutch AD

  • Technology Memes @lemmy.world

    So is it any wonder people are afraid of technology?

  • math @lemmy.world

    Pythagorean primes side factorization and sum of two squares

  • Software Gore @lemmy.world

    I think I found the right instance

  • Dragons @pawb.social

    50 baguettes

  • Dragons @pawb.social

    Feather maned dragon

  • Furry @pawb.social

    Feather maned dragon

  • Political Memes @lemmy.world

    As someone not from USA, this baffles me

  • Furry @pawb.social

    I felt quirky, took a mirror selfie

  • Furry @pawb.social

    Free base of a species I created!

  • Furry @pawb.social

    Glitch art of my sona

  • Furry @pawb.social

    Lacertocyon plumocrista (feather crested lizard dog)