Lifehacker: I Use CubiCasa to Make Floor Plans of My House (and You Should Too)
I Use CubiCasa to Make Floor Plans of My House (and You Should Too)
Floor plan analysis and image recognition constitute a rapidly evolving interdisciplinary field that combines architectural design interpretation with advanced machine learning techniques. The field ...
The get/set pattern provides a structure that allows logic to be added during the setting ('set') or retrieval ('get') of a property instance of an instantiated class, which can be useful when some instantiation logic is required for the property.
The plan here is to use a Mac other than your server for setting up, connecting to, and managing Profile Manager. It’s not necessary for this lesson, you can perform these tasks on your server, but ...
I disagree with the suggested dupe closure. In this question the point is what happens to the floor function when we subtract a small amount from an integer. On the other hand, in the suggested target the point is what happens to the floor function when an integer is added to the argument. Even if it is possible to massage the formula of the target question to yield this identity also, I think ...
The height of the floor symbol is inconsistent, it is smaller when the fraction contains a lowercase letter in the numerator and larger when the fraction contains numbers or uppercase letters in the numerator. Why is that the case? How can I produce floor symbols that are always the larger size shown in the picture?
4 I suspect that this question can be better articulated as: how can we compute the floor of a given number using real number field operations, rather than by exploiting the printed notation, which separates the real and fractional part, making nearby integers instantly identifiable. How about as Fourier series?