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Could you explain why that is The case? Interested to hear
Could you explain why that is The case? Interested to hear
Uhm… Are two of them in that pot?
Anya Taylor-Joy
Sorry to say, but you’re right
Correct, they announced it two months ago: https://www.androidpolice.com/bitwarden-app-about-prettier/
Same, staying with bitwarden for now
Jacha-chacha-chacha-chow!
Sympathy for the devil?
Yeah the scene is great! And it’s amazing too see then all together at NAC at the moment, great vibes! For those interested, big tourney going op at the moment (starts again in 2/3 hours): https://www.twitch.tv/nili_aoe?sr=a
I watch him indeed, among others
Love this game, both playing it and watching it being streamed, there is a great tournament happening at the moment.
FTW. For years I thought it meant “Fuck The What”. Even now that’s the first thing that comes to mind and have a hard time remembering the actual meaning.
!remindme 24h
I checked a few samples, for all there was at least 1 chapter as a preview. But it differs, one also had 3 with around 40 pages. I only counted actual pages, not into, table of contents etc. Hopefully that gives you an idea!
I usually buy them on my phone (Kobo app), which is easier with payments. Afterwards the book is immediately available on my e-reader. Started doing this a couple of months back and I like it. You can also preview books, but got no personal experience with that.
This would be amazing
Feedback welcome! Feel like I’m getting the hand of Rust more and more.
use regex::Regex;
pub fn part_1(input: &str) {
let lines: Vec<&str> = input.lines().collect();
let time_data = number_string_to_vec(lines[0]);
let distance_data = number_string_to_vec(lines[1]);
// Zip time and distance into a single iterator
let data_iterator = time_data.iter().zip(distance_data.iter());
let mut total_possible_wins = 1;
for (time, dist_req) in data_iterator {
total_possible_wins *= calc_possible_wins(*time, *dist_req)
}
println!("part possible wins: {:?}", total_possible_wins);
}
pub fn part_2(input: &str) {
let lines: Vec<&str> = input.lines().collect();
let time_data = number_string_to_vec(&lines[0].replace(" ", ""));
let distance_data = number_string_to_vec(&lines[1].replace(" ", ""));
let total_possible_wins = calc_possible_wins(time_data[0], distance_data[0]);
println!("part 2 possible wins: {:?}", total_possible_wins);
}
pub fn calc_possible_wins(time: u64, dist_req: u64) -> u64 {
let mut ways_to_win: u64 = 0;
// Second half is a mirror of the first half, so only calculate first part
for push_time in 1..=time / 2 {
// If a push_time crosses threshold the following ones will too so break loop
if push_time * (time - push_time) > dist_req {
// There are (time+1) options (including 0).
// Subtract twice the minimum required push time, also removing the longest push times
ways_to_win += time + 1 - 2 * push_time;
break;
}
}
ways_to_win
}
fn number_string_to_vec(input: &str) -> Vec {
let regex_number = Regex::new(r"\d+").unwrap();
let numbers: Vec = regex_number
.find_iter(input)
.filter_map(|m| m.as_str().parse().ok())
.collect();
numbers
}
I think it’s related to the replacement of words with digits. There are some overlapping words, for example in “eightwothree” the “t” is used for both “eighT” and “Two”. In this case the order of replacement differs your result. It either becomes “8wo3” or “eigh23”.
Is your husband my girlfriend?