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This script indexes ~800 poem verses from the huggingface poem_sentiment dataset, and uses a transformer model to index them,
and performs a KNN search using FAISS module.
Before running, install all the requirements with these 3 commands:
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Here are 10 one-liners which show the power of scala programming, impress your friends and woo women; ok, maybe not. However, these one liners are a good set of examples using functional programming and scala syntax you may not be familiar with. I feel there is no better way to learn than to see real examples.
Updated: June 17, 2011 - I'm amazed at the popularity of this post, glad everyone enjoyed it and to see it duplicated across so many languages. I've included some of the suggestions to shorten up some of my scala examples. Some I intentionally left longer as a way for explaining / understanding what the functions were doing, not necessarily to produce the shortest possible code; so I'll include both.
1. Multiple Each Item in a List by 2
The map function takes each element in the list and applies it to the corresponding function. In this example, we take each element and multiply it by 2. This will return a list of equivalent size, compare to o
Statix - the simplest static website generator in bash
Statix - the simplest static website generator in Bash
Statix is a stand-alone Bash script aimed at generating full-featured, routable static websites from reusable HTML snippets. It features the most basic templating engine ever possible but allows to organize your content in a SEO-friendly way. All Statix-based websites contain these parts:
Templates: a directory where all HTML templates are stored
Route configuration: a file that maps each publicly accessible template to a SEO-friendly URL
Assets: a directory with optional files copied to the output website directory with no processing.
This script is also lightweight. Aside from some standard file management commands such as cp, mkdir and rm, the only serious dependency for Statix is GNU Grep compiled with PCRE support (i.e. the version that supports -P flag, included in most Linux distributions).
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