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Seconding this. Especially if you’re still learning and making mistakes, it’s so nice to just be able to destroy a VM/CT and start over, rather then potentially breaking other things or the OS itself.
Seconding this. Especially if you’re still learning and making mistakes, it’s so nice to just be able to destroy a VM/CT and start over, rather then potentially breaking other things or the OS itself.
I have an Atari Lynx that I picked up at a garage sale. Never actually played it, though…
Proxmox. VMs and containers are great, especially when you’re learning
So what it comes down to is that int()
, float()
, and input()
(as well as print()
) are functions that you are calling. In the case of int()
and float()
, they return (simply put, when you make a function call it “becomes” the return value) an int
or float
type object based on the argument (the value between the parentheses) that you passed in. In the case of print()
, it causes the program to print out the provided argument.
input()
is a little more complicated. It prints out the provided argument (in your case: Who are you?
) and then puts the program on pause while it waits for the user to input some text and press enter. Once they have done so, the input
function returns the text the user has entered. So as mentioned before, the code input('Who are you? ')
“becomes” the text the user input, which then gets assigned to the variable nam
.
I think where you may be getting confused is what exactly defines “text”. The only things that python considers text (referred to as a string
) are characters surrounded by “” or ‘’. In your example, input('Who are you? ')
is not a string, but code to be executed (although the argument being passed to input
, 'Who are you? '
, is a string). As an experiment, try surrounding that code with quotation marks (name = "input('Who are you? ')"
) and see what happens!
No, but it was really well made. The perspective shifts were cool
Hopefully it makes the transition as well as Risk of Rain did!
Oh man, I loved the original so much
Man, same. I bought it, then learned it wouldn’t even have career mode and immediately refunded it.
Where did you go, if you don’t mind me asking? It’s certainly something we’ve talked about…
I could not agree more
Full source for that:
I have a 2021 MacBook M1 Pro and tbh, I do most of my gaming on it anymore. It has no trouble with even modded Minecraft, although I haven’t been able to use shaders without the fps dropping lower than I’d like. I can’t imagine it’d have any trouble with Sims 4 either
Ah, that’s good to know! I’ll give those other options a shot. Thank you so much for taking the time to help me with that! I’m very new to the whole LLM things, and sorta figuring it out as I go
It has a Intel Xeon E3-1225 V2, 20gb of ram, and a Strix GTX 970 with 4gb of VRAM. I’ve actually tried Mistral 7b and Decapoda Llama 7b, running them in Python with Huggingface’s Transformers library (from local models)
Hm… Alright, I’ll have to take another look at it. I kinda gave up, figuring my old server just didn’t have the specs for it
Show as in I waited a few minutes and finally killed it when it didn’t seem like it was going anywhere. And this was with the 7b model…
I tried doing that on my home server, but running it on the CPU is super slow, and the model won’t fit on the GPU. Not sure what I’m doing wrong
You monster
But you had to set up trackers to begin with…
Edit: Wait, they’re not talking about trackers. Nevermind!