Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Version 1.1.2b files cannot be properly opened in version 1.0b. OE-Cake files are stored in plaintext format, which makes them easy to share, small in size, and allows copying and pasting of particles and modify the behaviour of the engine. OE-Cake supports changing of the Parameters that define the physics and other behaviours in the game.
The type and length are fixed in size (typically 1–4 bytes), and the value field is of variable size. These fields are used as follows: Type A binary code, often simply alphanumeric, which indicates the kind of field that this part of the message represents; Length The size of the value field (typically in bytes); Value
In a proportional cake-cutting, each person receives a piece that he values as at least 1/n of the value of the entire cake. In the example cake, a proportional division can be achieved by giving all the vanilla and 4/9 of the chocolate to George (for a value of 6.66), and the other 5/9 of the chocolate to Alice (for a value of 5). In symbols:
Layer cake representation. In mathematics , the layer cake representation of a non- negative , real -valued measurable function f {\displaystyle f} defined on a measure space ( Ω , A , μ ) {\displaystyle (\Omega ,{\mathcal {A}},\mu )} is the formula
In mathematics, a unit vector in a normed vector space is a vector (often a spatial vector) of length 1. A unit vector is often denoted by a lowercase letter with a circumflex, or "hat", as in ^ (pronounced "v-hat"). The term normalized vector is sometimes used as a synonym for unit vector.
A vector of arbitrary length can be divided by its length to create a unit vector. [14] This is known as normalizing a vector. A unit vector is often indicated with a hat as in â. To normalize a vector a = (a 1, a 2, a 3), scale the vector by the reciprocal of its length ‖a‖. That is:
A closure-constructing operator creates a function object from a part of the program: the part of code given as an argument to the operator is part of the function, and so is the lexical environment: the bindings of the lexically visible variables are captured and stored in the function object, which is more commonly called a closure.
Utilitarian cake-cutting (also called maxsum cake-cutting) is a rule for dividing a heterogeneous resource, such as a cake or a land-estate, among several partners with different cardinal utility functions, such that the sum of the utilities of the partners is as large as possible.