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Groups > comp.lang.basic.visual.misc > #4248
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.basic.visual.misc |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-01-24 19:01 -0800 |
| Message-ID | <90bfde87-913e-43b2-8698-373929e796a3n@googlegroups.com> (permalink) |
| Subject | Slice And Dice Windows Download 'LINK' |
| From | Janette Leupold <leupoldjanette@gmail.com> |
<div>Take control of 5 heroes, each with their own unique dice. Fight your way through 20 levels of monsters and try to take on the final boss. If you lose a single fight you have to start over so be careful (and lucky!).</div><div></div><div></div><div>But on the other hand, if using strand reduces your mana, which reduces monster dice by enough to save a hero, it'll refund 4 mana which means no hero is saved. But if no hero is saved, then it should reduce mana sufficiently to save the hero. Therefore, Logical paradox. Turns out the game just resolves this by not considering a hero saved.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>slice and dice windows download</div><div></div><div>Download: https://t.co/XR0fX7YeFI </div><div></div><div></div><div>Access and Microsoft Excel possess many similarities, which can make it difficult to decide which program you should use. For example, both programs can store large amounts of data, run powerful queries and analysis tools to slice and dice that data, and perform sophisticated calculations that return the data that you need.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Do you know how to find the files on android? When I plug in my phone via usb, I can see other folders but not the one that contains slice and dice. Well, I found one that has Slice and Dice in the name, but it looked empty.</div><div></div><div></div><div>olapR is an R package from Microsoft used for MDX queries against a SQL Server Analysis Services OLAP cube. Functions do not support all MDX operations, but you can build queries that slice, dice, drilldown, rollup, and pivot on dimensions. The package is included in SQL Server Machine Learning Services and SQL Server 2016 R Services.</div><div></div><div></div><div>The olapR library provides a simple R style API for generating and validating MDX queries against an Analysis Services cube. olapR does not provide APIs for all MDX scenarios, but it does cover the most use cases including slice, dice, drilldown, rollup, and pivot scenarios in N dimensions. You can also input a direct MDX query to Analysis Services for queries that cannot be constructed using the olapR APIs.</div><div></div><div></div><div>After the connection is established, you can either pass in a fully defined MDX query, or you can construct the query using the Query() object, setting the query details using cube(), axis(), columns(), slicers(), and so forth.</div><div></div><div></div><div>MDX is the query language for multidimensional OLAP (MOLAP) cubes containing processed and aggregated data stored in structures optimized for data analysis and exploration. Cubes are used in business and scientific applications to draw insights about relationships in historical data. Internally, cubes consist of mostly quantifiable numeric data, which is sliced along dimensions like date and time, geography, or other entities. A typical query might roll up sales for a given region and time period, sliced by product category, promotion, sales channel, and so forth.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>Using an AdventureWorks OLAP cube from the multidimensional cube tutorial, this MDX query selects the internet sales count and sales amount and places them on the Column axis. On the Row axis it places all possible values of the "Product Line" dimension. Then, using the WHERE clause (which is the slicer axis in MDX queries), it filters the query so that only the sales from Australia matter. Without the slicer axis, we would roll up and summarize the sales from all countries/regions.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I really appreciate the way that everything works as I expect it to, e.g. if I long click on a dice, it tells me what it does. Games like this only really work if that sort of detail had been sorted out, which it has.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Also the Slimes that the Slimer generates are a lot less deadly than the Slimer itself (if you inspect their dice, they have a 1/3 chance of doing nothing). So typically I focus on killing the Slimer as fast as possible and just mitigating the Slimes it spawns in the meantime.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I wanted to make a game where your dice represented people and you could level them up! I did a lot of research around cool 2D ways to represent dice in games, but I couldn't find any that felt good to me. I didn't really want to delve into 3D but I had no choice. It took me a while but I eventually got it working: I could define graphics for sides of a dice and detect which side landed face-up!</div><div></div><div></div><div>I was really happy with how levelling up the dice felt, so I decided to try turning it into a combat game. Plus now I had a lot more coding and design skill, I thought I'd be able to use Event Horizon's combat system but make it simpler & more streamlined. I was at a friend's house doing a mini boardgame jam when I prototyped the game for the first time. I had some blank dice and drew some shield, sword and magic sides on them. I don't remember the exact rules, though they were very similar to the current game. I could see the game had potential from that, though it was a bit awkward to run the game IRL.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Download Slice & Dice on PC with BlueStacks and try out this totally free, adless demo. Lead your 5 heroes on a dangerous adventure through dark forests, deep dungeons, and creepy caverns. Face off against all manner of wicked beasts in this dice-based strategy RPG for Android.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Realistic 3D dice physics ensure your rolls are truly random. Roll your dice with every turn, then watch as the turn-based combat plays out before your eyes with charming 2D pixel art. Every fight won earns you experience points and potentially a new item that you can use to win the next.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Take the output from your backup software for the server in question and either manually for via script slice/dice the data. (I tend to do this because I'm more interested in the raw size of the data, irrespective of NTFS compression.) Depending on your backup software you may already have a treasure-trove of historical data here to "mine".</div><div></div><div></div><div>There is no automatic way to adjust the size of the slice, as long as you slice selection is from it's own layer you can manually stretch the slice to the size of the background and then set the required output format in the export setting and with the slice selected click on the export selected to save.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Lame. I've got 60 layers to output and NEED them to all be the same size ... the size of the document. By creating slices first, the size is constrained to the size of the graphic, not the size of the document. Manually resizing 60 slices before exporting them is MORE WORK than exporting each layer individually. LAME!</div><div></div><div></div><div>I've got exactly the same issue, 30 odd logo's placed and sized on a canvas. Thought I'd just be able to create slices and have something like the 'Trim transparent pixels' option in Sketch. No dice, and now pain in the ass. Sketch isn't even billed as an image manipulation program but understands the value of this option when export assets. Resizing after the fact won't work as I need the additional white space created to preserve positioning and size, that was the whole point of the exercise.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Problem: The slices match the outlines of the layer, meaning that the exported flower image has a different dimension than the background, which would require another manual matching step, which is not acceptable for my workflow.</div><div></div><div></div><div>If I go to the Export persona, I can have each layer as a slice, and I can export all the slices at once, in multiple formats. And each one will be not quite right, not quite the right size, and will result in a much more jerky time lapse than individual exporting.</div><div></div><div></div><div>+1 for this, it would be extremely handy to have a button that would set that slice dimensions to match the canvas/document. I'm exporting product shots, there are about 40 dog collars that all need to be the same final dimensions, but they take up different dimensions within the document. I have to manually drag the boundaries of every slice to make this happen.</div><div></div><div></div><div>This interactive table will be really useful when you are dealing with a lot of data and you need to filer out the same.Exporting the data to a spreadsheet is one option,however for quick slice and dice Out-GridView is the cmdlet for you.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Third, AtScale provides a multidimensional interface to Snowflake data that allows business users and data scientists to slice and dice data using measures, dimensions and hierarchies just like SQLServer Analysis Services (SSAS) but without building cubes.</div><div></div><div></div><div>One of the greatest benefits of Windows PowerShell is how it lets us slice and dice information with minimal effort. Often we like to look at data in buckets or groups. I think it has been awhile since we looked at the Group-Object cmdlet so I thought we'd discuss what I think is a little-used approach.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Auto Dashboard allows users to enter an entirely new world of free-form design - automatically. With expanded data preparation capabilities and our most advanced analytics functionality to date, users can interact with AI chatbots to build visualizations, reports, or entire applications. Continue conversation with the chatbot to add in transactional grids, information windows, and what-if analysis options.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Anyway, no popup windows seems to be some sort of old design choice - but it is easy to see it is not followed anymore. Drivers opens in its own popup window, and suffers similarly from not being able to stay on top. Also, Blender already has several popups for 3D viewport settings etc (which too could use more UX work), so why not add support for permanent floaters that stay on top of main window.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Aren't you sick of splitting your areas all the time and changing editors CONSTANTLY? well, I am! so I created this little free plugin that will pop-up floating windows with custom editors at pre-defined location and size.</div><div></div><div></div><div>As to the topic theme - yes, addon already mentioned in the thread is the only way to achieve floating windows always on top so far (at least without further coding and stuff). In 2.79 and prior File Browser was always on top so there was for one usecase less for this adodn, nonetheless depending on the workflow there could be situations to use the addon</div><div></div><div></div><div>In any large scale end user migration project, there will be a huge amount of data to slice, dice and rationalize. A mountain of it in fact! At Juriba, we often get asked about the best way to make good use of all that data. After all, our Dashworks software is designed to bring together many different sources of user, computer, application, departmental and location data, so we should have some idea! Having a central data warehouse is the first step, but it is the intelligence you apply to this data to make it into actionable project information that is the critical piece for accelerating your migration.</div><div></div><div> df19127ead</div>
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Slice And Dice Windows Download 'LINK' Janette Leupold <leupoldjanette@gmail.com> - 2024-01-24 19:01 -0800
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