The fourth requirement (“Dynamic”) ensures that we only create dependencies when they are actually needed. This is easiest to see with conditional formulas, so something like IF(, slow_calculation(B1)). If the condition is true, this formula returns the value of (and therefore depends on) the cell B1. But if the condition is false, the formula returns nothing — and if B1 changes, this cell should not be updated. This is a dynamic dependency — the dependency only exists if is true.
critical to the project not becoming another dead entry in my ~/projects directory:,更多细节参见whatsapp
Binding expressions give you a type-safe and non-invasive way to define DSLs or literal grammars directly in Java, without modifying base types or introducing macros.,更多细节参见谷歌
I have been thinking a lot lately about “diachronic AI” and “vintage LLMs” — language models designed to index a particular slice of historical sources rather than to hoover up all data available. I’ll have more to say about this in a future post, but one thing that came to mind while writing this one is the point made by AI safety researcher Owain Evans about how such models could be trained: