I hereby claim:
- I am sweinberg on github.
- I am samw (https://keybase.io/samw) on keybase.
- I have a public key whose fingerprint is 9FB2 1888 8BDA CF7B 2A50 3391 6568 97E9 60C3 D6A7
To claim this, I am signing this object:
body{ | |
background: #282c36; | |
color: #ffffff} | |
td{ | |
background: #282c36} | |
div{ | |
background: #282c36; | |
color: #ffffff} |
# Play a short melody | |
import sound | |
import time | |
notes = 'E3', 'E3', 'F3', 'G3', 'G3', 'F3', 'E3', 'D3', 'C3', 'C3', 'D3', 'E3', 'E3', 'D3', 'D3', 'E3', 'E3', 'F3', 'G3', 'G3', 'F3', 'E3', 'D3', 'C3', 'C3', 'D3', 'E3', 'D3', 'C3', 'C3' | |
for note in notes: | |
sound.play_effect('Piano_' + note) | |
time.sleep(0.5) |
<!DOCTYPE html> | |
<html> | |
<head> | |
<title>BitCash</title> | |
</head> | |
<body> | |
<style> |
#Reduced Sum of Digits | |
Take a whole number and add up its digits. If the result has more than one digit, add all of the digits again and keep doing this until you have one digit. Call the result the **RSOD**, the *Reduced Sum Of Digits*. | |
For example to get the RSOD of `32987` add `3+2+9+8+7` to get `29`. Now add `2+9` to get `11`. Now add `1+1` to get `2`. So the RSOD is `2`. | |
Here's why this is useful. If you add two numbers, the RSOD of the result is the RSOD of the sums of the RSODs. This means you can check any addition by checking single digit RSODs. For example consider this calculation | |
`132+991 = 1223` |
#Geometry Notes Second Semester | |
*** | |
##Area, Surface Area and Volume | |
###Circumference | |
* Circumference is the linear distance around the outside of a circular object. | |
* C = π • d or π • 2r. |
Verifying that +samw is my Bitcoin username. You can send me #bitcoin here: https://onename.io/samw |
import clipboard | |
import string | |
import sys | |
import webbrowser | |
try: | |
article = sys.argv[1] | |
except IndexError: | |
article = clipboard.get() |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object: