I am using IntelliJ IDEA 2024.1.1 (Community Edition). All my Java files are showing as Orange Icons (with a coffee cup) in the project file browser on the left hand side. I click on the file name ...
What named colors are available in matplotlib for use in plots? I can find a list on the matplotlib documentation that claims that these are the only names: b: blue g: green r: red c: cyan m: mag...
It seems whenever orange is spoken, it is spoken as one syllable. But it appears to be two. The Merriam-Webster online dictionary transcribes the pronunciation of orange as follows: \\ˈär-inj, ˈä...
SOLVED TEMPORARILY, TEMP SOLUTION AT BOTTUM Trying to install Orange for a data science class at my school. I had a previous version at least 6 months ago and removed it after not using it. Trying to
The newest version of Orange (3.34.1 at the time of writing) does not include the compute_CD function anymore. I don't know the reason, and I don't know whether it will come back in future releases. For the time being, you might want to install an older version of Orange that still has the function, for example: pip install orange3==3.30 Which includes compute_CD and is compatible with Python ...
I am searching for a list of all colors I can use in PowerShell. Since we need to provide names and no hexnumbers, it's hard to figure out if a color exists or not, at least if you don't know how :...
The indicator is currently implemented by changing the cell collapser and the cell execution counter color to orange, and adding a filled orange circle icon left execution counter. Hopefully, this will improve the situational awareness of the users and lead to more consistent state of the notebooks on save.
I am looking for a control code to create orange text in a terminal using ANSI or some other standard, is this possible? I only see yellow and red available, and I don't think you can mix red and y...
(as) queer as a clockwork orange The title of the novel A Clockwork Orange (1962; film UK 1971) came, according to its author Anthony Burgess, from a Cockney expression. 'queer as a clockwork orange' (i.e. homosexual). This had been in use since the mid-1950s, Paul Beale states in Partridge/Slang, though few others had heard of it.