Sorry for your loss. Death may be the most absolute part of life - don’t cry because it’s over smile because it happened. It’s okay to never “get over” something but wish you strength to overcome the immediate difficulties.
> don’t cry because it’s over smile because it happened
Exactly. In this savage universe where death is unavoidable, this is a great help. From all the possibilities in this vast universe, you happen to exist and so did your father and you had a chance to interact. The fact that OP is crying after a month, means it was good. Remember the good days, what good things you said to each other, etc. I'm sure there is a lot of it. Some people's relationships with their parents don't allow for this, unfortunately, so cherish it.
"Don't cry because it's over, smile because it happened." Well-said. Hard as it can be, try to temper the sadness with good memories - you may even find yourself smiling through the tears at times. Take care.
In my experience Discord is mostly popular among the gamers. Not for me personally, I find Discord bloated and overwhelming. Slack for work is barely tolerable
Maybe just a hidden form field with “are_you_a_bot” characteristics if necessary. Otherwise things like sql injection prevention may come out of the box with frameworks like rails
The view looking west from the east bay, particularly the Berkeley marina, is one of my favorites. The photos of the golden gate before the bridge was built still kind of makes me shiver
It’s not clear to me either. I’ve heard for a long time - including in undergrad fluid mechanics - how large groups of humans can be modeled via fluid mech equations. But this article seems to provide more robust evidence of these occurrences IRL.
It more draws parallels between the oscillations seen in crowds in Pamplona and another large gathering in Germany. Which have similar flow properties.
It also seems to specify the density with which these properties emerge
The posted article doesn’t talk about relationship/proximity to bulls directly. More like a large gathering of people in a plaza and is compared to another festival in Germany.
The parent comment sounds funny but is not directly relevant to the content of the article.
Crossing the Z is a good one. I cross 0 but understand the point with phi. Something that’s not mentioned is y (lowercase) and how they can look like a 4
I never used to cross my zeros until I was spending some time writing a lot of diagrams that had both O (for oxygen) and 0 (for the numeric label). It got very confusing!
I never took a real chem or bio class, but more than half my degree involved classes where 0 and ∅ were extremely frequently used. Thankfully no math or CS professor is stupid enough to use the letter o as a symbol or variable name.
I started crossing the Z in college because I was tired of messing things up because I confused a Z for a 2. I only crossed the 0 when Os showed up and it could be confusing. Similarly my 1s would get the hat and feet if I felt like it wasn't clear what it was.
I can't say I ever had trouble with y and 4 looking the same. I use the open 4 but the y has one less angle and it sits lower. If anything a y is more likely to look like a v if you can't see the descender clearly
I always cross my zs in maths to distinguish them from 2s, but in some countries they cross the 2s to distinguish them from zs, so the ambiguities remain.
I started crossing Z, 7, 0 and generally writing in as unambiguous a manner as possible in my math homework because I was afraid of the teacher reading it wrong and taking points off.