So this has been sort of the end of my r0b0t Intro class but I LOVED it. So I"m going to continue. And wohoo, of course I got an A (not that it matters much LOL). It was a lot of fun and I"m going to continue.
I also finished up another class in another programme I"m learning and got a certificate for that, and am done with another one (that I will also get a certificate for, even though it officially ends in the end of June). In the meantime, since I can't just twiddle around for two weeks, I"m continuing to learn two languages in Programming on my own that I've been learning.
So I bought this book (I have a stack to read)and have been now going through it on my own. It will hold me for the two weeks until I start back with class, and maybe I can continue while class goes on.
So in the book, we are going through basic functions and the structure of the programme, the way it understands things.
For part of the data, there was no text file so I had to make my own and import the data (basically you get it to read the information).
The first two graphs are from one of the first examples, which is basically taking randomized data and plotting a histogram and showing the randomized data as a scatter plot.
The third plot is a group of data I actually had to put into a text file, but it shows students' grades for an exam and the distribution.
Haha the fourth chart has an error, so I threw it in there (LOL). Why are you showing my concatenations, bruh?
The rest of graphs show a linear model and analyze the data. Cook's distance is used to show how a point can skew data (an outlier point or one that is different from the general cluster). It is used in Linear regression analysis which, as you can guess, is linear, or a line typically.
I don't quite know why I like this programme so so much. It's literally something I just enjoy doing on my own. I guess I've always sort of liked numbers and visual representation of numbers, so d@ta mining in general appeals to me. It's something that ties into my learning c0ding, also, because the base of this programme is the same base of the language(s) I'm learning, so they complement each other. This guy I met who will be at this big event on that later on in the year told me that there is still a merge that needs to happen between r0b0tics and d@ta, so maybe that will be a good thing for me that I seem to love the two and that the two are on the edge of merging, but not quite there yet.
What does that mean?
It means that r0bots will get to the point where they can recognize patterns and data more and more and use it to make algorithmic decisions; decisions based on deductions or predictions from data. It's pretty exciting! They'll be more and more intuitive. (and then..they'll take over the world and kill you LOL)








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