stylegan2-projecting-images
thonny
stylegan2-projecting-images | thonny | |
---|---|---|
135 | 176 | |
288 | 2,891 | |
- | 1.6% | |
10.0 | 9.5 | |
about 1 year ago | 6 days ago | |
Jupyter Notebook | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
stylegan2-projecting-images
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Getting Started with Gemma Models
A Colab notebook.
- Welcome to Colaboratory
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A playground to practice differential privacy - Antigranular
To play with the dataset, we first must create a Jupyter notebook, a powerful and popular tool among data engineers. I created mine on Google Colab.
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Topic and Subtopic Extraction with the Google Gemini Pro
Please head over to the Google Colab
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How do I begin building AI tools for myself?
But regardless of what you want to do, you'll probably use Python. In this context, a good way to work with Python is using Jupyter Notebooks. So you should start with installing Python and Jupyter and go from there. If you want to get started without installing anything, Google Colab gives you a remote Jupyter Notebook which runs in the browser for free.
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教程:使用 Google Colab 安全地转发 B 站视频
访问 Google Colab 。
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Journey into Jupyter Notebooks: A Beginner's Guide
Remember school days when you'd share notes with classmates? Jupyter takes that spirit and amplifies it. Once you've crafted your Notebook, you can share it with peers, collaborators, and the world. Platforms like GitHub and Google's Colab natively render Jupyter Notebooks. It's like penning an open letter to the world but in a delightful mix of code, text, and visuals.
- This feels like an obvious question, but if I load a pickle file that is 1GB in size, is it taking up 1GB of memory?
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Leveraging Google Colab to run Postgres: A Comprehensive Guide
Open your web browser and navigate to Google Colab.
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No excuses to start working with Python
Using Google Colab you can develop Python codes, similar to Jupyter Notebooks. You will have an environment prepared with various Python libraries. In addition you have tips on small codes for development, some tutorials, gihub connection, cloud -saved notebooks and more.
thonny
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FeedMyFurBabies – Send and Receive MQTT messages between AWS IoT Core and your micro-controller
Install Thonny and run it. Then go to Tools -> Options, to configure the ESP32C3 device in Thonny to match the settings shown in the screenshot below.
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Raspberry Pico Badger: Hardware Features and OS
The recommended way to programm MicroPython on the Raspberry Pico is to use the Thonny IDE. Accessing the Badger with reveals the following file structure:
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Abstract Classes in Python
Personally, I like to debug and step through code to see where I went wrong so I'm going to paste the code into my Thonny IDE. I like Thonny for small code challenges like this because it doesn't require setting up a whole project just to run and step through code.
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Ask HN: Do you know any good coding platform for education?
Thonny is designed speciffically for that purpose https://thonny.org .
For beginners the main advantage is the easier install and maintainance, and the less intimidating/cluttered environment.
IMHO it makes some decent tradeoffs, and it is an onramp for students evolving to VSCode or PyCharm when they feel ready.
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Macropad with KMK
I use the serial console with a tool like Thonny to debug KMK/CircuitPython code on my device. running something like import main; main.keyboard.go() usually prints a useful error message.
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Help me Please
If you think you need an IDE then Thonny is a good one for beginners. It does more than a simple text editor, some of which you won't use initially, but it is more to learn on top of learning python.
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Alguem sabe um editor de codigo leve para python?
Usa o thonny. É muito bom e leve.
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What’s an free bare bones IDE for Python that works smoothly out of the box?
VSCode is good but I wouldn't describe it as "barebones". I recommend Thonny. It's a Python IDE specifically for beginners.
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There's just TOO MUCH material!!!
All you really need to learn python is just an installed python interpreter, the command line and a text editor like Notepad, but that's a bit too minimal perhaps. There are things called IDEs (Integrated Development Environment) that bundle up tools such as an editor, build tools and a debugger into one package. I think that a full-blown IDE is overload for a beginner with too much to learn that isn't actually python. If you want to use an IDE try something like Thonny which is aimed at beginners. When you get some experience try other IDEs and Jupyter.
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Now, NiceGUI has a build-in persistent user/session based storage.
Maybe a goofy question, and definitely unrelated to the post topic, but: I’m using Thonny to learn Python: can I use NiceGUI with Thonny?
What are some alternatives?
fast-stable-diffusion - fast-stable-diffusion + DreamBooth
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
stable-diffusion-webui-colab - stable diffusion webui colab
mu - A small, simple editor for beginner Python programmers. Written in Python and Qt5.
gimp-stable-diffusion
Geany - A fast and lightweight IDE
discoart - 🪩 Create Disco Diffusion artworks in one line
Spyder - Official repository for Spyder - The Scientific Python Development Environment
quickstart-android - Firebase Quickstart Samples for Android
arduino-pico - Raspberry Pi Pico Arduino core, for all RP2040 boards
comfyui-colab - comfyui colabs templates new nodes
Django - The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.