edu | Demo files & resources for various edu projects

 by   wilsmex CSS Version: Current License: No License

kandi X-RAY | edu Summary

kandi X-RAY | edu Summary

edu is a CSS library. edu has no bugs, it has no vulnerabilities and it has low support. You can download it from GitHub.

A repository of all the digital assets for various projects.
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              edu has a low active ecosystem.
              It has 131 star(s) with 436 fork(s). There are 17 watchers for this library.
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              It had no major release in the last 6 months.
              There are 1 open issues and 1 have been closed. On average issues are closed in 222 days. There are no pull requests.
              It has a neutral sentiment in the developer community.
              The latest version of edu is current.

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              edu has no bugs reported.

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              edu has no vulnerabilities reported, and its dependent libraries have no vulnerabilities reported.

            kandi-License License

              edu does not have a standard license declared.
              Check the repository for any license declaration and review the terms closely.
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              Without a license, all rights are reserved, and you cannot use the library in your applications.

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              edu releases are not available. You will need to build from source code and install.

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            edu Key Features

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            edu Examples and Code Snippets

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            Community Discussions

            QUESTION

            General approach to parsing text with special characters from PDF using Tesseract?
            Asked 2021-Jun-15 at 20:17

            I would like to extract the definitions from the book The Navajo Language: A Grammar and Colloquial Dictionary by Young and Morgan. They look like this (very blurry):

            I tried running it through the Google Cloud Vision API, and got decent results, but it doesn't know what to do with these "special" letters with accent marks on them, or the curls and lines on/through them. And because of the blurryness (there are no alternative sources of the PDF), it gets a lot of them wrong. So I'm thinking of doing it from scratch in Tesseract. Note the term is bold and the definition is not bold.

            How can I use Node.js and Tesseract to get basically an array of JSON objects sort of like this:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 20:17

            Tesseract takes a lang variable that you can expand to include different languages if they're installed. I've used the UB Mannheim (https://github.com/UB-Mannheim/tesseract/wiki) installation which includes a ton of languages supported.

            To get better and more accurate results, the best thing to do is to process the image before handing it to Tesseract. Set a white/black threshold so that you have black text on white background with no shading. I'm not sure how to do this in Node, but I've done it with Python's OpenCV library.

            If that font doesn't get you decent results with the out of the box, then you'll want to train your own, yes. This blog post walks through the process in great detail: https://towardsdatascience.com/simple-ocr-with-tesseract-a4341e4564b6. It revolves around using the jTessBoxEditor to hand-label the objects detected in the images you're using.

            Edit: In brief, the process to train your own:

            1. Install jTessBoxEditor (https://sourceforge.net/projects/vietocr/files/jTessBoxEditor/). Requires Java Runtime installed as well.
            2. Collect your training images. They want to be .tiffs. I found I got fairly accurate results with not a whole lot of images that had a good sample of all the characters I wanted to detect. Maybe 30/40 images. It's tedious, so you don't want to do TOO many, but need enough in order to get a good sampling.
            3. Use jTessBoxEditor to merge all the images into a single .tiff
            4. Create a training label file (.box)j. This is done with Tesseract itself. tesseract your_language.font.exp0.tif your_language.font.exp0 makebox
            5. Now you can open the box file in jTessBoxEditor and you'll see how/where it detected the characters. Bounding boxes and what character it saw. The tedious part: Hand fix all the bounding boxes and characters to accurately represent what is in the images. Not joking, it's tedious. Slap some tv episodes up and just churn through it.
            6. Train the tesseract model itself
            • save a file: font_properties who's content is font 0 0 0 0 0
            • run the following commands:

            tesseract num.font.exp0.tif font_name.font.exp0 nobatch box.train

            unicharset_extractor font_name.font.exp0.box

            shapeclustering -F font_properties -U unicharset -O font_name.unicharset font_name.font.exp0.tr

            mftraining -F font_properties -U unicharset -O font_name.unicharset font_name.font.exp0.tr

            cntraining font_name.font.exp0.tr

            You should, in there close to the end see some output that looks like this:

            Master shape_table:Number of shapes = 10 max unichars = 1 number with multiple unichars = 0

            That number of shapes should roughly be the number of characters present in all the image files you've provided.

            If it went well, you should have 4 files created: inttemp normproto pffmtable shapetable. Rename them all with the prefix of your_language from before. So e.g. your_language.inttemp etc.

            Then run:

            combine_tessdata your_language

            The file: your_language.traineddata is the model. Copy that into your Tesseract's data folder. On Windows, it'll be like: C:\Program Files x86\tesseract\4.0\tessdata and on Linux it's probably something like /usr/shared/tesseract/4.0/tessdata.

            Then when you run Tesseract, you'll pass the lang=your_language. I found best results when I still passed an existing language as well, so like for my stuff it was still English I was grabbing, just funny fonts. So I still wanted the English as well, so I'd pass: lang=your_language+eng.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67991718

            QUESTION

            Multiple requests causing program to crash (using BeautifulSoup)
            Asked 2021-Jun-15 at 19:45

            I am writing a program in python to have a user input multiple websites then request and scrape those websites for their titles and output it. However, when the program surpasses 8 websites the program crashes every time. I am not sure if it is a memory problem, but I have been looking all over and can't find any one who has had the same problem. The code is below (I added 9 lists so all you have to do is copy and paste the code to see the issue).

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 19:45

            To avoid the page from crashing, add the user-agent header to the headers= parameter in requests.get(), otherwise, the page thinks that your a bot and will block you.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67992444

            QUESTION

            Prolog: existentially quantifying
            Asked 2021-Jun-14 at 12:48

            I am trying to understand the usage of existentially quantifying. What I know by now is this technique is used with setof, findall, bagof. Further, I found a tutorial. However, I am not sure when and how I do the Vars^Goal (existentially quantifying) in Prolog.

            Here is the example, my goal is to find two employees who know each other but work at different companies, binding the result with L showing Name1-Name2:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-14 at 12:48

            I am not sure when and how I do the Vars^Goal (existentially quantifying) in Prolog.

            The easiest answer is: Don't do it, ever. You can always introduce an auxiliary predicate that captures exactly the query you want, exposing exactly the arguments you want and nothing else (that would require quantification), and with a nice self-documenting name.

            In your example, you can define:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67926396

            QUESTION

            Django Ajax: response renders in another page not same page
            Asked 2021-Jun-13 at 11:10

            I'm having app that using ajax to submit model form.

            ISSUE: the submit works fine and edit the database. but the response renders in manage_user("users/manage" in another wod), not the same page I'm working on "users/"

            in urls.py:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-13 at 11:10

            You are not preventing the form from being submitted in your function. You do write return false; but that won't work here as that needs to be done in a fashion like below where somefunction will return false:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67898958

            QUESTION

            differences in bitmap or rasterized font bitmaps and text display on 3.5" TFT LCD
            Asked 2021-Jun-12 at 16:19

            I am using a 3.5: TFT LCD display with an Arduino Uno and the library from the manufacturer, the KeDei TFT library. The library came with a bitmap font table that is huge for the small amount of memory of an Arduino Uno so I've been looking for alternatives.

            What I am running into is that there doesn't seem to be a standard representation and some of the bitmap font tables I've found work fine and others display as strange doodles and marks or they display upside down or they display with letters flipped. After writing a simple application to display some of the characters, I finally realized that different bitmaps use different character orientations.

            My question

            What are the rules or standards or expected representations for the bit data for bitmap fonts? Why do there seem to be several different text character orientations used with bitmap fonts?

            Thoughts about the question

            Are these due to different target devices such as a Windows display driver or a Linux display driver versus a bare metal Arduino TFT LCD display driver?

            What is the criteria used to determine a particular bitmap font representation as a series of unsigned char values? Are different types of raster devices such as a TFT LCD display and its controller have a different sequence of bits when drawing on the display surface by setting pixel colors?

            What other possible bitmap font representations requiring a transformation which my version of the library currently doesn't offer, are there?

            Is there some method other than the approach I'm using to determine what transformation is needed? I currently plug the bitmap font table into a test program and print out a set of characters to see how it looks and then fine tune the transformation by testing with the Arduino and the TFT LCD screen.

            My experience thus far

            The KeDei TFT library came with an a bitmap font table that was defined as

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-12 at 16:19

            Raster or bitmap fonts are represented in a number of different ways and there are bitmap font file standards that have been developed for both Linux and Windows. However raw data representation of bitmap fonts in programming language source code seems to vary depending on:

            • the memory architecture of the target computer,
            • the architecture and communication pathways to the display controller,
            • character glyph height and width in pixels and
            • the amount of memory for bitmap storage and what measures are taken to make that as small as possible.

            A brief overview of bitmap fonts

            A generic bitmap is a block of data in which individual bits are used to indicate a state of either on or off. One use of a bitmap is to store image data. Character glyphs can be created and stored as a collection of images, one for each character in the character set, so using a bitmap to encode and store each character image is a natural fit.

            Bitmap fonts are bitmaps used to indicate how to display or print characters by turning on or off pixels or printing or not printing dots on a page. See Wikipedia Bitmap fonts

            A bitmap font is one that stores each glyph as an array of pixels (that is, a bitmap). It is less commonly known as a raster font or a pixel font. Bitmap fonts are simply collections of raster images of glyphs. For each variant of the font, there is a complete set of glyph images, with each set containing an image for each character. For example, if a font has three sizes, and any combination of bold and italic, then there must be 12 complete sets of images.

            A brief history of using bitmap fonts

            The earliest user interface terminals such as teletype terminals used dot matrix printer mechanisms to print on rolls of paper. With the development of Cathode Ray Tube terminals bitmap fonts were readily transferable to that technology as dots of luminescence turned on and off by a scanning electron gun.

            Earliest bitmap fonts were of a fixed height and width with the bitmap acting as a kind of stamp or pattern to print characters on the output medium, paper or display tube, with a fixed line height and a fixed line width such as the 80 columns and 24 lines of the DEC VT-100 terminal.

            With increasing processing power, a more sophisticated typographical approach became available with vector fonts used to improve displayed text quality and provide improved scaling while also reducing memory required to describe the character glyphs.

            In addition, while a matrix of dots or pixels worked fairly well for languages such as English, written languages with complex glyph forms were poorly served by bitmap fonts.

            Representation of bitmap fonts in source code

            There are a number of bitmap font file formats which provide a way to represent a bitmap font in a device independent description. For an example see Wikipedia topic - Glyph Bitmap Distribution Format

            The Glyph Bitmap Distribution Format (BDF) by Adobe is a file format for storing bitmap fonts. The content takes the form of a text file intended to be human- and computer-readable. BDF is typically used in Unix X Window environments. It has largely been replaced by the PCF font format which is somewhat more efficient, and by scalable fonts such as OpenType and TrueType fonts.

            Other bitmap standards such as XBM, Wikipedia topic - X BitMap, or XPM, Wikipedia topic - X PixMap, are source code components that describe bitmaps however many of these are not meant for bitmap fonts specifically but rather other graphical images such as icons, cursors, etc.

            As bitmap fonts are an older format many times bitmap fonts are wrapped within another font standard such as TrueType in order to be compatible with the standard font subsystems of modern operating systems such as Linux and Windows.

            However embedded systems that are running on the bare metal or using an RTOS will normally need the raw bitmap character image data in the form similar to the XBM format. See Encyclopedia of Graphics File Formats which has this example:

            Following is an example of a 16x16 bitmap stored using both its X10 and X11 variations. Note that each array contains exactly the same data, but is stored using different data word types:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67465098

            QUESTION

            Unable to Extract text names in span tag using selenium webdriver
            Asked 2021-Jun-12 at 07:04

            I have a table like below :

            I'm trying to extract the Title names (highlighted) using below Selenium web driver code, but I'm getting output as None here:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-12 at 06:55

            you can use i.text or i.get_attribute('innerText')

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67945942

            QUESTION

            Audio having a weird behaviour while being played
            Asked 2021-Jun-11 at 21:27

            I have a problem with playing audio when I press or click a button.

            Drum Machine

            It seems like my audio has a delay but I put a audio.currentTime = 0, so I don't know what's going on.

            Here is my JS:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-11 at 21:27

            First off, big thanks to @Seblor for providing me with the solution.

            I solved my problem by creating audio node for each sound:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67859952

            QUESTION

            Swagger in .net core 5 give me the error --No authenticationScheme was specified, and there was no DefaultChallengeScheme found
            Asked 2021-Jun-11 at 10:20

            When I request any API endpoint from Swagger UI give me the following error

            System.InvalidOperationException: No authenticationScheme was specified, and there was no DefaultChallengeScheme found. The default schemes can be set using either AddAuthentication(string defaultScheme) or AddAuthentication(Action configureOptions).

            at Microsoft.AspNetCore.Authentication.AuthenticationService.ChallengeAsync(HttpContext context, String scheme, AuthenticationProperties properties)

            at Microsoft.AspNetCore.Authorization.Policy.AuthorizationMiddlewareResultHandler.HandleAsync(RequestDelegate next, HttpContext context, AuthorizationPolicy policy, PolicyAuthorizationResult authorizeResult)

            at Microsoft.AspNetCore.Authorization.AuthorizationMiddleware.Invoke(HttpContext context)

            at Microsoft.AspNetCore.Authentication.AuthenticationMiddleware.Invoke(HttpContext context)

            at Swashbuckle.AspNetCore.SwaggerUI.SwaggerUIMiddleware.Invoke(HttpContext httpContext)

            at Swashbuckle.AspNetCore.Swagger.SwaggerMiddleware.Invoke(HttpContext httpContext, ISwaggerProvider swaggerProvider)

            at Microsoft.AspNetCore.Diagnostics.DeveloperExceptionPageMiddleware.Invoke(HttpContext context)

            HEADERS

            =======

            Accept: /

            Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate

            Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5

            Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJVc2VySWQiOiIzIiwiTG9naW5JZCI6ImFkbWluIiwiVXNlclR5cGVJZCI6IjEiLCJFbWFpbCI6ImEiLCJNb2JpbGUiOiJhIiwianRpIjoiMWU1MDY3ODAtMWRjNS00MDYzLWFkMTktMDdlMjg4MzAxOWVjIiwiZXhwIjoxNjIzNDYzNjQ4LCJpc3MiOiJlZHVjYXJlLmNvbSIsImF1ZCI6ImVkdWNhcmUuY29tIn0.G2-D_oIdwUDw_3iz87jxWBIMabFpLlR5ASjCr109kNM

            Connection: keep-alive

            Host: localhost:21068

            Referer: http://localhost:21068/swagger/index.html

            the Swagger configuration is given below

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-11 at 10:20

            It's not about Swagger your code is missing AddAuthentication(). The example below registers the Authentication schemes (JWT & Cookie) while using the JWT as the default scheme. More info in the Docuementation.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67930652

            QUESTION

            Browsersync IDE error "Couldn't open browser (if you are using BrowserSync in a headless environment, you might want to set the open option to false)"
            Asked 2021-Jun-11 at 10:03

            I'm stuck on lesson 19 of this course - https://javascript30.com/ - which uses Browsersync to provide access to the webcam.

            These are the files I'm working with: https://github.com/wesbos/JavaScript30/tree/master/19%20-%20Webcam%20Fun

            Having run npm install I get this error when trying to run the package that includes Browsersync and none of the URLs below work for me:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-11 at 10:03

            The CS50 IDE provides a "cloud-based Ubuntu environment", but that means "localhost" according to the browsersync output you're seeing isn't your localhost ― it's the localhost of that cloud environment.

            (And the "External" direct IP access will be incorrect too, since it references a local network that your computer isn't attached to.)

            The IDE might provide a way for you to access a server that's running in this way, but I suspect a simpler path is to run the start script directly on your local machine.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67934691

            QUESTION

            Unable to extract URL names from table using Selenium webdriver
            Asked 2021-Jun-11 at 08:44

            I have a table like below:

            The goal is to extract the names using selenium webdriver.

            I tried using the below code to fetch the names using xpath:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-11 at 08:44

            You may want to use below xpath :

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67931931

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