It may get a bad rap for being basic, but there's nothing easier than putting together a simple cat Halloween costume — and with Halloween right around the corner, easy is what you need. You've ...
xnew_from_cat = torch.cat((x, x, x), 1) print(f'{xnew_from_cat.size()}') print() # stack serves the same role as append in lists. i.e. it doesn't change the original # vector space but instead adds a new index to the new tensor, so you retain the ability # get the original tensor you added to the list by indexing in the new dimension
If using an external utility is acceptable I'd prefer busybox for Windows which is a single ~600 kB exe incorporating ~30 Unix utilities. The only difference is that one should use "busybox cat" command instead of simple "cat"
cat is valid only for atomic types (logical, integer, real, complex, character) and names. It means you cannot call cat on a non-empty list or any type of object. In practice it simply converts arguments to characters and concatenates so you can think of something like as.character() %>% paste(). print is a generic function so you can define a specific implementation for a certain S3 class.
Can someone please shed some light on an equivalent method of executing something like "cat file1 -" in Linux ? What I want to do is to give control to the keyboard stream (which is "-&
cat countryInfo.txt | grep -v "^#" >countryInfo-n.txt After some research i found that cat is for concatenation and grep is for regular exp search (don't know if i am right) but what will the above command result in (since both are combined together) ? Thanks in Advance. EDIT: I am asking this as i dont have linux installed. Else, i could test it.
cat is an identity pipe. It only streams its input to its output. If the second program in the chain can take its input from the same argument you pass to cat (or from the standard input, if you pass no argument), then cat is absolutely useless and only results in an additional process being forked and an additional pipe being created.