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77 results for “jonthegeek”

  1. Happy Mole Day! Go learn (or teach) something about chemistry! moleday.org/ #ChemEd

  2. Happy Mole Day! Go learn (or teach) something about chemistry! moleday.org/ #ChemEd

  3. Happy Mole Day! Go learn (or teach) something about chemistry! moleday.org/ #ChemEd

  4. There's still time to vote in the @R4DSCommunity #GivingSeason 2023 donation drive! Would you rather see us work on features for #TidyTuesday, our data-related book clubs (#RStats, #PyData, and #JuliaLang so far), or our mentoring/tutoring program?

    rfordatasci.com/donate.html#gi

  5. There's still time to vote in the @R4DSCommunity 2023 donation drive! Would you rather see us work on features for , our data-related book clubs (, , and so far), or our mentoring/tutoring program?

    rfordatasci.com/donate.html#gi

  6. There's still time to vote in the @R4DSCommunity #GivingSeason 2023 donation drive! Would you rather see us work on features for #TidyTuesday, our data-related book clubs (#RStats, #PyData, and #JuliaLang so far), or our mentoring/tutoring program?

    rfordatasci.com/donate.html#gi

  7. There's still time to vote in the @R4DSCommunity #GivingSeason 2023 donation drive! Would you rather see us work on features for #TidyTuesday, our data-related book clubs (#RStats, #PyData, and #JuliaLang so far), or our mentoring/tutoring program?

    rfordatasci.com/donate.html#gi

  8. There's still time to vote in the @R4DSCommunity #GivingSeason 2023 donation drive! Would you rather see us work on features for #TidyTuesday, our data-related book clubs (#RStats, #PyData, and #JuliaLang so far), or our mentoring/tutoring program?

    rfordatasci.com/donate.html#gi

  9. @hendrikerz as long as you can keep the language wars out if things, we'd love to see you in the Data Science Learning Community (formerly @R4DSCommunity but we're ) dslc.io ! We're a diverse, friendly, and inclusive community of data science learners and practitioners.

  10. TIL: before 1925, (some? British?) astronomers started the GMT day at noon (noon was 00:00:00), so "1924-12-30 23:00:00 GMT" would mean 11am on the morning of what we now call December 31. Be careful when working with historical datetime data, even if it's precisely specified!

    As far as I can find, neither lubridate nor clock have a way to deal with this in #RStats. In theory there should be a "Greenwich Mean Astronomical Time" in #tzdb to specify this system, but I don't see it.

    @davis

  11. TIL: before 1925, (some? British?) astronomers started the GMT day at noon (noon was 00:00:00), so "1924-12-30 23:00:00 GMT" would mean 11am on the morning of what we now call December 31. Be careful when working with historical datetime data, even if it's precisely specified!

    As far as I can find, neither lubridate nor clock have a way to deal with this in #RStats. In theory there should be a "Greenwich Mean Astronomical Time" in #tzdb to specify this system, but I don't see it.

    @davis

  12. TIL: before 1925, (some? British?) astronomers started the GMT day at noon (noon was 00:00:00), so "1924-12-30 23:00:00 GMT" would mean 11am on the morning of what we now call December 31. Be careful when working with historical datetime data, even if it's precisely specified!

    As far as I can find, neither lubridate nor clock have a way to deal with this in #RStats. In theory there should be a "Greenwich Mean Astronomical Time" in #tzdb to specify this system, but I don't see it.

    @davis

  13. TIL: before 1925, (some? British?) astronomers started the GMT day at noon (noon was 00:00:00), so "1924-12-30 23:00:00 GMT" would mean 11am on the morning of what we now call December 31. Be careful when working with historical datetime data, even if it's precisely specified!

    As far as I can find, neither lubridate nor clock have a way to deal with this in #RStats. In theory there should be a "Greenwich Mean Astronomical Time" in #tzdb to specify this system, but I don't see it.

    @davis