They could be. But again, only if the cell lines have different properties.
They could be. But again, only if the cell lines have different properties.
Tags allow set operations (union, intersection, etc) that are impossible with a tree based file hierarchy, even when using softlinks.
For basic usage, sure, you could make a folder for every tag you make and softlink everything into that folder to make it have said tag. But what if you now want all files tagged as “rent” but that are not tagged to your current landlord? You’d have to get the list of files in the “rent” folder and subtract form that list the list of files in the “<current landlord>” folder.
If you make tags have an order I’d even argue they are strictly superior to a tree hierarchy. Edit: that means that there is not a single operation you can do in a tree hierarchy that you can not do with those ordered tags.
Firefox has a “copy link without tracking information”, in the right click menu btw
Eh, “data available upon request” - fuck you, just add a table in the extra materials part. Also applies to any code written for a project.
I am doing a data analysis that has been described in another paper. Somewhat complex equations, but I managed to put them into code. Except when I use my code to reproduce figures from the paper two of five equations are off by a factor of kT/E_phonon (empirically determined by me, it’s just a value that makes my plots correspond with theirs). I have absolutely no effing clue where that discrepancy is coming from. They clearly wrote code for their paper but it’s not online and while I did have a pleasant correspondence with the author, they (understandably) do not have time to go digging for 10 year old code.
Right, and what force is acting on the child to make it deviate from a circular orbit into a spiral one?
Are we stuck though? IMAP supports folders, but Gmail ignores that and uses tags instead.
The filename idea is not bad, but you restrict the ability to give your files meaningful names.