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gine if you now change your strategy, persona, and marketing to being known as a “Progressive Mobile Web Application Developer”. You’ve drastically differentiated yourself. Sure you will have less people looking for you, but when so
Public Function GetSelectedSlicerItems(SlicerName As String) As String
Dim SL As SlicerCacheLevel
Dim sI As SlicerItem
Set SL = ActiveWorkbook.SlicerCaches(SlicerName).SlicerCacheLevels(1)
For Each sI In SL.SlicerItems
If sI.Selected = True Then
GetSelectedSlicerItems = (sI.Value)
End If
Next
End Function
Dim sValue As String
sValue = GetSelectedSlicerItems("Slicer_HeaderTitle")
After an hour two, fiddling with python standard libraries this is what I had.
I had never heard about the Master Method before, but found both the formula (for finding the big-O performance of recursive algorithms) and the derivation of it quite interesting. I also liked the graph algorithms, in particular the algorithm for finding strongly connected components in a directed graph (the algorithm uses the neat trick of reversing all the edges as one of its steps). The lecture on heaps was interesting – I studied heaps in my class at university, but I had completely forgotten about them. So there it really was a case of needing a refresher (and heap sort now makes total sense too).
- All new lines must be executed at least once. Before you are done with a feature, you have to test it. Otherwise, how do you know that it does what it is supposed to do? Often, the best way is by automatic tests, but not always. But no matter what, every new line of code has to be executed at least once.
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