i have been Programming Lua with the game Roblox!
but my code i'm trying to build does not work!
RH = Instance.new("Motor6D", T)
RH.DesiredAngle = -0.044
RH.MaxVelocity = 0.15
RH.Name = "Right Hip"
RH.Part0 = Torso
RH.Part1 = Right Leg
RS = Instance.new("Motor6D", T)
RS.DesiredAngle = 0.044
RS.MaxVelocity = 0.15
RS.Name = "Right Shoulder"
RS.Part0 = Torso
RS.Part1 = Right Arm
it says expected '=' got RH
Can anyone please tell me why
Also my theory is that
RH.Part1 = Right Leg
is causing the problem.
When i put it in quotes it says
RH.Part1 = "Right Leg" Object Needed not string
(something along those lines)
So can anybody tell me how to weld with two words?
You're right. Lua is complaining about RH.Part1 = Right Leg, which it sees as RH.Part1 = Right followed by Leg RS = Instance.new("Motor6D", T), and this is a syntax error.
The fix RH.Part1 = "Right Leg" does work at compile time but not at run time because of the semantics of Roblox. From what I could gather on line, RH.Part1 needs to be an object. And so does RH.Part0. Since Torso is not defined in that code, you get nil.
Bottom line: you need to define objects named Torso, Right_Leg, Right_Arm before you used them.
Related
I have encountered a very strange problem when using cvxpy. Consider the following two problems:
x = cvx.Variable(1, "x")
obj = cvx.Minimize(x)
cons = [x==1]
prob = cvx.Problem(obj, cons)
prob.solve()
print(cons[0].dual_value)
Output: -1
x = cvx.Variable(1, "x")
obj = cvx.Maximize(x)
cons = [x==1]
prob = cvx.Problem(obj, cons)
prob.solve()
print(cons[0].dual_value)
Output: 1
The only difference is that one is a minimization problem and the other is a maximization problem, but the sign of the dual variable is flipped.
Conceptually, this shouldn't happen as in both cases the Lagrangian is L=x + lambda*(x-1), but I cannot find the documentation on how it is defined.
Does anyone have an explanation on why this is happening?
I've been trying to make a pivot point high low multitimeframe indicator but still a new learner and have no idea how to fix.
I tried to put 'tf' function in multiple places of code but it's not working.
//#version=4
study("Pivot Prices", overlay=true)
tf=input('120')
leftbars = input(10, minval=1, title='Bars to the left')
rightbars = input(2, minval=1, title='Bars to the right')
phigh = pivothigh(high, tf, leftbars,rightbars)
plow = pivotlow(low, tf, leftbars, rightbars)
if phigh
label1 = label.new(bar_index[rightbars], high[rightbars], text=tostring(high[rightbars]), style=label.style_labeldown, color=color.orange)
if plow
label2 = label.new(bar_index[rightbars], low[rightbars], text=tostring(low[rightbars]), s``tyle=label.style_labelup, color=color.green)
I want it to be showing multitimeframe perspective but couldn't figure what is wrong in the code.
Read the documentation. pivothigh() and pivotlow() can take two or three arguments.
pivothigh(source, leftbars, rightbars) → series[float]
pivothigh(leftbars, rightbars) → series[float]
You are passing four arguments.
I'm fairly new to Swift, only having used Python and Pascal before. I was wondering if anyone could help with generating a floating point number in range. I know that cannot be done straight up. So this is what I've created. However, it doesn't seem to work.
func location() {
// let DivisionConstant = UInt32(1000)
let randomIntHeight = arc4random_uniform(1000000) + 12340000
let randomIntWidth = arc4random_uniform(1000000) + 7500000
XRandomFloat = Float(randomIntHeight / UInt32(10000))
YRandomFloat = Float(randomIntWidth / UInt32(10000))
randomXFloat = CGFloat(XRandomFloat)
randomYFloat = CGFloat(YRandomFloat)
self.Item.center = CGPointMake(randomXFloat, randomYFloat)
}
By the looks of it, when I run it, it is not dividing by the value of the DivisionConstant, so I commented this and replaced it with a raw value. However, self.Item still appears off screen. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
This division probably isn't what you intended:
XRandomFloat = Float(randomIntHeight / UInt32(10000))
This performs integer division (discarding any remainder) and then converts the result to Float. What you probably meant was:
XRandomFloat = Float(randomIntHeight) / Float(10000)
This is a floating point number with a granularity of approximately 1/10000.
Your initial code:
let randomIntHeight = arc4random_uniform(1000000) + 12340000
generates a random number between 12340000 and (12340000+1000000-1). Given your final scaling, that means a range of 1234 and 1333. This seems odd for your final goals. I assume you really meant just arc4random_uniform(12340000), but I may misunderstand your goal.
Given your comments, I think you've over-complicated this. The following should give you a random point on the screen, assuming you want an integral (i.e. non-fractional) point, which is almost always what you'd want:
let bounds = UIScreen.mainScreen().bounds
let x = arc4random_uniform(UInt32(bounds.width))
let y = arc4random_uniform(UInt32(bounds.height))
let randomPoint = CGPoint(x: CGFloat(x), y: CGFloat(y))
Your problem is that you're adding the the maximum value to your random value, so of course it's always going to be offscreen.
I'm not sure what numbers you're hoping to generate, but what you're getting are results like:
1317.0, 764.0
1237.0, 795.0
1320.0, 814.0
1275.0, 794.0
1314.0, 758.0
1300.0, 758.0
1260.0, 809.0
1279.0, 768.0
1315.0, 838.0
1284.0, 763.0
1273.0, 828.0
1263.0, 770.0
1252.0, 776.0
1255.0, 848.0
1277.0, 847.0
1236.0, 847.0
1320.0, 772.0
1268.0, 759.0
You're then using this as the center of a UI element. Unless it's very large, it's likely to be off-screen.
I am trying to somehow replicate the range bar chart here.
I've found this reference but I don't fully grasp the code.
What I have is a series of task (sometimes accomplished in different periods).
let d = [("task1", DateTime.Parse("11/01/2014 08:30"), DateTime.Parse("12/01/2014 10:30"));
("task2", DateTime.Parse("15/01/2014 09:30"), DateTime.Parse("16/01/2014 10:30"));
("task3", DateTime.Parse("11/01/2014 08:30"), DateTime.Parse("16/01/2014 10:30"))]
let chart = d |> FSharp.Charting.Chart.RangeBar
chart.ShowChart()
I am struggling to understand the logic of the API.
I have also tried:
let chart = new Windows.Forms.DataVisualization.Charting.Chart(Dock = DockStyle.Fill)
let area = new ChartArea("Main")
chart.ChartAreas.Add(area)
let mainForm = new Form(Visible = true, TopMost = true, Width = 700, Height = 500)
mainForm.Controls.Add(chart)
let seriesColumns = new Series("NameOfTheSerie")
seriesColumns.ChartType <- SeriesChartType.RangeBar
type SupportToChart(serieVals: Series) =
member this.addPointXY(lbl, [<ParamArray>] yVals: Object[]) =
serieVals.Points.AddXY(lbl, yVals) |> ignore
let supporter = SupportToChart(seriesColumns)
supporter.addPointXY("AAA", DateTime.Parse("11/01/2014 08:30"), DateTime.Parse("12/01/2014 10:30") )
which results in
System.ArgumentOutOfRangeException: You can only set 1 Y values for
this data point.
Has something changed in the API since then?
I'm not entirely sure that F# Charting is currently powerful enough to be able to reconstruct the above chart. However, one of the problems seems to be that it treats dates as float values (for some reason) and incorrectly guesses the ranges. You can at least see the chart if you use:
Chart.RangeBar(d)
|> Chart.WithYAxis(Min=41650.0, Max=41660.0)
Please submit this as an issue on GitHub. If you want to dig deeper into how F# Charting works and help us get this fixed, that would be amazing :-)
The trick is initializing the Series with
let serie = new Series("Range", yValues)
where yValues defines the max number of "Y-values".
this code (lua) gives you a random value from the table "local a" by pressing the text "new". Unfortunately the new random value just appears above the old one. I've tried to remove the old value e.g. with display.remove(mmDis), but it doesn't work.
The second problem is that sometimes I also get back the value "nil" and not only the four entries from the table.
Both things must be easy to solve, but as newbie to lua and working on these small things for almost 4 hours now I just don't get what to change to make it work.
-- references
local mmDis
-- functions
function randomText(event)
display.remove(mmDis)
local a = {"Banana!","Apple!","Potato","Pie"}
com = (a[math.random(0.5,#a)])
local mmDis = display.newText(tostring(com),
display.contentWidth*0.57, display.contentHeight*0.7,
display.contentWidth*0.9, display.contentHeight*0.8, "Calibri", 60)
end
-- menu button
local textnew = display.newText("New", 0, 0, "Calibri", 40)
textnew.x = display.contentWidth*0.2
textnew.y = display.contentHeight*0.9
textnew:addEventListener ("tap", randomText )
It's hard to understand what you are trying to do because when you create textnew you have it in one position and size, while in randomeText() you seem to want to replace that text object with a new one, but you put it at a different pos and size. It appears you want to change the object's text every time you press on tap; in this case, you don't need to replace the text object, you just replace its text.
Also:
you have two "local mmDis", the second one will hide the first, not sure what you're after there
read carefully the docs for math.random
com is already a string so you don't need tostring
Try this code and let me know if this is not what you are after:
local menuTextOptions = {
text = "New",
x = display.contentWidth*0.2,
y = display.contentHeight*0.9,
align = 'left',
font = "Calibri",
fontSize = 40,
}
local textnew = display.newText(menuTextOptions)
-- functions
function randomText(event)
local a = {"Banana!","Apple!","Potato","Pie"}
local com = a[math.random(1,#a)]
textnew.text = com
-- if you want to change position too:
-- textnew.x = display.contentWidth*0.2
-- textnew.y = display.contentHeight*0.9
-- if you want to change size too, but only used for multiline text:
-- textnew.width = display.contentWidth*0.9
-- textnew.height = display.contentHeight*0.8
end
textnew:addEventListener ("tap", randomText )
Sometimes it looks like the button doesn't do anything when you tap but that's because the random number happens to be same as previous, you could put a loop to guard against that. Ig you actually want to change the pos and/or width, then the above code makes it clear where you should do that.
So, that's the basic code (without any extras at the moment :)) how it should be. Big thanks to Scholli!:
local menuTextOptions = {
text = "New",
x = display.contentWidth*0.2,
y = display.contentHeight*0.9,
align = 'left',
font = "Calibri",
fontSize = 40,
}
local textnew = display.newText(menuTextOptions)
local replacement = display.newText(menuTextOptions)
replacement.y = display.contentHeight*0.5
-- functions
function randomText(event)
local a = {"Banana!","Apple!","Potato","Pie"}
local com = a[math.random(1,#a)]
replacement.text = com
end
textnew:addEventListener ("tap", randomText )