The release notes themselves describe what the deprecations are but do not speak much to the reasons that are driving them in the overall lifecycle of this software.
Would anyone kindly shed some light on the intentions behind these deprecations?
On the other hand, when I boot into Windows for games, it always surprises me how much CPU Windows uses just… sitting there, doing nothing.
They pronounce the "Py" as "pie".
209 video clips with searchable transcripts use "NumPy": https://youglish.com/pronounce/NumPy/english?
Out of the first 16 clips I checked (which contain a few duplicate speakers), all say "num-pie".
Next, "sqlite": https://youglish.com/pronounce/sqlite/english?
15 for "sequel-light", 1 for "S-Q-L-light". 430 left to check.
I recently learned YouGlish also supports other languages!
Here's how French people say "Python" - https://youglish.com/pronounce/python/french?
For a word that blew my mind when I first saw it, here are 68 clips of the German word "Höchstgeschwindigkeit": https://youglish.com/pronounce/H%C3%B6chstgeschwindigkeit/ge...? .
> 15 for "sequel-light", 1 for "S-Q-L-light". 430 left to check.
It has to be pronounced in the French fashion: Liberté, Fraternité and SequalitéI am frequently stupidly oblivious, so the first time I noticed the docs spelling it “NumPy” I thought that an odd spelling for a package called num-pee.
Only when I heard it in a presentation did it all click and I laughed at my misunderstanding.
I now attempt to say “num-pie” but frequently mispronounce in error.
However, it does not surprise/bother me if someone goes for "num-pie".
I mean the Py comes from python where it certainly sounds more like pie.
The real question then is: How would the file ending .py be pronounced?
This update breaks Seaborn library. I need to keep numpy on v1.23