Created
September 13, 2012 22:59
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Why I want ES.next yesterday
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// some code I'm writing... | |
class Matrix { | |
/* ... */ | |
transpose() { | |
var [n, m] = this.size(), | |
rows = this.rows, | |
result = [], | |
i = 0, j = 0; | |
for (j = 0; j < m; j++) { | |
result[j] = []; | |
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) { | |
result[j][i] = rows[i][j]; | |
} | |
} | |
return new Matrix(...result); | |
} | |
svd() { | |
let A = this.transpose().x(this), | |
[n, m] = this.size(), | |
S = Matrix.Zeros(n, m); | |
A.eigenvalues() | |
.sort((a, b) => b - a}) | |
.map(Math.sqrt) | |
.forEach((val, i) => S.rows[i][i] = val); | |
/* ... */ |
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I've been avoiding
let
because Traceur usestry...catch
when you use it inside blocks and that's a performance killer. For example this:...turns into:
When you use
let
in the top scope of a function it just turns it into avar
so in this case it works ok.