You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
It makes sense to abandon Chimp and Elephant once you progress into the book; however, you drop them too coldly. As you revise, make a note to the reader in the last chapter in which you will be using C & E and let the reader know that, while they've been useful characters, we won't be seeing them any more. That said, is there anything stopping you from weaving in a brief example that utilized C&E in later chapters? My point is, they get dropped to suddenly, and that's a lose thread. There are various ways to tie it up. -Amy
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Great point. I like it best to have them crop up throughout. One of the
things I've wrestled with is how to work in the philosophical/editorial
passages, eg when to stop tuning; or why you should only use a crude
algorithm, never a fancy one, to fix up data for use by another algorithm.
In the later chapters perhaps C&E take those over.
It makes sense to abandon Chimp and Elephant once you progress into the book; however, you drop them too coldly. As you revise, make a note to the reader in the last chapter in which you will be using C & E and let the reader know that, while they've been useful characters, we won't be seeing them any more. That said, is there anything stopping you from weaving in a brief example that utilized C&E in later chapters? My point is, they get dropped to suddenly, and that's a lose thread. There are various ways to tie it up. -Amy
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: