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![]() I have used Camino as my main browser since about 2001. If you don’t use a lot of extensions anyway, and just want a lightweight but modern Mozilla then this is the perfect browser for you. I have never attempted using the mail client so I cannot speak for how good it is. The thing some may really like is that it’s a very complete internet usage tool with a built in mail client, composer and address book. Other than adblock, none of my extensions from Aurora work. As I mention above TFF is a little more compatible with all the add-ons I have used but Aurora performs a good deal better on 10.5. It borrows from both the TenFourFox code and the official FireFox’s Leopard optimizations to create a better experience for 10.5 users. This is the Aurora based sibling of TenFourFox. This is the best modern Mozilla option by far for Tiger users The same cannot be said for Aurora or SeaMonkey. I have yet to find one that doesn’t work perfectly. The bug free aspect of it is particularly beneficial with extensions. It’s not quite so efficient on 10.5, but AuroraFox addresses most of those issues. I would call it the most capable and bug free Mozilla option for OS X PowerPC. It supports both 10.4 and 10.5 which makes it more portable. This is Cameron Kaiser’s main project and the one everyone knows best usually. An undeveloped browser is a security risk, because there is no one battling to keep the code healthy and safe. There are a few like Sunrise, Stainless and Shiira that some may feel are worthy of mention, but they are all no longer developed. Safari is the exception because it's built in. Other than Safari, I will only be covering browsers that are still developed. I would only leave out the ones that have possible security concerns. The point is to cover all options whether we consider them all good or not. If you know of a good one that I don’t mention, or has just started development, please let me know and I will add it. Kaiser alone is directly responsible for TenFourFox and Classilla. People like Cameron Kaiser, RPMozley and a few others are working hard and have been for a long time. Although the browser selection on PowerPC is more limited in 2012, there is still a small but loyal developer base working hard. I will look at each in an overall type manner by combining an evaluation of the features and technologies at hand. To truly evaluate a group of anything you need to be objective so my Mozilla preference is out the window for this post. I myself tend to always gravitate to Mozilla based browsers like Camino and TenFour/Aurora/FireFox. My logic behind this is that even a layperson on the internet often has a preference. Since most browsers are based on core technologies like Mozilla or Webkit and such, it would be best to categorize them like this. Browsers are easily the most utilized internet tool in the world, so this is a worthy topic. My interest is not only to write what I have to say, but also to write about subjects that the readers are interested in. Thanks to a regular commenter here named 'dr.dave', I was reminded of this when I asked for OS X content ideas a few days ago. I meant to write this well over a month ago, but it never happened somehow. ![]() If the figure dpi is different (matplotlib default is fig.dpi=100), 1 point = fig.dpi/72. If the figure dpi is 72 as well, one point is one pixel. It might be useful to be able to specify sizes in pixels instead of points. The standard size of points in matplotlib is 72 points per inch (ppi) - 1 point is hence 1/72 inches. Also linewidths is often specified in points. Points are often used in typography, where fonts are specified in points. So far the answer to what the size of a scatter marker means is given in units of points. doubling the underlying quantity should double the area of the marker. Specifying the size of the scatter markers in terms of some quantity which is proportional to the area of the marker makes in thus far sense as it is the area of the marker that is perceived when comparing different patches rather than its side length or diameter. This is the motivation to call it "area" even though in most cases it isn't really. In all cases however the area of the marker is proportional to the s parameter. For other markers there may not even be any obvious relation to the area of the marker.For a circle, the area of the circle is area = pi/4*s.For the special case of a square marker, marker="s", the area of the marker is indeed directly the value of the s parameter.Of course the units of points**2 are area units. So why do other answers and even the documentation speak about "area" when it comes to the s parameter? In order to produce a scatter marker of the same size as a plot marker of size 10 points you would hence call scatter(. So the relationship between the markersize of a line plot and the scatter size argument is the square. In order to obtain a marker which is x points large, you need to square that number and give it to the s argument. S : scalar or array_like, shape (n, ), optional The argument s in plt.scatter denotes the markersize**2. ![]() Plt.legend(loc='center left', bbox_to_anchor=(1.1, 0.5), labelspacing=3)īecause other answers here claim that s denotes the area of the marker, I'm adding this answer to clearify that this is not necessarily the case. Thus if we want a circle to appear a factor of n bigger we would increase the area by a factor n not the radius so the apparent size scales linearly with the area.Įdit to visualize the comment by is what it looks like for different functions of the marker size: However it is the second example (where we are scaling area) that doubling area appears to make the circle twice as big to the eye. Similarly the second example each circle has area double the last one which gives an exponential with base 2. The question asked about doubling the width of a circle so in the first picture for each circle (as we move from left to right) it's width is double the previous one so for the area this is an exponential with base 4. Now the apparent size of the markers increases roughly linearly in an intuitive fashion.Īs for the exact meaning of what a 'point' is, it is fairly arbitrary for plotting purposes, you can just scale all of your sizes by a constant until they look reasonable.Įdit: (In response to comment from probably confusing wording on my part. If instead we have # doubling the area of markers Notice how the size increases very quickly. To see this consider the following two examples and the output they produce. Because of the scaling of area as the square of width, doubling the width actually appears to increase the size by more than a factor 2 (in fact it increases it by a factor of 4). There is a reason, however, that the size of markers is defined in this way. This means, to double the width (or height) of the marker you need to increase s by a factor of 4. This can be a somewhat confusing way of defining the size but you are basically specifying the area of the marker. ![]() The bubbles can be destroyed by any attack or projectile. Detonating Bubble: Duke Fishron blows roughly 10-20 bubbles from his mouth that follow the player at moderate speed, exploding and dealing damage on contact.Bleeding can be ignored with an Adhesive Bandage or any of its upgrades, and all of Feral Bite's side effects will be prevented by the Ankh Charm or Ankh Shield.ĭuke Fishron lunges at the player exactly five times, traveling through blocks, before using one of two projectile attacks in this order: When hitting the player in Expert Mode or Master Mode, Duke Fishron has a 33% chance to inflict Bleeding and a 33% chance to inflict Feral Bite. The player's Fishing Power is irrelevant to the summoning, and Crate or Sonar potions will be wasted. If within the Ocean biome, he can also be summoned by fishing in lava or honey. ![]() Summoning Duke Fishron does not require that any other bosses have been defeated beforehand, so on a technical level, he is only restricted by the Hardmode exclusive Truffle Worm, which can be used to spawn him in any world. Once the bobber bobs, reeling in the line spawns Duke Fishron, who emerges from the water, pauses for a moment, and then begins attacking the player. The Truffle Worm is a rare critter that must be caught with the Bug Net, Golden Bug Net, or Lavaproof Bug Net in an underground Glowing Mushroom biome. On the Old-gen console, Windows Phone, Old Chinese, 3DS, and tModLoader Legacy versions, Boss 1 will play.ĭuke Fishron is summoned by fishing in the Ocean using a Truffle Worm as bait. When Otherworldly music is enabled, the track Boss 2 (Otherworldly) (Otherworldly).mp3 will play instead. While Duke Fishron is alive, his exclusive music Duke Fishron will play. On the Old-gen console version, Windows Phone version, and Nintendo 3DS version, Duke Fishron and Ocram are the final bosses due to the lack of the Moon Lord in these versions. Fighting Duke Fishron is completely optional and not required for game progression, but his defeat will reward the player with powerful weapons. Some players may challenge him with post- mechanical bosses gear, but most players may want to wait until post- Golem to battle him. While he can be summoned as soon as Hardmode is initiated, he can pose a serious threat to new or underprepared players and should be fought later on in the game. For the hardmode enemy, see Pigron.ĭuke Fishron is a Hardmode boss. |