Name: Jason Scott Schneider
Type: User
Company: Dallas College
Bio: Programs and Analyzes Data with: R, Python, Javascript, PHP, C#, and Java;
Favorite IDEs: VS Code, R Studio, and Jupyter Notebook;
Favorite Editor: Notepad++
Blog: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jason-schneider-3b7025202/
Jason Scott Schneider's Projects
This is a darts game called 501 that can be played in the terminal with the Swift programming language.
This is a desktop app that contains an executable intended to provide tools and services from the Academic Center for Writing (ACW) at Mountain View Campus for students and writing specialists of Dallas College. This is a link to where users can download the source files from Google Drive. Currently, there is a link to download this desktop app for Windows.
This is a program written in Python to load any csv with texts and measure character similarities among each word.
This is something I created for teaching a brief class over descriptive statistics (i.e., the condensed and concise version) with spread sheets. I will prepare some spread sheets later as well as examples, too.
This is a basic Monte Carlo. It doesn't seem like much because, fundamentally, a Monte Carlo is fairly simple, but it can become complex depending on the various algorithms implemented, which this Monte Carlo I programmed using Python is straight forward without using anything complicated. I essentially wanted to do this to exhibit the fundamental mathematics of it, nothing more.
This is a simple fight simulator between player 1 and player 2 in C# and dotNET.
This is how to calculate work with the Midpoint Rule from calculus using Python.
This is just a quick demonstration of how we might create and modify a SQL database using SQL Lite that is built into Python.
This is just a toy model built to better understand the concepts of working with databases using entity frameworks. I like to share my learning, so try loading this workspace in Visual Studio for yourself.
This is a grid of photos encapsulated in hexagon shapes in a grid for HTML. I originally found this from Code Pen, but I had to rework the code in Javascript significantly for HTML. Use this template for easy use without having to use external frameworks and such.
This is a simple exercise for making a homemade pos tagger using Sklearn with a decision tree classifier.
This is a template for creating horizontal tabs with vanilla Javascript as an alternative to JQuery UI's horizontal tabs.
Project Website
This is a program to build random sentences based on the data with sentences fed into it. This program uses simple Markov chains that checks at every one, two, or three words, depending on whether the user selects one, two, or three Markov chains a user desires running.
This is a toy example using Naive Bayes. The program below is not novel, but this is a great way to learn how to do machine learning without additional modules.
This question bot runs in Xcode in the Swift language. The program itself is that of ELIZA to make the bot talk to the user. ELIZA is an early natural language processing computer program created from 1964 to 1966 at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory by Joseph Weizenbaum.
This is like a treasure hunt, or as I call it a search and find, in Javascript, no JQuery. Its theme is Star Wars called "Find Those Droids!" in which the player clicks somewhere, and the game responds to how close to the missing droids the player is.
This is using a simple Markov Chain to predict the next states of weather in Python with Juypter Notebook.
This is a boot camp for learning Javascript I made for teaching a class.
This is just a bunch of random stuff I am playing around with as I pick up the Swift programming language. I am using Swift in Linux, but it should work in both Mac and Linux, ... maybe.