1608950652
The idea of PointPay Crypto Bank is to seamlessly integrate crypto and fiat accounts for the user. It is planned to create technical infrastructure aimed to enable instant cross-border transactions from one country to another one. Fiat A will be automatically converted at the back-end to Fiat B through the PointPay native stable cryptocurrency, pegged to to a basket of various fiat currencies. The cryptocurrency will be Stellar-forked with an integrated privacy layer above the blockchain. It guarantees both quick confirmation of transactions on the network and sender’s anonymity.
Why Invest in PointPay
PointPay is a cryptocurrency banking platform. It disrupts the traditional bank model by enabling low-cost and instant fund transfers across the globe using our native offchain technology and PointPay token (PXP). 1.5 billion people worldwide don’t have both financial literacy skills, and an access to banking services, but they would like to.
By purchasing PointPay token (PXP) you invest in the future of global crypto and blockchain Education through PointPay Crypto School. As a reward for contribution to World Education, PointPay token (PXP) holders get the right to earn higher yields (up to 20% annually) on a progressive scale on PointPay Blockchain-based Bank with Checking and Savings Accounts. Furthermore, PointPay token (PXP) holders are entitled to send instant payments within PointPay products with lower commission as well as trade on PointPay Crypto Exchange with reduced fees. Finally, PointPay token (PXP) holders get an access to premium video tutorials with advanced trading strategies where we explain how to make money in the crypto market.
POINTPAY CRYPTO EXCHANGE
PointPay Crypto Exchange with custom design of trading blocks, chat for traders and the ability to buy and sell cryptocurrencies with VISA/MASTERCARD bank cards for USD, RUB and UAH. For newbies who experience difficulties with market, limit and stop-limit orders we created Quick Exchange option for the convenience.
POINTPAY MULTI CURRENCY WALLET
PointPay Crypto Wallet supports Bitcoin, Ethereum and PointPay token (PXP) with the ability to track the dynamics of changes in the crypto portfolio capitalization in accordance with current quotes on the cryptocurrency market. PointPay cusotmers can already take advantage of sending funds from the wallet by email without having to copy complex addresses consisting of numerous letters and numbers. It is planned to enable ERC-20 tokens support, organize a payment code system, and launch an innovative crowdfunding platform for the start-ups - Initial Wallet Offering (IWO).
POINTPAY PAYMENT SYSTEM
POINTPAY TOKEN (PXP)
ICO Main Sale
ICO START
July 22, 2020
ICO END
July 22, 2021
Information
TOKEN: PXP
PRICE: $0.10
SOFT CAP: $1 000 000
HARD CAP: $30 000 000
PLATFORM: ERC20
BUY WITH: BTC, ETH, XRP, BNB, LTC, XLM, USDT, BCH, TRX, EOS
POINTPAY MOBILE BANKING APPLICATIONS FOR ANDROID AND IOS
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Looking for more information…
☞ Website
☞ Whitepaper
☞ Source Code
☞ Social Channel
☞ Message Board
☞ Coinmarketcap
Thank for visiting and reading this article! I’m highly appreciate your actions! Please share if you liked it!
#bitcoin #crypto #pointpay #pxp
1608950652
The idea of PointPay Crypto Bank is to seamlessly integrate crypto and fiat accounts for the user. It is planned to create technical infrastructure aimed to enable instant cross-border transactions from one country to another one. Fiat A will be automatically converted at the back-end to Fiat B through the PointPay native stable cryptocurrency, pegged to to a basket of various fiat currencies. The cryptocurrency will be Stellar-forked with an integrated privacy layer above the blockchain. It guarantees both quick confirmation of transactions on the network and sender’s anonymity.
Why Invest in PointPay
PointPay is a cryptocurrency banking platform. It disrupts the traditional bank model by enabling low-cost and instant fund transfers across the globe using our native offchain technology and PointPay token (PXP). 1.5 billion people worldwide don’t have both financial literacy skills, and an access to banking services, but they would like to.
By purchasing PointPay token (PXP) you invest in the future of global crypto and blockchain Education through PointPay Crypto School. As a reward for contribution to World Education, PointPay token (PXP) holders get the right to earn higher yields (up to 20% annually) on a progressive scale on PointPay Blockchain-based Bank with Checking and Savings Accounts. Furthermore, PointPay token (PXP) holders are entitled to send instant payments within PointPay products with lower commission as well as trade on PointPay Crypto Exchange with reduced fees. Finally, PointPay token (PXP) holders get an access to premium video tutorials with advanced trading strategies where we explain how to make money in the crypto market.
POINTPAY CRYPTO EXCHANGE
PointPay Crypto Exchange with custom design of trading blocks, chat for traders and the ability to buy and sell cryptocurrencies with VISA/MASTERCARD bank cards for USD, RUB and UAH. For newbies who experience difficulties with market, limit and stop-limit orders we created Quick Exchange option for the convenience.
POINTPAY MULTI CURRENCY WALLET
PointPay Crypto Wallet supports Bitcoin, Ethereum and PointPay token (PXP) with the ability to track the dynamics of changes in the crypto portfolio capitalization in accordance with current quotes on the cryptocurrency market. PointPay cusotmers can already take advantage of sending funds from the wallet by email without having to copy complex addresses consisting of numerous letters and numbers. It is planned to enable ERC-20 tokens support, organize a payment code system, and launch an innovative crowdfunding platform for the start-ups - Initial Wallet Offering (IWO).
POINTPAY PAYMENT SYSTEM
POINTPAY TOKEN (PXP)
ICO Main Sale
ICO START
July 22, 2020
ICO END
July 22, 2021
Information
TOKEN: PXP
PRICE: $0.10
SOFT CAP: $1 000 000
HARD CAP: $30 000 000
PLATFORM: ERC20
BUY WITH: BTC, ETH, XRP, BNB, LTC, XLM, USDT, BCH, TRX, EOS
POINTPAY MOBILE BANKING APPLICATIONS FOR ANDROID AND IOS
Would you like to earn many tokens and cryptocurrencies right now! ☞ CLICK HERE
Visit ICO Website ☞ CLICK HERE
Looking for more information…
☞ Website
☞ Whitepaper
☞ Source Code
☞ Social Channel
☞ Message Board
☞ Coinmarketcap
Thank for visiting and reading this article! I’m highly appreciate your actions! Please share if you liked it!
#bitcoin #crypto #pointpay #pxp
1603255867
We at ICO Development cover all the major steps or activities i.e. light paper & white paper drafting, coin or token creation, ICO fundraising dashboard, coin drop, marketing plan, bounty management etc. that will help you to raise a successful ICO.
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1659601560
We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.
-- Oscar Wilde
WordsCounted is a Ruby NLP (natural language processor). WordsCounted lets you implement powerful tokensation strategies with a very flexible tokeniser class.
Are you using WordsCounted to do something interesting? Please tell me about it.
Visit this website for one example of what you can do with WordsCounted.
["Bayrūt"]
and not ["Bayr", "ū", "t"]
, for example.Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'words_counted'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install words_counted
Pass in a string or a file path, and an optional filter and/or regexp.
counter = WordsCounted.count(
"We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars."
)
# Using a file
counter = WordsCounted.from_file("path/or/url/to/my/file.txt")
.count
and .from_file
are convenience methods that take an input, tokenise it, and return an instance of WordsCounted::Counter
initialized with the tokens. The WordsCounted::Tokeniser
and WordsCounted::Counter
classes can be used alone, however.
WordsCounted.count(input, options = {})
Tokenises input and initializes a WordsCounted::Counter
object with the resulting tokens.
counter = WordsCounted.count("Hello Beirut!")
Accepts two options: exclude
and regexp
. See Excluding tokens from the analyser and Passing in a custom regexp respectively.
WordsCounted.from_file(path, options = {})
Reads and tokenises a file, and initializes a WordsCounted::Counter
object with the resulting tokens.
counter = WordsCounted.from_file("hello_beirut.txt")
Accepts the same options as .count
.
The tokeniser allows you to tokenise text in a variety of ways. You can pass in your own rules for tokenisation, and apply a powerful filter with any combination of rules as long as they can boil down into a lambda.
Out of the box the tokeniser includes only alpha chars. Hyphenated tokens and tokens with apostrophes are considered a single token.
#tokenise([pattern: TOKEN_REGEXP, exclude: nil])
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello Beirut!").tokenise
# With `exclude`
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello Beirut!").tokenise(exclude: "hello")
# With `pattern`
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("I <3 Beirut!").tokenise(pattern: /[a-z]/i)
See Excluding tokens from the analyser and Passing in a custom regexp for more information.
The WordsCounted::Counter
class allows you to collect various statistics from an array of tokens.
#token_count
Returns the token count of a given string.
counter.token_count #=> 15
#token_frequency
Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimensional array where each element is a token and its frequency. The array is sorted by frequency in descending order.
counter.token_frequency
[
["the", 2],
["are", 2],
["we", 1],
# ...
["all", 1]
]
#most_frequent_tokens
Returns a hash where each key-value pair is a token and its frequency.
counter.most_frequent_tokens
{ "are" => 2, "the" => 2 }
#token_lengths
Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimentional array where each element contains a token and its length. The array is sorted by length in descending order.
counter.token_lengths
[
["looking", 7],
["gutter", 6],
["stars", 5],
# ...
["in", 2]
]
#longest_tokens
Returns a hash where each key-value pair is a token and its length.
counter.longest_tokens
{ "looking" => 7 }
#token_density([ precision: 2 ])
Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimentional array where each element contains a token and its density as a float, rounded to a precision of two. The array is sorted by density in descending order. It accepts a precision
argument, which must be a float.
counter.token_density
[
["are", 0.13],
["the", 0.13],
["but", 0.07 ],
# ...
["we", 0.07 ]
]
#char_count
Returns the char count of tokens.
counter.char_count #=> 76
#average_chars_per_token([ precision: 2 ])
Returns the average char count per token rounded to two decimal places. Accepts a precision argument which defaults to two. Precision must be a float.
counter.average_chars_per_token #=> 4
#uniq_token_count
Returns the number of unique tokens.
counter.uniq_token_count #=> 13
You can exclude anything you want from the input by passing the exclude
option. The exclude option accepts a variety of filters and is extremely flexible.
:odd?
.tokeniser =
WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new(
"Magnificent! That was magnificent, Trevor."
)
# Using a string
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: "was magnificent")
# => ["that", "trevor"]
# Using a regular expression
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: /trevor/)
# => ["magnificent", "that", "was", "magnificent"]
# Using a lambda
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: ->(t) { t.length < 4 })
# => ["magnificent", "that", "magnificent", "trevor"]
# Using symbol
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello! محمد")
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: :ascii_only?)
# => ["محمد"]
# Using an array
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new(
"Hello! اسماءنا هي محمد، كارولينا، سامي، وداني"
)
tokeniser.tokenise(
exclude: [:ascii_only?, /محمد/, ->(t) { t.length > 6}, "و"]
)
# => ["هي", "سامي", "وداني"]
The default regexp accounts for letters, hyphenated tokens, and apostrophes. This means twenty-one is treated as one token. So is Mohamad's.
/[\p{Alpha}\-']+/
You can pass your own criteria as a Ruby regular expression to split your string as desired.
For example, if you wanted to include numbers, you can override the regular expression:
counter = WordsCounted.count("Numbers 1, 2, and 3", pattern: /[\p{Alnum}\-']+/)
counter.tokens
#=> ["numbers", "1", "2", "and", "3"]
Use the from_file
method to open files. from_file
accepts the same options as .count
. The file path can be a URL.
counter = WordsCounted.from_file("url/or/path/to/file.text")
A hyphen used in leu of an em or en dash will form part of the token. This affects the tokeniser algorithm.
counter = WordsCounted.count("How do you do?-you are well, I see.")
counter.token_frequency
[
["do", 2],
["how", 1],
["you", 1],
["-you", 1], # WTF, mate!
["are", 1],
# ...
]
In this example -you
and you
are separate tokens. Also, the tokeniser does not include numbers by default. Remember that you can pass your own regular expression if the default behaviour does not fit your needs.
The program will normalise (downcase) all incoming strings for consistency and filters.
def self.from_url
# open url and send string here after removing html
end
See contributors.
git checkout -b my-new-feature
)git commit -am 'Add some feature'
)git push origin my-new-feature
)Author: abitdodgy
Source code: https://github.com/abitdodgy/words_counted
License: MIT license
#ruby #ruby-on-rails
1658068560
WordsCounted
We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.
-- Oscar Wilde
WordsCounted is a Ruby NLP (natural language processor). WordsCounted lets you implement powerful tokensation strategies with a very flexible tokeniser class.
["Bayrūt"]
and not ["Bayr", "ū", "t"]
, for example.Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'words_counted'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install words_counted
Pass in a string or a file path, and an optional filter and/or regexp.
counter = WordsCounted.count(
"We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars."
)
# Using a file
counter = WordsCounted.from_file("path/or/url/to/my/file.txt")
.count
and .from_file
are convenience methods that take an input, tokenise it, and return an instance of WordsCounted::Counter
initialized with the tokens. The WordsCounted::Tokeniser
and WordsCounted::Counter
classes can be used alone, however.
WordsCounted.count(input, options = {})
Tokenises input and initializes a WordsCounted::Counter
object with the resulting tokens.
counter = WordsCounted.count("Hello Beirut!")
Accepts two options: exclude
and regexp
. See Excluding tokens from the analyser and Passing in a custom regexp respectively.
WordsCounted.from_file(path, options = {})
Reads and tokenises a file, and initializes a WordsCounted::Counter
object with the resulting tokens.
counter = WordsCounted.from_file("hello_beirut.txt")
Accepts the same options as .count
.
The tokeniser allows you to tokenise text in a variety of ways. You can pass in your own rules for tokenisation, and apply a powerful filter with any combination of rules as long as they can boil down into a lambda.
Out of the box the tokeniser includes only alpha chars. Hyphenated tokens and tokens with apostrophes are considered a single token.
#tokenise([pattern: TOKEN_REGEXP, exclude: nil])
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello Beirut!").tokenise
# With `exclude`
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello Beirut!").tokenise(exclude: "hello")
# With `pattern`
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("I <3 Beirut!").tokenise(pattern: /[a-z]/i)
See Excluding tokens from the analyser and Passing in a custom regexp for more information.
The WordsCounted::Counter
class allows you to collect various statistics from an array of tokens.
#token_count
Returns the token count of a given string.
counter.token_count #=> 15
#token_frequency
Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimensional array where each element is a token and its frequency. The array is sorted by frequency in descending order.
counter.token_frequency
[
["the", 2],
["are", 2],
["we", 1],
# ...
["all", 1]
]
#most_frequent_tokens
Returns a hash where each key-value pair is a token and its frequency.
counter.most_frequent_tokens
{ "are" => 2, "the" => 2 }
#token_lengths
Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimentional array where each element contains a token and its length. The array is sorted by length in descending order.
counter.token_lengths
[
["looking", 7],
["gutter", 6],
["stars", 5],
# ...
["in", 2]
]
#longest_tokens
Returns a hash where each key-value pair is a token and its length.
counter.longest_tokens
{ "looking" => 7 }
#token_density([ precision: 2 ])
Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimentional array where each element contains a token and its density as a float, rounded to a precision of two. The array is sorted by density in descending order. It accepts a precision
argument, which must be a float.
counter.token_density
[
["are", 0.13],
["the", 0.13],
["but", 0.07 ],
# ...
["we", 0.07 ]
]
#char_count
Returns the char count of tokens.
counter.char_count #=> 76
#average_chars_per_token([ precision: 2 ])
Returns the average char count per token rounded to two decimal places. Accepts a precision argument which defaults to two. Precision must be a float.
counter.average_chars_per_token #=> 4
#uniq_token_count
Returns the number of unique tokens.
counter.uniq_token_count #=> 13
You can exclude anything you want from the input by passing the exclude
option. The exclude option accepts a variety of filters and is extremely flexible.
:odd?
.tokeniser =
WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new(
"Magnificent! That was magnificent, Trevor."
)
# Using a string
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: "was magnificent")
# => ["that", "trevor"]
# Using a regular expression
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: /trevor/)
# => ["magnificent", "that", "was", "magnificent"]
# Using a lambda
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: ->(t) { t.length < 4 })
# => ["magnificent", "that", "magnificent", "trevor"]
# Using symbol
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello! محمد")
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: :ascii_only?)
# => ["محمد"]
# Using an array
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new(
"Hello! اسماءنا هي محمد، كارولينا، سامي، وداني"
)
tokeniser.tokenise(
exclude: [:ascii_only?, /محمد/, ->(t) { t.length > 6}, "و"]
)
# => ["هي", "سامي", "وداني"]
The default regexp accounts for letters, hyphenated tokens, and apostrophes. This means twenty-one is treated as one token. So is Mohamad's.
/[\p{Alpha}\-']+/
You can pass your own criteria as a Ruby regular expression to split your string as desired.
For example, if you wanted to include numbers, you can override the regular expression:
counter = WordsCounted.count("Numbers 1, 2, and 3", pattern: /[\p{Alnum}\-']+/)
counter.tokens
#=> ["numbers", "1", "2", "and", "3"]
Use the from_file
method to open files. from_file
accepts the same options as .count
. The file path can be a URL.
counter = WordsCounted.from_file("url/or/path/to/file.text")
A hyphen used in leu of an em or en dash will form part of the token. This affects the tokeniser algorithm.
counter = WordsCounted.count("How do you do?-you are well, I see.")
counter.token_frequency
[
["do", 2],
["how", 1],
["you", 1],
["-you", 1], # WTF, mate!
["are", 1],
# ...
]
In this example -you
and you
are separate tokens. Also, the tokeniser does not include numbers by default. Remember that you can pass your own regular expression if the default behaviour does not fit your needs.
The program will normalise (downcase) all incoming strings for consistency and filters.
def self.from_url
# open url and send string here after removing html
end
Are you using WordsCounted to do something interesting? Please tell me about it.
Visit this website for one example of what you can do with WordsCounted.
Contributors
See contributors.
git checkout -b my-new-feature
)git commit -am 'Add some feature'
)git push origin my-new-feature
)Author: Abitdodgy
Source Code: https://github.com/abitdodgy/words_counted
License: MIT license
1611118213
At ICO Development, we create your ICO for victory with powerful PR campaigns, Whitepaper services, drafted pre-ICO technology set-up, dedicated & skillful ICO customer services, Smart contract setup, & standard block explorer integration services.
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