But the l-system gave me loads of practice and increased my problem solving skill. Just by doing that, I did my last assignment faster and my code looked better.
Python does print "Hello, World!". Java does public static class Main{ public static void main(int argc, char[] argv){System.IO.println("Hello, world!");}}
But yes. Just build upon your knowledge. Start small and grow. If you try to go for an insanely difficult project then you may struggle without the basics. A lot of people seem to ask extremely simple questions about simple python on their insanely difficult projects.
It might mention that the expression in a default argument is evaluated once at definition time, and then it's up to you to determine if that could produce surprising results
It won't say "(watch out when using a list as a default argument)"
@ExoticBirdsMerchant, I'd expect an <HTML> tag if it was HTML
@ExoticBirdsMerchant Are you saying that's an information bombshell? I don't mean to mislead you - I don't know what format it's in. I'm just repeating what I remember you saying
emails demand a response; phone calls require an efficient exchange of information; in one-on-one conversations, you have to be entertaining 50% of the time
"obscure" for me, can mean a lot of things. In that context, I think it's just "stuff I didn't know yet". Other times it might be "things you can do in Python, that you can't do in other languages". (Those two definitions might have a lot of overlap, btw)
It could be "features of the language that aren't necessary for turing completeness", or "a feature, that, when I read about it the first time, I said 'neat.'"
I'm yet to find a good use case for them in my work unfortunately :( possibly because while I understand what they do I don't understand it that thoroughly
I use them in graphical programs which contain a mainloop method, which never returns once you call it, but which invokes a user-supplied idle method every 60th of a second.
When you want to do some work that takes longer than a 60th of a second (say, moving a sprite from one side of the screen to another over the course of a second), it's useful to have a coroutine that does a single frame of work, then yields, 60 times in a row
Yeah, I could write a class with a doAFrameOfWork method, but the amount of necessary code scales a lot faster with complexity, compared to coroutines. So I'm thankful to have them.
always wondered, how are you guys able spend so much time answering? some answers I see are fairly cumbersome. It is absolutely awesome that people do that, but curious.. just altruistic tendencies or..?
Oh i understand, I like solving occasional puzzle in the chatroom too, especially like those one liners but it seems some people spend.. a lot of time overall
I guess for you it is a form of continuing education on the topic?
user559633
@rodling i work at a chemical weapons factory. answering python and ruby questions on SO is my way of coming out cosmically neutral
I'm a murderer on death row so I've got all the time in the world.
Lol. I answer because I feel it helps me to learn mainly. One of the best ways of being able to test your knowledge is to try to explain it to someone else.