read that article was fairly interesting, esp coming from the military where the paradox of medication is a fact of life for those of us with brain injuries
Do you believe that if I am using Bottle for small API's within my application, it will be suitable for production? We currently have small API's written with Bottle and Node.js Express, and are wondering if it would be overkill to switch our Python API's to Flask?
I did some community college and then a few AA classes while I was in so I finished my BS with time left over (so continuing Graduate while looking for work)
To be honest, I've been back online for a few days, but I was busy learning enough about ellipsoid geodesics to write this SE.mathematics answer and this accompanying program, GeodesicTriangulate.py. :)
Anyone having experience with Tor proxy ? I am doing good with this but local control ports also get proxied through a tor exit node while using Mongoclient.
Oh, he understands that spherical trig's not good enough for his purposes - we already discussed that in the comments. I originally suggested using Vincenty's formulae, but I've since learned that Charles Karney's algorithm is vastly superior: I suppose that Vincenty's algorithm was good enough 40 years ago, but it sometimes fails to converge & it's not very accurate.
There are not many "general" libraries like there is Boost for C++, that's because anything that is "general" is already available in the standard library (which is built in).
@VermillionAzure The standard Python distribution comes with a healthy library of modules. I suggest getting familiar with the standard modules via the official Python documentation.
You can do Qt from Python. Or GTK. They are 3rd party modules, i.e., not part of the standard distribution. The standard library comes with tkinter, which is ok for simple stuff, but a bit limiting for ambitious projects. Also, tkinter doesn't have a great reputation, partly because it's a bit weird in some of its design decisions, and partly because earlier versions made very ugly GUIs.
Again, you should search yourself and see what pops up. All that's happening at the moment is you're asking me a question and I'm then Googling it for you.
I know of PyGame, I'm sure there are more, I don't know them off the top of my head.
Pygame is a quick & dirty solution for doing graphic stuff. As it name implies, it's designed for people who just want to hack a simple game together - it doesn't really provide the capability for creating a proper GUI.
OTOH, there's a guy on xkcd who's in the process of building a GUI library based on Pygame, but I haven't seen any recent progress reports from him, so maybe he's abandoned that project.
@VermillionAzure The most popular-use libraries in Python are the standard ones. Guido's philosophy is that Python comes with "batteries included" i.e., you don't need to rely on 3rd party libraries to get stuff done.
Of course, for special purposes 3rd party libraries may be necessary. And in some cases 3rd party libraries may be clearly superior to the standard ones, eg Requests is generally acknowledged to be way better than the standard Python urllib / urllib2
A little while ago, I noticed Determining if three numbers are consecutive in the Hot Network Questions sidebar. I have a cute solution, but I guess it might be considered too clever (à la Kernighan's Law). Also, it's not immune to overflow error. But it's very compact and quite efficient. :)
@Ffisegydd , agree with you but the question is quite old. I expected somewhat more pythonic way to do it instead of using a bit of workaround. Well that's ok.
Maybe there's not a huge demand for setInterval-like behaviour in simple Python scripts that run in the terminal. GUI programs will generally use the delay functionality that's provided by the GUI library.
FWIW, I think your answer looks cleaner than that recursive solution. But I've rarely done time delays in Python, except in GUI programs using GTK, where I used GTK's delay functions.
@black-perl Yes, it spawns a different thread in each recursive call. But each of those threads is killed once the function executes. I guess that involves a little bit of overhead, but as Ffisegydd said, you'd really need to profile it to see what impact that has on resources & performance.
Hi Bhargav. I've had the 'flu, and haven't done much with the computer for the last few weeks. I'm almost better now, but still a bit vague.
bluefeet took a job as a community manager so she stopped being a mod, as such they asked Jon and Matt to become mods as well (as they were 4th and 5th in the election).
I've seen some pretty inefficient prime number counters in my time, but this one must be a leading contender for most inefficient. Using a list purely as a counter's just the icing on the cake. :) I'm almost tempted to post a link to it in Deliberately bad algorithms...