And even for simple programs that don't require that level of design, it's better to separate input reading. Ex. Better to have a function def frob(x): than def frob(): x=input("enter value for x:")
god ultra excited when I saw a paper written by "Joslin & Clements" <- thought it was @JonClements. Turns out it was some totally other Clements by the name of David. Impostor!
Although PS4 already cross-platforms some games with PC, I think this is better because it's the platform infrastructure supporting it, whereas I think PS+ cross-platform wasn't on the PS+ infra
@enderland the word test is ambiguous. It's more like a behavior you are looking for. So, before implementing a function, you formulate the behavior and then implement the function itself
@enderland @khajvah Yeah, the way I break it down, is when you are performing more BDD type tests, you are really trying to test the overall behaviour, so more concrete, using gherkin to list down the overall functionality (lettuce). Then your TDD approach will drill down more to the single methods you wrote to make all this happen. So using unittest/mocking..
@RobertGrant PS5 will include a Super Nintento Virtual Console? :P (wishful thinking)
one of the main uses of integration testing is making sure everything talks correctly to everything else; unit tests can't expose that if one side has everything working properly (assuming protocol A) and the other side has everything working properly but they thought we went with protocol A'
@khajvah I am basically creating a mini-system that tests the full stack of our app's communication (effectively reproducing in a sandbox a miniprod network)
@Andras Deak Yeah I understand. I trying to comprehend what caller meant in a line I read in a book. "A line such as yield item produces a value that is received by the caller of next(…), and it also gives way, suspending the execution of the generator so that the caller may proceed until it’s ready to consume another value by invoking next() again."
Python: How to get the caller's method name in the called method?
Assume I have 2 methods:
def method1(self):
...
a = A.method2()
def method2(self):
...
If I don't want to do any change for method1, how to get the name of the caller (in this example, the name is method1) in metho...
is there someone who can run a function for me? i am trying to write an HSL to RGB function in another language and want to check if i am getting the same output. i want to see what hsl(300, 100, 25) is in rgb. docs.python.org/2/library/colorsys.html#module-colorsys (note the arguments are in a different order)
> Coordinates in all of these color spaces are floating point values. In the YIQ space, the Y coordinate is between 0 and 1, but the I and Q coordinates can be positive or negative. In all other spaces, the coordinates are all between 0 and 1.
Hi guys, someone could be kind enought to check this? (uwsgi, flask): http://stackoverflow.com/questions/35973897/typeerror-module-object-is-not-callable-uwsgi-flask-python?noredirect=1#comment59602238_35973897
Would anyone perchance know how to properly have Selenium access a VPS within a browser? Here's an example: oi63.tinypic.com/2j1s8zt.jpg Where I'd be using a VNC connection to view the VPS's terminal and it'd be through Firefox with Selenium.
I mean without using a macro, if possible.
I'm just curious if you guys know a better way, though if not don't worry about it.