@PradeepJaiswar Not a criticism ... I just meant that if you're asking right at the start, you'll be more comfortable having a big audience to ask further questions down the line :-)
I tend to think that paprika mostly means the ground spice in the west. But Hungarians call that "piros paprika", red paprika. So paprika alone would mean the veggie.
@AnttiHaapala Ok. I guess it looks Slavic. FWIW, I spent a few months teaching myself Russian in my mid-teens, but decided it wasn't a good idea since I had a fairly full load of subjects at school. I've forgotten almost all the Russian I learned, apart from the Cyrillic alphabet, and I guess I'm probably a little shaky on Cyrillic alphabetical order. :)
@AndrasDeak The modern postage stamp was still very new technology in 1856; the first such stamps were issued in Britain in 1840. Prior to that date, postal services did mark posted items by stamping them, though. See Wikipedia
Say what you will about the Finnish -- roughly 5.4 million in population, inhabitants of a European nation bordering Sweden and Russia, that they drive on the right side of the road, that their ITU country code is 358, but they have been known to joke in the past.
Cyprus has 357. 357°C is the boiling point of mercury, and Mercury was the messenger of the Roman gods, so there's a link between 357 and communication. Pity that Cyprus is Greek & Turkish. :)
Yeah, it did reasonably well on the Australian charts, back in the day. And it gets played on our community station (which is targeted at the older audience) fairly regularly.
Did you like that Anderson Ponty Band clip? IMHO, neither Jon nor Jean-Luc have the raw power they had a few decades ago, but I reckon they still do pretty well for a couple of old blokes. :)
Obviously the report was evenly-worded and politically correct and what not, but it was strongly leaning against Blair throughout from what I saw in his statement.
I was too young to have an opinion on the Iraq war.
Which is to say, I didn't care.
The press questions with the family after the statement was very intense.
@ZeroPiraeus Just saw "the way the legal basis was dealt with before the 20 March invasion was far from satisfactory." As you say - as near as he could go, I reckon.
@Ffisegydd It was what made me realise the full gravity of the late Blair project. I was marching and campaigning. It takes some ego to ignore 1 million people on the streets.
This phrase "the right thing to do". I see it quoted there in a note from Blair to Bush. Cameron uses it a lot. It is very, very dangerous. It implies such an ego - that one leader has a handle on the objective "right thing".
Key conclusions are that there was no imminent threat, and that Blair deliberately exaggerated evidence of WMDs. The first means the war was illegal, and the second means impeachable misconduct.
@JRichardSnape Not to defend either, but eventually a decision has to be made. That decision could be made by a single person or by parliament voting or whatever, but a decision has to be made. Never mind, I misunderstood your point.
@JRichardSnape: so I can think it, but I can't tell it to people? You keep putting "right thing" in scare quotes, but I'm legitimately not getting your point. Presumably those who opposed the war also felt they were doing the right thing in opposing it.
Once more, with feeling: not to defend either but it's only a saying. You could come to the conclusion that something is "the right thing to do" either because you've decided it's right (bad, ego, etc) or because you've spoken to intelligence, analysts, your cabinet, etc.
An old folky favourite: May You Never, with John Martyn and Kathy Mattea on guitars and vocals, some tasty lap Dobro work by Jerry Douglas, and of course the inimitable Danny Thompson on bass.
@DSM I would expect that they think it's the right thing to do (who deliberately, knowingly does the wrong thing? only a sociopath). It almost shouldn't need saying. But to assert it, rather than make the argument; that's the rub.
Sorry for the quotes - I guess that betrays my opinion that it was not the right thing
I think this also makes perfectly clear why Blair is so upset with allegations of bad motives - he did genuinely think it was the right thing. I believe that. I just don't think it's sufficient.
@ZeroPiraeus Interesting - my partner was in the same boat. Very similar left wing politics to me, but she was absolutely convinced by the humanitarian plight, to her this dwarfed the WMD arguments.
@JRichardSnape Sierra Leone and Kosovo led many to think that a glorious new era of positive intervention was possible. Incredibly naïve looking back, but there you go.
@Ffisegydd: Tom wrote one; I know Andy was working on one; and I've thought about it. ("Pandorable Data Analysis by DSM" or something.) Everyone's in the game!
I've been removing warnings and fixing a bunch of legacy issues with this code, but there's this one section which as near as I can tell only works because it doesn't, and if I fix it, everything goes boom. Frustrating, but that's what underlings are for, I guess.
Guys, If you can help please... I run `python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000` outputs: `Serving HTTP on 0.0.0.0 port 8000 ...` And on another console I type `curl localhost:8000`and it shows `curl: (7) Failed to connect to localhost port 8000: Connection refused`, it's same for nginx
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Things which seem crazy sometimes are, but are more often the result of something stupidly simple no one considered. What you're doing sounds like it should work, though.
Pigeonhole principle. Any compression algorithm has to make some inputs longer. (Well, okay, I guess that's not quite true -- a no-op algorithm wouldn't make anything longer. But you know what I mean.)
@AnttiHaapala: not if you don't save that information at all. I mean, for any given file, you don't actually know if it's compressed or not, regardless of what internal markup they use.
@MarkoMackic You mean 11 bytes. 9 is the compression level. The output of the function has header info in addition to the actual compressed data. See tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1950
You may enjoy implementing your own simple LZW compressor & decompressor from scratch. It's not that hard, and it's a good exercise in working at the bit level, IMHO.
Lempel–Ziv–Storer–Szymanski (LZSS) is a lossless data compression algorithm, a derivative of LZ77, that was created in 1982 by James Storer and Thomas Szymanski. LZSS was described in article "Data compression via textual substitution" published in Journal of the ACM (1982, pp. 928–951).
LZSS is a dictionary encoding technique. It attempts to replace a string of symbols with a reference to a dictionary location of the same string.
The main difference between LZ77 and LZSS is that in LZ77 the dictionary reference could actually be longer than the string it was replacing. In LZSS, such references...
guys what do you think of this. That if line is really bugging me. But the alternative one liner I came up with calls strip() twice which I equally don't like. Anyone have any suggestions on how I can make this prettier?
with open(filename) as f:
for line in f.read().splitlines():
if line:
jobs.add(line)