Draw two circles of equal radii whose centers each lie on the other's circumference. Draw a line through their centers, and draw a line through the two points where their circumferences intersect.
Float glass is a sheet of glass made by floating molten glass on a bed of molten metal, typically tin, although lead and various low melting point alloys were used in the past. This method gives the sheet uniform thickness and very flat surfaces. Modern windows are made from float glass. Most float glass is soda-lime glass, but relatively minor quantities of specialty borosilicate and flat panel display glass are also produced using the float glass process. The float glass process is also known as the Pilkington process, named after the British glass manufacturer Pilkington, which pioneered the...
And I think some parabolic mirrors are done similarly, by rotating glass? Not sure. What I do know is the awesomeness that is the Large Zenith Telescope
Sometimes I think about how in prehistory you could go your whole life without seeing a flat surface or a straight line or a right angle or a completely enclosed space.
@MarcusS "SQLAlchemy considers the database to be a relational algebra engine, not just a collection of tables. Rows can be selected from not only tables but also joins and other select statements; any of these units can be composed into a larger structure. SQLAlchemy's expression language builds on this concept from its core."
Peeking into the memory of a process is doable on many architectures, but lots of headaches abound. It'd be much easier to push the data from the process side, if that's viable.
Back in the day I'd write little cheat engines for Minecraft that let you fly around and such. As I recall, it wasn't too hard to modify the source. You could use 7zip or similar to unpack .jar files into their composite .java files. Then you could modify whatever you wanted and re-build.
Sometimes I use Poke to inject into foreign processes and give myself infinite health or whatever. Primitive, but largely effective. Except on semi-exotic processes that regularly move around the location of variables. Typical of languages with high levels of abstraction. Java might be one of them.
I need a new minion. Having solved the hard part I want to assign the boring cleanup to someone else, but my mentee isn't really a minion and she has more important responsibilities right now. :-/
@MooingRawr Your company must have modified the definition of full-stack development :D OR, may be it is done to attract people who run after the title ;)
@MoinuddinQuadri eh who knows..... All I want to do is find a job close to my home that works with Python and I don't care if I'm front end or back end or side ways end. If it's a Python end, I'm all in.
@MooingRawr Well I personally don't consider Python (along with any web-framework) a very good choice for client side stuff; having APIS based on Python is fine. may be opinion based
@MooingRawr I think it varies hugely on company. One time I was hired as a front end engineer somewhere and my first job was to do a data migration in ruby and implement oauth with twitter on the back end
This is why it's so hard to find a right fitting job. What does the title even mean, and sure job descriptions are decent, but sometimes aren't relevant at all lol... Guess you have to ask more questions at the interview stage.
I want to follow him but I'm curious on how he 'survived'so many failures... where did his income come from when he was failing....
I also read that he enjoys 12 hours shifts work days, Something about only working 3 or 4 days a week. I wish that was the standard instead of 9-5 , 5 days a week.
@MooingRawr He was one of the founder of PayPal. That means strong social connections, and wealthy friends. Plus his vision to change the mankind. Many huge organizations support him. I have read it long back that he invested all his money, even mortgaged his house during the downtime of Tesla Motors. His friends use to carry food for him (not sure of the authenticity)
I meant before he got big, while he was still trying to make a name for himself. I guess he networked and made connection with rich people and got them to invest on him
Oh well, it's a road I don't wanna take. Not so fond on the idea of making friends with someone with the sole purpose of investing their money. Seems rather scumy. But if I was just to look for investors first and than maybe befriend them for other reasons, I guess that would be alright.
Anyone knows what this error means: error: command 'C:\\Program Files (x86)\\Microsoft Visual Studio 14.0\\VC\\B IN\\x86_amd64\\cl.exe' failed with exit status 2 I get it every time I try installing scrapy, specifically when it's installing twisted
hmm I'm trying to make python output latex files.. But there's a lot of preamble and other "always the same" lines inside it. Leading some very very cluttered looking code 300 character long lines of string inbetween them (actually it's more latex-with-python-inbetween for these classes).
Since Tuples are non-mutable data types in Python and Tuple comprehensions aren't a thing then why do List comprehensions with circle brackets instead of square brackets work fine and produce regular Tuples?
I thought circular brackets were used to define Tuples not Lists (I know I'm not wrong t...
@MichaelHCameron as far as I know, you can only overwrite the line you're on using a carriage return or other control characters, so if you need to reset several lines, I'm not sure there's any other way
and I'm pretty sure the answer is OS-dependent
windows command prompt behaves pretty different from unix terminals, for instance
user5870134
Good evening, guys!
user5870134
Can anybody help me rationalise why this is working (thanks 😊):
Since Tuples are non-mutable data types in Python and Tuple comprehensions aren't a thing then why do List comprehensions with circle brackets instead of square brackets work fine and produce regular Tuples?
I thought circular brackets were used to define Tuples not Lists (I know I'm not wrong t...
@AndrasDeak Question is actually a good one. I know I didn't grasp the difference between generator expressions and tuples until I saw them side-by-side.
honestly, two more steps of making that into an MCVE would show that something's not what it seems
and then the question could be "why does (a for b in c) not execute a", which would be a good question, and dupe-able:P
but I'm aware that OP's horribly asocial approach has impaired my judgment in this matter
@davidism do you think it would be worth adding a subsection heading right below "Rules" on the rules page? At least one user has apparently stopped reading after the first 5 points, and I can only assume because of the other subsection headings. Then again "Contact us" is with the same style as the subsection headings, which might or might not be intentional.
[formatit(x.mutablething(i)) for i in range(10)] - I saw some colleague make my code into that (where mutablething was changed to return i), considering it would be "more pythonic because less lines".
True, don't even remember the exact thing anymore. Though functions that take both a single item and an iterator are something I did often in the past: and grew to hate after having to create constant tests against strings.