Both operands of and evaluate to True because they're different from 0, so True and True is True and True evaluates to 1 when added (using +) to other numbers (it's just a specialized integer).
And 1/0 is just a scalar division by zero, which triggers exception. It's not a logical operation.
Well, not angry so much as downvoting-for-the-sake-of-not-confusing-potential-future-readers.
There are questions with good answers, but in those cases the questions were IMO not close enough to be immediately obvious to the (obviously beginner) OP.
@ZeroPiraeus Your answer is a tiny bit confusing. It mentions short-circuiting but then your point 1 implies that both operands of and are evaluated before it's decided which one will be returned
@AndrasDeak Oh man, so good. Also you can try creme cheese, powdered sugar, and bananas for "banana cheesecake" crêpes. Or, if you're like me, just pour powdered sugar on it for that extra taste of diabetes.
@MarcusS Thanks! I guess I should add that info to make it more complete and self-contained. I didn't add it originally because I figured that it was getting a bit long, and I expected interested readers wouldn't have much trouble finding that info themselves. ;)
@WayneWerner I mean, I am glad it was hammered but it was a C question with just python tagged because of "I am converting this python code into C and now it crashes"
I especially felt the similarity when I died deep in the underground and had to trek back to that position to reclaim my currency and the full use of my magic abilities
But it doesn't have Dark Souls' brutal difficulty. I know this because I didn't die three seconds into the first boss fight.
@Kevin Careful ... you just qualified thousands of beltway pundits (whose job is to have an opinion on everything) to work in cryptography. That way lies Clipper.
Overhearing a colleague debug a problem with a NY consultant's way-too-long database code. I really need to replace the whole thing with python/postgresql. #thingsillneverhavetimetodo
guys when implementing a design pattern, should I strictly follow all the naming conventions of method and classes or I can implement the pattern the way that make more sense as log as i am accomplishing the same result?
@AndrasDeak Traditional British pancakes are similar enough to crêpes for the words to conceivably be used interchangeably. Scotch pancakes are a whole different ballgame, of course.
A pancake (or hotcake, griddlecake, or flapjack) is a flat cake, often thin and round, prepared from a starch-based batter that may contain eggs, milk and butter and cooked on a hot surface such as a griddle or frying pan, often frying with oil or butter. In Britain, pancakes are often unleavened and resemble a crêpe. In North America, a leavening agent is used (typically baking powder). American pancakes are similar to Scotch pancakes or drop scones. Archaeological evidence suggests that pancakes were probably the earliest and most widespread cereal food eaten in prehistoric societies.
The pancake...
I want to do python but i think that it does not teach interacies of working of computer can someone correct me or point me to where should i go , i love C and wants to do development work
Python can get as intricate as any other programming language but yeah you're probably not going to be writing "close to the metal" like you would with a lower-level language
I think the question presupposes that low-level languages are somehow more "real" than high level ones. My advice is to ignore semantics and use the right tool for the right job.
@SurajJain Python is a lot further from the bare metal than C. On the other hand, it's unusually forthcoming about its own workings compared to other high level languages, which allows you a different vantage point from which to explore the intricacies of computing.
It was from an event called "Swipe Right: Modern Valentine" so the card technically represents what my dating profile would be if I was using a 1960's computer dating service
We see a lot of the same questions on here due to the same exceptions, like "No module named XXXX" or "AttributeError: 'X_OBJECT' object has no attribute 'Y_METHOD'". Other than just saying "Hey please read the error message and fix that " It would be nice to have some documentation to link them to.
@PM2Ring I actually got a chance to finally sit down and step line through line of that code you sent me, that's good stuff man. I would have never thought of doing it like that at all.
@wim Very good question. I think either of those will get the job done for you. I know that in my world right now, MySQL is pretty much the go-to. What kind of data would you be storing in the database?
I need to confirm this, but I think postgres actually plays nice with JSON?
whereas MySQL might not? Unless they updated support for it
It's impossible to say without knowing more. The only thing I've heard offhand is that MySQL has a better replication story, but Postgres has nicer features by default
I'm trying to get a field from a website which contains the euro symbol €, using scrapy and xpath. I get the following error: 'charmap' codec can't encode character '\u20ac' in position 11: character maps to <undefined>. I tries setting the Request enconding to iso-8859-1, just as the website HTML dictates, but the error is still the same. Any idea? I would prefer to stick to xpath to avoid changing all the code to bs4
Of course, a polished turd will tend to reflect sunlight, so the analogy doesn't quite work. Unless you have a bunch of turds, which you polish and then arrange into a parabolic mirror, periodically unpolishing and moving one of the turds to the focus.
Dumb mathy question: say that you convert a string like #FFFFFF to it's numerical value. From that, is it possible to extract its value in the form of [ red, green, blue ] from that?
@wim I imagine because, like JSON, it tries to exist in the intersection of language features rather than the union (sensible for a language-agnostic communication medium), and sets aren't common enough.
that feeling when you fix 10+ errors in a client's code rules, and still haven't found the original issue. that feeling when you finally find the issue and it's not even in the client rules and it's on client config files :( life is hard wasted hours on this matter :( I think I'm going to lie down a bit.
@wim Not entirely true -- I like bitshift hacks when the process is likely to be used repeatedly where speed may matter / where the hacks themselves are easy to understand (color math, yes/no state masks, etc)
@MooingRawr: whenever something like that happens I try to look at it as an opportunity to write a smarter test harness which would catch problems in that entire category. (emphasis on try..)
I remember seeing some code -- can't remember if it was on SO or IRL -- which was all something.__add__(something_else). I'm impressed that they bothered to stick with Python if that's what they thought you needed to do..
@user2176127 I read this which made me understand the concept of class vs instance attributes. I'm not sure how authoritative that post is, but it definitely helped me
@user2176127 I guess it's the same thing discussed above, dunder vs direct? But I'm not very OOP-savvy, and I don't know if some multiple inheritance or something else can make a difference
nevermind; you can overwrite __class__ but type will tell you the class
>>> class Foo:
... def __init__(self):
... self.__class__ = 'asdf'
...
>>> foo=Foo()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "<stdin>", line 3, in __init__
TypeError: __class__ must be set to a class, not 'str' object
neat
but you can shadow __class__ with a method of the same name
I don't think one should worry about old-style classes nowadays:P
This is an old question, but none of the answers seems to mention that. in the general case, it IS possible for a new-style class to have different values for type(instance) and instance.__class__:
class ClassA(object):
def display(self):
print("ClassA")
class ClassB(object):
__...
@DSM I have no control over the client's rules they write, I don't have control over the config, so I guess I have to write my own test cases for their rules and configs. Thanks for the insight. I will try better next time :(
@MooingRawr Don't know how these config rules are being verified for usage in your application, but is there a finite list of these configuration variations?
it seems like there are some cases that can be put together to help control the outcome
maybe limit to what you know for sure should be accepted, and throw back an error with an explanation on what and why the rejection happened
so without going into details, we have our base app which we let our clients set up certain rules (if members can only do something if they start an event at a certain day, or logic on how or when parts of our apps should run). We also allow the clients to set up their own configs to match their rules, for example config for one set of group to only use half the app, but have client rules to check for their group and execute custom combination of our apps...
so when I get one of these tickets in, I have to look at what they did, how they set it up and if it's wrong or just syntactically incorrect. I then have to recommend the fix to them. Yes too much power is in the user and I don't like it but hey, I'm lower dev tier so my opinion on this matter falls on deaf ears :\
/rant over. work is over, anyway, another ticket done, Leafs game tonight so I know what I'm going to be doing ;D
>>> class A(object):
... def __init__(self, data):
... self.data = data
...
...
>>> a = A(data='potato potato')
>>> class B(object): # note: not inheriting from A!
... def foo(self):
... print(f"I'm a {type(self)} and I have data {self.data}")
...
>>> a.__class__ = B # polymorph instance to different type without destroying data
>>> a.foo()
I'm a <class '__main__.B'> and I have data potato potato
Well, ok. But you know what I mean... I've a script that will ultimately spawn 10 - 100,000 threads over the course of, say, an hour. Are there any memory overheads with creating threads like this or is everything garbage collected? They only run ~2-3 seconds each, max.