Especially if it wouldn't use "oop" types but rather something like "contract types" (IE: "this is an object that has __getitem__, __str__ and my_function defined in it)
def count_something(input: typing.Sequence) is much clearer than having to either look through a documentation or through the function itself. - It's a way to "formalize documentation".
If I want the user to know a parameter should be a sequence, I usually do def count_something(seq):
"Yeah, well, that's obviously a simple example," you hypothetically say. "If it's a real complicated function, what do you do then?" in which case, I just don't write complicated functions :-P
Still that's not a formal description - so the user either has to understand your naming scheme or you have to define that in a documentation. - It's the formalizing that I like, just like I actually LIKE pep8.
sql can we lock relationships at the schema level?
e.g. suppose you have an Author with a many Books , and if author.status = 'deceased' you don't want to permit any change to the collection of author.books
> you do not need to say “anyone here know Django?” before asking a question about Django. Even if you do, the Django experts in the room might not step forward until hearing the actual question. They may not wish to commit themselves to help until they know how much effort it will entail.
I would like to think I remind/inform people of the room rules. If you want to break them because my guilt trip/suggestion isn't strong enough, who am I to stop you... I'm no room owner :D
If you want to get maximally pedantic, it's not a "rule" that you can't have a "anyone know X?" preamble. I'm just quoting our handy guide that indicates why such a query might be met with stony silence
user6845426
I have a scanned document containing x many lines of text. I want to be able to separate these lines into individual images to apply further wizard magic. Anyone know a good approach?
but I feel if I ask them for it in the comments I would not get a reply, since they might be long gone (it's happen in the past) :( guess I will never know
Oh it might have been me miss typing sample with shuffle, even thought my link to the docs is to sample, and my example uses sample :\ guess I deserve it should have proof read it better .
Perhaps they object to your use of the variable name generate_random_names, which, despite being a verb clause, is not a function. Yes, I know OP used it first, but some drive-by downvoters don't think that's a valid excuse.
Personally I try to keep naming conventions as close to the OP's orginal code as possible, even if doing so violates style standards (... To a reasonable degree)
valid point, but then would op get upset if i use different variable names. I just wanted to link it to OP's so there's little to no confusion :\ but then it's confusing for future readers
in the currently accepted axioms of mathematics, you can make these statements that you can prove are impossible to prove, and you can also prove they are impossible to disprove
Trying to remember how to pronounce an O with two dots over it... I know some people spell "cooperate" with an O with two dots over it, so maybe an O with two dots over it is pronounced like the O sounds in "cooperate".
Or maybe I'm thinking of an accent mark which looks similar to, but is distinct from, an O with two dots over it, and which means "this pair of O's makes two sounds even though two O's together usually just indicates a long O"
If I have a class that is a wrapper for an API and this class has a public method GetCategories() which performs an API call and returns a list of categories..
Should I wrap the API call in the method with a Try Catch and return an empty list if there is an excepton? or should I not catch any exceptions so that the exception bubbles up on its own to the user of the api class?
To summarize: implicit string literal concatenation – 'foo' 'bar' == 'foobar' – only works with string literals. mycat['size'] is not a string literal.
Oh man, that feeling you get when you add some bit of functionality to a module, thinking it might some day later be useful, and then twenty months later, it's actually overwhelmingly useful. :y