hrmph. This is odd. I take a zipfile, and then when it's done, I use shutil.copy2 to put it in a directory. However, when I do that, it doesn't let me expand it
If you folk got time and you want to mock me, feel free to view my effort to implement OData. There is no codebase yet, only writing requirements and specifications, later on moving to design and modelling and only finally into the actual coding.
I really want to get this thing going, the only partial implementation of OData in Python I've ever found was odata-py and it has been sitting unattended since 2011...
btw, the list of supported features is a very partial list, it should grow at least 3 times its current length, maybe even 10 times. OData protocol is a 300 pages long protocol.
@Terfin On the EDM page, you write: "Basically, this defines how should the dataset that the OData protocol works with look like." I think it would be more understandable as "Basically, this defines how the dataset that the OData protocol works with should look."
def get_input(prompt, validator=lambda L: L, converter=lambda L: L):
for result in iter(lambda: raw_input(prompt), None):
if validator(result): return converter(result)
My uncle told me the other day, about a contestant on The Price is Right, who lives off of disability checks. But she sure wasn't handicapped when it came to spinning the big wheel!
I concluded that she must have a disability that isn't apparent, like narcolepsy. There's probably a dozen unaired takes where she spins the wheel and plop, down she goes
Are those hdanicapped parking spots reserved for people with movement impairing handicaps, or for disabled people in general? It is wheel chair sign after all.
Maybe they're flouting the law, or maybe they have early-stage multiple sclerosis, and it's a good day so they don't need their crutches, but still would prefer not to walk half the length of a parking lot. Not that I'm saying that happens often, but I'd prefer to not to take the chance by scolding them because they look alright
I am not that much of a client sider tbh, so never put the effort into researching that. I only do HTML5 apps with Phonegap when it comes to mobile and I have to do client side, and usually not for apps with extreme visual effects
We have various mobile apps for android and the client dev takes ages compared to the server side. And since the advent of fragments in the API, things got... bizzare
Cannot believe this. I wouldn't spend the time to read it, if it were free.
Programmers who already know C++ may be able to pick up Java speedily, since the two languages share many features. But for those weaned on other popular languages, particularly BASIC and Visual Basic, the transition to Java can be a lot more difficult.
The Visual Basic Programmer's Guide to Java teaches Java from the perspective of an experienced VB programmer, noting important differences in syntax between the two languages, introducing the principles of object-oriented programming, and explaining Java's AWT (abstract windowing toolkit) components.
I wish I found a job in Python. Sadly in here, Python is not as popular... companies actually still use Perl for system tasks and devops, not to mention products... Python barely sees light as a product development language in here. Only in a very few startups... everything is MS oriented around here.
I work for a consulting company, 90% of the developers work with C#.NET, a few work with Java. One or two work with Ruby and I am trying with all my might to get Python into the toolbox, but the market isn't ready for that.
@Terfin It means the applicant overestimates its own capabilities and nothing more. I would never be so proud as to say that I am at 100% at anything. Not even breathing or sitting.
I would tend to put it the other way: a list of things to remember to check regarding permissions can be learned. The sort of programming skills that I can't teach -- at least not in the available time -- are the types of things I review candidates for.
They say that bananas have been cultivated from their wild forms to be more palatable for humans to eat. I wonder if we'll ever do the same with coconuts. A thousand years from now we'll have a coconut that fits in your hand, whose shell you can peel off without a tool.
omg that's cheap... in here a standard lunch would cost around 15-30 USD, while the minimal wage is around 1.2k USD. Also, we pay tons of taxes, of any kind you could possibly imagine. I wonder how comes they don't tax us for breathing, or for metabolism.
@DSM I spotted another the other week (seems I'm not the first... plenty of people have noticed)... Anyway, I've been listening to some Lily Allen stuff...