that's exciting (I hope). Unless you take it to mean you'll be disappearing through the back window because company is armed and knocking down your door.
Heh ... no, although there's a reasonable chance she'll have had a drink or two (works leaving do), so there's always a possibility of something getting knocked over.
Guys, how do I generate n random numbers within a range with conditions? The conditions can be, for example, that a set of numbers appears twice as often as they should.
Hi guys, I'm learning python, in this UDP client code ( pastebin.com/zFFhRUSQ ) I'd like to add a timeout on data reception from server. It seems to have some problem in the timeout exception management (lines 28-30), what's wrong? Thanks in advance.
in a parser, I want to be able to match patterns against the input buffer
the buffer object and parser object are distinct
if the buffer is bytes, then no problem
can return a zero-copy memoryview to the parser object
but if the buffer is a unicode string, can only return a copy of the buffer (slice) to the parser object
seems a waste
can workaround it, by always keeping the buffer as bytes and decode as necessary
e.g. if the buffer contains b'asdfgh', and the parser is doing lookahead, say wanting to match b'fgh' at position 3, it's simple to do memoryview(buffer)[3:] == b'fgh'. But with a string (`buffer[3:] == 'fgh'), there's a copy taking place. And I don't understand the reason why it has to be like that.
ok, but if a string is conceptually an array of unicode code points, what's the big deal in obtaining a (read-only) memoryview of it to avoid a slice copy when required (much like obtaining a memoyview of an array.array of short or int, depending on whether the implementation is using UCS-2 or UCS-4 code points)?
i.e. buffer[3:] == 'fgh' is saying I don't care about the binary encoding, I want to compare code points. But why does one have to get a copy of those codepoints first?
in python 2, the 'unicode' type supported buffer protocol. what's the difference between a python 3 string and the python 2 unicode type?
PhraseId SentenceId Phrase Sentiment
0 1 1 A series of escapades demonstrating the adage ... 1
1 2 1 A series of escapades demonstrating the adage ... 2
2 3 1 A series 2
>>> [tuple(s for s in tup if s) for tup in m]
[('Brodie Loy', '3', '53'), ('Hugh Bowman', '3', '47'), ('James McDonald',), ('Kerrin McEvoy',), ('Tommy Berry',), ('Ms', "Kathy O'Hara")]
I have quick question. I am trying to convert image from .webp to jpg with this code: from PIL import Image
im = Image.open("aq1.webp")
print(im.format, im.size, im.mode)
but i am getting raise IOError("cannot identify image file") IOError: cannot identify image file
Not sure. I am unfamiliar with which is which. But when I run the command normally it prints out about three lines of code. When I do with check_output it only prints the last line if no errors. If there are errors I don't know how to print them.
I am giving users access to a different languages repl
To my command line where I am running python... it prints: Swift version 1.0 (swift-600.0.34.4.5) Target: x86_64-apple-darwin13.3.0 But to the variable I saving output of check_output it saves the last line
Which is the result of the command I sent to the repl a 3
Produce a gist with the python call, the output, the command you're running and its output... just so it's all in one place - it's Saturday evening... don't fancy 20 guesses :)
@Johnston okay... sorry for being slow... you're not the most clear of people though - you catch the exception that's thrown (as stated in the docs), eg:
I am trying to return the error from python to the browser by using that return statement. That error doesn't seem to be located in e.output or e.message.
@davidism cheers, it's for @Johnston, and we've spent about 30+ mins trying to work through this... (I'm on the media laptop - don't have all my dev setups on it)