@Veedrac Ta! Reciprocated :-) Always nice to have a succinct comment thread ...
@Veedrac I wouldn't worry too much - getting to 10K was like pulling teeth (got lucky with two answers yesterday), and I'm likely to take a bit of a holiday.
I reckon this is the perfect time to stop caring about rep. I'm not fussed about the 15K and 20K privileges, I now have the coveted "k" at the end of my rep next to my avatar, and if I did carry on trying to get more, I'd end up bitter about being unable to catch certain puppies, ninjas etc. :-)
@Veedrac I did actually flag something on bounty in the last few days; not sure whether that was it though. I don't do do often, since "evade closure" is clearly part of the point of bounties (otherwise why disable it?)
And ... ehh. My flag history is almost entirely consumed by "what have you tried" flags, about which I am somewhat obsessive - not fun hunting anything else down in there.
If I only want a single application to connect to a VPN (OpenVPN is the server in this case) can I just use pyOpenSSL and forego setting up a virtual device (TUN/TAP)?
We just need processor speed to double a few more times. People won't be terribly concerned that launching pypy is a hundred times slower than launching JS, if it amounts to a microsecond difference
@John Yes it does, but assuming pyOpenSSL does implement all the required criteria I wonder if it would interface with OpenVPN properly. As said, I've not used it so can't really offer more help than that
Try not to think what it says about the afterlife, that I took one look at it and immediately jumped back into chat.
Oops. I intended to start working on the "100 consecutive days" badge about a week and a half ago, so I could claim it during the Winter Bash, and potentially get the "got a gold badge during Winter Bash" hat.
I set up my phone's calendar app to remind me, but I guess I didn't notice the notification.
The ceremony only really requires two dollar-store candles and a partridge egg, but it just doesn't have the same ambience without the dribbly black wax and the velvet curtains and ruby inlaid dagger
@IntrepidBrit because the bullet would respect you defacing it so much it would refuse to hit its target, if the author of the name even did happen to hand over said bullet to someone about to shoot them?
I'm going to +1 this... but to show how much I don't care, I'm not going to leave a comment to explain how happy I am you are, and hope you die soon...
As far as I know, Python doesn't have an actual iterator class. It has an "iterator protocol", which seems quite informal. Basically "we don't care what you inherit from or anything, just provide these two methods"
you guys think it would be confusing to use an example in python in a beginner's level java class? I am trying to display exceptions, and I feel python makes it look a lot cleaner and more readable
@Veedrac what do you mean by that? Can you post simple example code?
@corvid Seems fine as long as you don't use any Python-specific idioms. No list comprehensions, etc. Keep it plain, and Python pretty much resembles pseudocode.
Ok. consider a parser object. The constructor takes various params which control the parsing process (e.g. case-insensitive or not). There is also parse method taking an input string/buffer and which does the actual parsing (returning, say the CST). It's top-down type parser, which multiple methods implementing the various parsing rules. My first approach was to set an instance variable to hold the input string/buffer, allowing the rule methods to access the input.
But that doesn't seem clean. For instance, a file object always has an underlying stream (being created with open ). In this case, the parser object only has a stream when parse is called... just smells funny.
I would do some basic preprocessing on the source and convert it into keywords, then run the parsing rules over those basic tokens (e.g. a Bash-like parser could start by building a list of space-separated words and feeding those to the rules)
well, simply that a parser object may perform a fair amount of initialisation which is independent of the input stream. Repeating that for every stream seems inefficient. But having a parse without a stream is equally 'wrong' somehow.
I wrote a top-down parser last week, and I used your second approach: I passed the stream as an argument to every method. But I was in a functional mood that day. I wouldn't have had a problem with making a stream parameter that might change or become None in between calls to parse.
I wonder if you could do some kind of singleton design, so that your fair amount of initialization only happens with the first Parser you create, and all later Parsers just borrow from that.
One might argue that it's local to the Parser module. Other modules shouldn't be able to tell whether you're initializing once ever, or initializing every time
I feel that with work commitments my activity has dropped as of late. In order to re-affirm my social standing within the group I present to you this tiny kitten as a gesture of good faith.
Everyone in the office has THAT guy who always disturbs you at crucial moments when you're "in the zone". Currently enjoying turning the tables on him today