Yeah, February 1999; saw an article about the Zope platform in a magazine, which seemed to fit the needs of the web dev company I was with at the time.
Any books I used at the time are long since out of date.
Finding those exceptions is a good debugging trait and a good trait in comedians. In other circumstances I admit it tends to make you want to punch someone in the face.
@JonClements It may be worthwhile to put the int call in the while loop, like credit = int(raw_input("Please input your change: ")). That way, the while credit == 0 loop will actually do something.
Now the email server is running... I now have the "fun" of talking a technophobe through adding a new mail account to their email client... better grab a large brandy first...
Start with competence. It's underrated. I'm nowhere near an expert in Java, but I can get what I need done in it, and that's a useful skill. The extra glamour (?) of being a wizard isn't particularly useful to me.
Even though we talk like they are, "lambda functions" aren't really a thing. lambda is a keyword which lets you write simple functions in a certain way. That's it.
And from people on SO saying, "actually, this way is better / faster / shorter / more correct". If other people are putting your answers to shame, then you're already learning.
They only change the language itself when there's no real alternative. Nothing you write in a module could ever replicate what the new nonlocal keyword does.
The devs seem quite content to go without it. "An if ... elif ... elif ... sequence is a substitute for the switch or case statements found in other languages."
I doubt that it's much slower than a switch would be.
If you're writing code that's super time critical, you probably shouldn't be writing it in Python. Switch to Fortran for a free 100x speed boost. </lame-excuse>
In certain situations, you can turn a switch block into Python code that uses no conditionals at all. For example:
switch(x){
case 1: y = 4; break;
case 2: y = 8; break;
case 3: y = 15; break;
case 4: y = 16; break;
case 5: y = 23; break;
case 6: y = 42; break;
}
becomes
y = {1:4, 2:8, 3:15, 4:16, 5:23, 6:42}[x]
The PEP's position seems to be "it's not impossible to do switch well, but I haven't seen a good approach yet" and "it doesn't have popular support, so let's not bother".
If both of those change over time, I think we can embrace switch at that point, without any hypocrisy.
@Kevin I think that's a fair summary of the PEP, yeah (have read it through more than once on thinking I'd come up with a good syntax) ... I've seen a bit of a cultish "if we don't have it, it must be a bad idea" attitude from quite a number of pythonistas (including core devs), though.
What he's tried: the three lines he showed us already. His current output: None, the program isn't fully written yet. Expected output: numToBaseB(7, 2) -> 111
@ZeroPiraeus mm hmm, I agree that that kind of thinking is problematic
Apropos of nothing, one thing I find hard to deal with is people who cannot admit they're wrong about something. I make ten mistakes before breakfast, and if my code isn't buggy it's because I wasn't paying enough attention. So the idea of being unwilling to admit "oops, I typed Y where I meant Z" but instead needing to construct a storyline about how actually it wasn't a mistake when it really was is entirely foreign to me.
@DSM: all of downtown, AFAIK. All public buildings are locked down. The lab is inaccessible without a key card, and there's a row of computers from the door to my desk (a lot of metal through which a bullet would have to travel)
@inspectorG4dget If the televised version of HHGttG taught me anything, it's that a bank of computers provides an effective if temporary shield from gun-wielding crazies ...
Well, badguys can't hit goodguys, unless the badguys are stormtroopers and the goodguys are redshirts - even though the stormtroopers miss every shot, the redshirt still dies
@DSM: so much commotion here. We're confined to classrooms, offices and labs, to the point where we can't even go to the bathroom without an escort (in some cases)
@inspectorG4dget Supposition: as a result of karma, bad guy bullets are sentient, and seek to avoid striking any living being, but red shirts provide perfect camouflage, and therefore appear to the bullets to be empty space.
Radio presenter here has just gone: "Obviously, Canada's a bilingual country so he's doing a French translation. We'll come back to him when he starts talking English again..." :p
I did the only thing I could - I set up a facebook page, accumulating names of friends, and their known statuses (safe, not in Ottawa, etc). Please contribute if you know anything useful
See... whoever decided to raise the threat level from "low" to "medium" should be told to not do that in the future - look what's happened because of it :)
@Ffisegydd Is there any way you know of to have two line breaks after a paragraph has ended in LateX, that doesn't make the compiler moan about badboxes?
Oh the irony of this statement from 7 hours ago: Canada has raised its terror threat level from low to medium but has stressed there is no specific threat.
> A huge security operation has parts of Canada's capital in lockdown after a gunman shot and killed a soldier at a war memorial, then opened fire in the parliament building.
Computer experts like us shouldn't have to enlist our friends' help to delete THE FOLDER after our demise. You should just encrypt it with a password that only you know.
And configuring your browser to erase your history periodically and automatically, goes without saying.
@Kevin Actually, come to think of it, when you're dead you shouldn't have any concerns at all! Either your heaven sorts that stuff for you, THE FOLDER was destroyed in the same incident as you were, or more to the point, you're dead. Not much concerning gets done at that point.
I often wonder, among all of the things I've never tried, is there something that's way way better than the stuff I consider my "favorite" these days?
Maybe I'm just wild for hummus, but I'll never find out!
@Iplodman I'm now inventing a peer-to-peer religion, where the quality of your paradise is directly proportional to your total approval rating amongst your friends and family.
That's one situation where you don't want your loved ones thinking that you're a super creepazoid, even posthumously.
I blame the expansion of popular culture. Back in the day, when everyone's TV only got channels 3 6 and 10, you could converse with any complete stranger on the street, and have a 33% chance that you could talk about what was on last night.
Nowadays, those odds are down to a fraction of a percent.
@Kevin That's an interesting idea for a thesis, I might add.
The effect of the development of modern technology during the 21st century on the ever declining odds of having viewed any particular given footy match.
Technology gives us a nice way of finding niche subgroups, like the one we're chatting in right now, but it doesn't prepare you for making small talk with strangers on the bus.
one year ago: "our parametrized SQL is hard to maintain, let's use an ORM". six months ago: "our ORM produces big nasty queries, let's switch to ORM #2". Today: "neither of our ORMs are any good, let's use parametrized SQL". It's the ciiiircle of life
Substitute Lukas Podolski netted a dramatic late winner as Arsenal came from behind with two goals in the final two minutes to beat Anderlecht 2-1 and hand manager Arsene Wenger a 65th birthday to remember at the Constant Vanden Stock Stadium.