@vaultah if you feel that the post would not be closed otherwise, but is an obvious close target. I used it for a post that is a) old, b) a resource request; pushing that into the queue would have taken a long time to close.
I do it rarely, if a question requires some domain knowledge to close then keep it to the appropriate room.
So if it is a JavaScript duplicate, for example, best stick that in the JS room, not here.
If we have a function which calculates the percentage of letters that are capitalised. What if we pass it an empty string? Obviously it will return ZeroDivisionError, but if we catch this exception, what should we return in its stead? 0? 1?
@Ffisegydd Well, I was working on redoing that code at the weekend. I made the function return a named tuple that gave the ratio of upper/total, lower/total and other/total)
Yeah, and just make the function return all the ratios
But I definitely think that returning 0 would be a good way to go. Because the functions that will use that information won't need to differentiate between an empty string and a string that contains no capitalisation
I don't mind either way - it's not like I bagsied it. Our RFID modules have come in so I don't have huge gaps of time free during the day (which I wasted, beating Ubuntu into submission)
Obviously I could be wrong with this, as I'm just thinking it in my head and have no statistical proof whatsoever, but I can't see that being the best of features. Features should be able to distinguish, in our case, between a good question and a bad question. I can't see the ratio of markup tags to text doing such a thing. I'd imagine it'll be roughly consistent for both. But hey, we can try it.
It's worth a try, as long as it isn't going to stress you out doing the code for it :P
Please search on StackOverflow for prime number checks. It’s a very common topic with lots of different approaches, some better than others. But in general, it’s really normal that it takes a lot of time.
I don't know much python, but pateryn's answer seems wrong. I don't think he's computing the mode at all, and I'm not sure it's computing the mean, either.
Actually, I work with networkx to plot a tree. I have edgenames in a list, and I'd like to draw all edges and link every edge with each other. I tried nx.read_edgelist() ; but I think it's not correct :/
does anybody know how to use networkx ?
example for nodes: node = ["houseA", "houseB", "houseC", "houseD"]
@RobertGrant what I meant to say about alembic was that it is not perfect but anything sql tools written by zzzeek at 0.1 is still better than anything django at 2.5 :D
question: if i've got a list : ["a", "b", "c", "d"] how can I get a list of tuples : [("a", "b"), ("a", "c"), ("a", "d"), ("b", "c"), ("b", "d"), ("c", "d")]
hey my friends, I've got the following code: http://www.codeshare.io/q8cKV Unfortunately, I get an type error: module object is not callable. why is that and how can I fix this error?