So, I remember reading on Meta a while ago about some hack you could use to make very short comments, below the 15-character limit. It sounded cool, then I immediately forgot how to do it. Anyone know how? I tried <!-- --> but that didn't work...
Oh, I see. Well, I printed out a string, and must have only selected a few of them before I copied, so it ended up getting a little mangled. Effective, though...
Oh, well, I guess that's a good enough reason. I cannot wait for the day when the US decides to hold elections on weekends, but that probably won't be any time soon. You'll get too many hourly and low-wage workers showing up, and we all know who they vote for...
re regex: I remembered that bit, I'm just stuck on referencing the named group later. Do you just use (<name>)? I have a decent-enough capture group for ddMonyyyy(day), but I don't want to repeat it 3 times, with commas after two of them...
even though the pay is not that high, this beats sitting in the office and saying "No, no, no, we can't do that, no, it is impossible, wowowo, who told you it is OK to sell that?"
so ...
it was... (?P=name) A backreference to a named group; it matches whatever text was matched by the earlier group named name.
but it is not the same
this is for matching the same string
if you need to do the same pattern 3 times, you'd use {} or % formatting
needed to write a little function to return the file type to me according to some rules, i am using sublime text 2, but i get indentation errors all the time pastebin.com/M8YiErXa
@makallio85 this is a slightly better version of yours:
# See about Fizz buzz game in here, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fizz_buzz
import time
# Whether to print each row result in iteration on not
PRINT_ROUNDS = False
# Run game with different amounts of rounds
amount = 10
while (amount <= 10000000):
# Get time in milliseconds
start = round(time.time()*1000)
for x in range(1, amount + 1):
if not x % 3:
string = "Fizz"
if not x % 5:
string += "Buzz"
if not string:
string = x
if PRINT_ROUNDS:
@Stephan ahh.... just a little worried that you rarely need to do type checking in Python - so if you're starting - wouldn't like to see you getting started on the wrong foot as it were :)
@Jon Thank you for your concern, but that is actually required in the assignment, but now it works, what i did was just move everything completely to the left, and then use tab and hit it 1 or 2 times..seems tab is quicker than spaces and less prone to error in my ind
yeah but i think it might be something like language learning.. there is a hump.. and you get better from there.. but if you are over the hump.. you know how to help yourself
I've only learned from examples... I remember that when I was writing my first php+mysql thing I only knew conditions in php and I didn't know mysql "and" syntax :D so I wrote select which selected all rows from database with one condition (out of 4) and the rest was filtered by script :D
@Jon.. my assignment is, to take columns out a .csv file that i know names of.. look at the datatypes.. put them into a set.. then write it into a dictionary where the column name is the key, and the set is the value ( that is what i have to do as far as i can tell ) it is a little over my head and i have been sitting on it for a few days
@Pascal i am a beginner.. i don't really understand how that can be advantages, if i use tabs, i can just press one button, spaces is 4 times the button, and the chance of me miscounting... don't wanna offend you.. i am just clueless
like of of the values in FIELDS is areaUrban, so in theory the dict should give me like a pair of areaUrban as key and a set as the value that contains all the different datatypes that occur in that column in the document
@StephanKetterer what you want is your field_types to have a set per each column... at the moment, you've got a single set that's shared by all columns
@JonClements Hmm i am sorry to ask.. i thought i get a set called helper.. stuff the datatypes in, then save it as the value of my key to the dict,, and then iterate further
mh that sounds very complicated for my beginner brain:) i am sure it is an awesome counstruct, i am not sure what it does, fieldtypes = {k:set() for k in FIELDS} i guess that replaces the empty dict definition.. it has a "for" in it which makes me believe it is some kind of loop, which i don't understand in a variable declaration
@Stephan yes... so at the moment, you've got one helper shared by all columns... that's presumably not what you want... you wants each column to have it's own set of types... not the total amount of types found across all columns...
yes, just out of curiousity... because i think i used that in the past. that you take a variable in a loop, then maybe append a dict with it.. then "reset" the variable and use it again and again ... kind of as a shovel ?!
I've literally just woken up though :p I'm going to be travelling for a bit but when I get home I can ping you to discuss things properly if you want @Pascal? Until then my responses will be sadly intermittent.
honestly.. maybe because i am stupid.. or maybe because english is not my first language... i have problems with understanding the documentation sometimes
def get_the_type(value):
if value in ('', 'NULL'):
return None
elif value.startswith('{'}):
return list
for T in (int, float, str):
try:
return type(T(value))
except ValueError:
pass
also it was mentioned that DictReader is not helping me since i will get strings
Jon, yours look indefinitely better ! but i was just happy for a moment that mine worked.. even though its clumsy.. writing a function that seems to do what want was good :)
@StephanKetterer Your main problem is going to be that when you solve one problem, you'll see others appear, because there are multiple things wrong with the code.
@StephanKetterer Yes, there's the official Python tutorial "This tutorial does not attempt to be comprehensive and cover every single feature, or even every commonly used feature. Instead, it introduces many of Python’s most noteworthy features, and will give you a good idea of the language’s flavor and style."
That official tutorial is not aimed at total beginners to programming. It was originally written as an introduction to Python for people who were already competent programmers in one or more other languages. However, there are various core things that Python does differently to many other common languages, so if you already know how to program in C/C++, JavaScript, or PHP, you may find some Python things a bit alien at first.
@AvinashRaj: FWIW, I know a little bit about Indian culture, especially Vaishnava culture & beliefs. I've read Bhagavad Gita a few times, plus various bits & pieces from the Ramayana and Bhagavata Purana, etc. A few decades ago I learned a tiny bit of Sanskrit and how to read & write Devanagari (very slowly), but most of that knowledge has faded from lack of practice.