:facepalm: Newbie's text processing program is giving mysterious bugs. It turns out his data was not a plain text file - it's in an RTF. stackoverflow.com/questions/29730239/…
anyone know how to fix this unorderable types error please? I am using one argument and within the script I have accessed it as follows: if math.fabs(c-60) < sys.argv[1]:
I have tried surrounding the arg with int() but still get an error
@Ffisegydd 'The author of the book, Josh Holtz, expressed his disdain to us. “I thought that people would want a realistic look at the startup life. Tim Ferriss is lying to you.”' nice
I want a new close reason: 'Questions which cannot be answered without also winning James Randi's million dollar prize are off topic. Please do not ask us to be omniscient, omnipotent, or anything else that starts with "omni."'
:) It's annoying when people start making wild guesses as to what the OP really means, and then start writing answers based on those guesses. It's even more annoying when they guess right. :) Eg, this gem I linked to earlier stackoverflow.com/questions/29730097/…
@JonClements I guess so. There's nothing wrong with making educated guesses, but IMHO you should prompt the OP with comments first to verify those guesses before posting answers. OTOH, it doesn't hurt to start working on an answer while waiting for verification...
@JohanLarsson Nice. I'm glad I'm not the only blues fan here.
@makallio85 btw, personally I prefer (Py)Qt/<insert your favorite toolkit> for anything beyond a simple dialog, Tk is pretty old and devoid of features
As you might guess, you have to be fit to play that well and that fast.
OTOH, being a little overweight doesn't seem to slow this young lady down: Chantel McGregor Band - A New Day Yesterday. FWIW, that's a cover of an old Jethro Tull blues-rock number.
I meant that you may use `output` just to print debug messages and in future you may want to get rid of them, so you will just make output that will do nothing :) (although logging is much more clever way of doing that)
@MartijnPieters I'm not asking for technical help with Python, I'm asking for feedback from this particular community (the Python room) on a meta issue. I don't think I'm the target of that rule. Also, it's not the main site, it's meta. If you don't like it here that's fine I don't mind really - it was just relatively well appreciated when I posted meta topic I posted and generally interesting ones before.
@Martijn to be fair... as @Benjamin says we've never enforced that rule re: meta posts from well known members of the community.... Benjamin's posted ones here before that may be of interest to the members here...
@MartijnPieters I really don't mind it being trashed, I just found it odd. When rooms have that rule it's usually to prevent people who have "urgent" work and "need urgent help" with their "how do I add 1 to 1 in numpy" questions or something like that.
I would like to plot the ROC curve for the multiclass case for my own dataset. By the documentation I read that the labels must been binary(I have 5 labels from 1 to 5), so I followed the example provided in the documentation:
print(__doc__)
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
fr...
This has always confused me. It seems like this would be nicer:
my_list = ["Hello", "world"]
print my_list.join("-")
# Produce: "Hello-world"
Than this:
my_list = ["Hello", "world"]
print "-".join(my_list)
# Produce: "Hello-world"
Is there a specific reason it does it like this?