The sphere formed by AB and the sphere formed by BC intersect at a circle perpendicular to the plane ABC... Now the question is, does that circle intersect the sphere formed by AC? For ordinary acute-ish formations of ABC, it seems like it should
Hmm. I think the answer is yes. If we choose the appropriate transformation, we should be able to make A, B, and C look like (1,0,0), (0,1,0) and (0,0,1) in an orthonormal basis, no? And if that's true, then P=(2/3,2/3,2/3) should give (A-p) ⊥ (B-p) etc.
Ok, the more vectory problem statement of my question is, "Given three vectors A, B, and C. Find some vector P such that (A+P) dot (B+P) = 0 and (B+P) dot (C+P) = 0 and (A+P) dot (C+P) = 0."
are we talking something like: value = reduce(dict.__getitem__, keys, the_dict) ?
I'm fairly sure there's loads of q/a's on the site on doing stuff like this in various ways... (he says before searching... but I'm sure I've answered a couple...)
@MoAli it's hard to tell exactly what you're confused about. The structure is clearly described in those docs. You navigate it just like you normally would in Python. What is the actual, specific problem you're having?
@davidism My issue was that I didn't know you can query lists inside numbers using integers. So when looking up dict d["Reservations"][0] it makes sense how to query a list inside a dictionary and vice-versa
You realize you have an interactive interpreter whenever you're using Python, right? You could literally copy that example response into the interpreter and play around with it.
Ok, so A+P dot B+P = (Ax+Px)*(Bx+Px) + (Ay+Py)*(By+Py) + (Az+Pz)*(Bz+Pz) and with two other equations just like this I'm pretty sure I'm heading into a quagmire of unsolvable polynomials.
If you're about to say "I initially had continue in there without a loop, but it gave me errors, so I added one", then you have a serious problem with your code structure
@ahlusar1989 it sounds like you just don't understand what you're doing or what the data you're working with is. Unfortunately, we can't write your code for you.
def just_xml_data(xml_string):
xml_string = xml_string.replace('&', '')
root = ElementTree.XML(xml_string) #serialize and parse into XML object
xml = dict(flatten_dict(root))
return xml
Ok, but if you catch the error, then you don't actually have any xml, because the xml generating function failed. So it doesn't make sense to try to return that xml that doesn't exist.
When I inserted an item into my listctrl, my entire window just froze - so I can't debug and see the error to search online
Do you guys know any possible cause from GUI related things that could cause the app window to freeze?
Usually what happens is I do something wrong on wxpython and it throws an error, and the app just would not respond while an error message is printed, but it wouldn't freeze.
@OneRaynyDay GUI lock-ups usually happen when you never return control to the main loop, so the function never gets a chance to "catch its breath" and work on the event queue that governs screen repainting, window repositioning, etc
One possible cause of this is an infinite loop in your code.
@MoAli Think about expressions. if d is a dict, then d["reservations"] is an item in that dict. If it's a list, then d["reservations"][0] is the first element of that list. If that element is a list then d["reservations"][0][0]is the first element of that list, and so on
@ahlusar1989 at this point, you have recieved more than enough help. It sounds like you don't have the basis for understanding what to do, and unfortunately this room is not the right place. You have confused what you've written (which is wrong) with what you're trying to do. We can't help you any more.
I can guarantee from personal experience that the single biggest improvement in your performance will come from sleeping until you can't sleep any more - which, after 72 hours, is likely to be twelve or fifteen hours
Getting 666 declined would be an achievement... how many times you'd end up being flag banned before getting to that level would take a lot of persistence :)
Next time break the problem down by throwing prints everywhere. print(range(10)); print(list(range(10)); print(list); etc. This helps even if you don't notice "hey, it thinks I'm calling a tuple. Syntactically, what am I calling? list and range. So I guess one of those is a tuple!"
I forget if you can do this in IDLE, but in ipython you can just type the name of something, followed by a question mark, and helpful text comes up. (ie 'list?')
@corvid thank you both - just looking for something where I can go 'back to basics' and learn good habits (or at least not bad practices) and move away from GAE..
@davidism Thanks, I will use that as a reference :)
I'd advise anyone to just get a $5 basic digital ocean account or something - that way you can learn loads on setting stuff up, scale it, etc... Never found a use for GAE/Heroku nad kin... (as yet)
@JonClements Yeah that's partly why I want to move away. It's been the only way so far I've done web stuff (in Python), want to go 'back to basics' as it were with Flask for it's lightweight-ness/flexibility and 'not-proprietary-ness'..
Well, I've found its services less of a convenience and more of an annoyance
it obviously does fit some ways of working though which I quite liked... maybe I'm just old-school and just prefer a server to be specific to a task and configured exactly how I want it for the task at hand.
@JonClements ah, no problem! I was thinking of getting digital ocean account(but I develop on java spring), but some friends were suggesting heroku or aws
Well, if you want to outsource an occasional massive number crunching job that lasts a few hours, that can run in parallel etc...
then it's better to use AWS instead of keeping N many server/cloud instances about that you're paying for whether or not they're actually doing anything
Hm yeah I've just had a look at the two, definitely see what you mean re: customisability/lower-level as it were. I only really came across Heroku as the "thing you can immediately deploy to from git", which is a pretty cool novelty imo.
@OllieFord takes just a few moments to set up an appropriate commit hook with a good git setup, to do pretty much the same
@OneRaynyDay all depends... too many factors involved - choosing a good environment, eco-system, host, supplier etc... is so conditional on the actual task/thinking about future requirements etc... it's a judgement call
@JonClements yeah of course, that's why I say novelty. I'll probably check out digital ocean, dollar payments just sting because it can cost me more in bank fees than the actual payment (e.g. Google Drive)..
@OllieFord the trick there is to deposit into paypal your local currency, then since DO accept paypal, use that to avoid x-rates... although it's been a while, so that might be a "loop hole" that's been fixed
@OllieFord I like digitalocean alot ... I used to like dreamhost ... but digital ocean will probably be my only host soon (I still like dreamhost quite a bit... but its pricy)
Thanks for reply! But this won't solve my issue. I am stuck building a python app for android in kivy. I want to add feature where all users can upload some data to common folder without authentication.
@AbhishekBhatia write your own service that runs remotely. It knows the authentication for your dropbox, and accepts requests to add, list, and get files from all the clients. Now you just authenticate the clients with your service (oauth, etc.), and your dropbox credentials don't get leaked
Step 1: write service that can upload, list, and get files from dropbox (simple python program, dropbox api) Step 2: write api for this service (flask, oauth) Step 3: use service (kivy app)
Quick question: in the top most __init__.py of my package I configure the logger (standard library logging). However, for other modules to gain access to this logger, this setup must be done before they are imported. This means the import statements are not on the top of the script anymore. This is against pep 8 standard, I think. Is it ok though?
@AbhishekBhatia please be wary that you're becoming what's called a help vampire... while we as a room do our best to help, there's a limit to our generosity. We're not here to hand hold you nor explain every single thing. Make an attempt at things yourself first, then if you have a specific issue, then talk about that...
so.... __init__.py is not the place to configure the logger? That's the first point of execution. everything else in the package is brought together in there.