@Ffisegydd: ? I mean the room you people who collect cards with pictures of creatures on them, or craft mines, or whatnot, have here on SO to congregate.
I would assume that any language that brags about doing it themselves, do so because they have their own dedicated memory management system. I imagine they only make one allocate/deallocate call to the OS per execution, and work from a single large internal pool the rest of the time.
If my understanding is accurate, then it's neither good nor bad that one language advertises "compaction" and another doesn't.
I slept through 50% of my computer architecture lessons, which is why I'm not putting all this conjecture into an answer.
I'm learning Python and came across Modules. Aren't they pretty much a class with static methods that can be used without having to initialize the class?
A Python module is simply a Python source file, which can expose classes, functions and global variables.
When imported from another Python source file, the file name is treated as a namespace.
A Python package is simply a directory of Python module(s).
For example, imagine the following direc...
So it's a file that contains a list of class prototypes, functions and variables?
"module - An object that serves as an organizational unit of Python code. Modules have a namespace containing arbitrary Python objects. Modules are loaded into Python by the process of importing."
I guess it comes down to the definition of "X is pretty much a Y". "X and Y have similar interfaces"? Sure, ok. "X's type is a child of Y's type, and you can demonstrate this programmatically"? Not so much.
Standard warning: People coming from Java often insist on carrying a primitive/non-primitive object classification into Python even though it doesn't fit. There are some simple cases in which -- by coincidence -- Python's object model in the case of mutable and immutable objects makes it seem like Python treats certain objects differently (pass by value vs pass by reference) depending on their "primitiveness". There is no such distinction in Python: you've just got objects.
> package - A Python module which can contain submodules or recursively, subpackages. Technically, a package is a Python module with an __path__ attribute.
Back in my day, the curriculum taught you how to deal with the community by t-rex rules: "if you see a senior developer, be quiet, very still, and try to study its behavior"
Oh, I thought it was a perl command. Well, I know it is, but I thought that's what everyone was referring to when using the meme, inasmuch as they're referring to anything in particular and not just copying other people using the meme, as is typical of memes.
I mean, there's nothing wrong with having a class with an attribute whose type is that same class. That's exactly how trees work.
I don't want to say "this is good practice" and have you put self-type-lists in every class "just in case you need them later", and I don't want to say "this is bad practice" and have you never use a list as an attribute "because Kevin said so".
a question from a beginner, something is not working, you dont know why, you change the structure,and it works, do you go back and try to figure out why the first structure did not work ?
@AbhishekBhatia According to regex101.com, *? means "Match as few times as possible." which is not very meaningful when you're matching 'b', but if b were a group that could mean multiple things or ., then it would have a significant effect on what gets matched.