I start a server using sockets and want to allow clients to connect to it.
self.sock.bind(('0.0.0.0',0)) # 0.0.0.0 will allow all connections and port 0 -> os chooses a open port.
stroke_port=self.sock.getsockname()[1]
self.sock.listen(75)
self.open_port_popup(stroke_port)
Now, for other clien...
@Jessica try exploring your code and trying to debug what's happening. Use an interpreter to look at the values and manipulate them and you'll be able to solve this yourself.
if this is an assignment, go ask your teacher if you're having trouble
@Jessica Well, yes. However, not being allowed to use Python's built-in functions is a little cruel, IMHO, especially such an important one like zip. Banning zip is a recipe for un-Pythonic code.
And since I've already coded an example using zip, I'm going to post it anyway. :)
a = [[1,2,3], [4,5,6], [7,8,9]]
ta = zip(*a)
for col in ta:
print(col)
sorry if this was already covered here, quick search of the room history showed no hits. meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/319930/… is asking for a good canonical for object not callable -- there's a decent suggested question but perhaps this would deserve attention from you gentlepeople
I don’t think we have a perfect canonincal for that one. Most of the ones are just rather specific solutions (which may give others an idea about the source of the problem) but don’t necessarily help perfectly.
@axiac: Indeed. This is a very simple example and not meant to be exhaustive. Nobody copies code from StackOverflow and pastes it straight into a terminal window, do they? ;) — Johnsyweb3 mins ago
Hi, everybody. How often are you using python non-optimised code-writing to get your life simpler? I am using python almost for this reason - it is very fast even if I am writing code completely by myself.
Writing code that runs slowly isn't a problem (unless it's too slow). Writing code that is hard for someone else (including future you) to read just because you can't be bothered to think of the best way to structure your approach, is a problem.
Help on built-in function FastFeatureDetector in module cv2:
FastFeatureDetector(...)
FastFeatureDetector([, threshold[, nonmaxSuppression]]) -> <FastFeatureDetector object>
@AndrasDeak Everything is an intent. If you click a link in a browser, a VIEW intent is raised with the new URL as the target. If there’s an app registered that matches the intent, it will offer itself.
@Withnail A project management strategy. It works with user stories that match the requirements and the work is separated in time “sprints”. Before each sprint, the user stories are rated with imaginary complexity points which gives you an idea of how difficult something is. After the sprint, you can see how many complexity points you managed to get done, which gives you a “team velocity” as an indicator on how fast you can get through complexity.
Problem is that “complexity points” is a super useless thing for the management and for any business purpose, and it’s also rather arbitrary, so it is often (intentional or not) linked to actual work hours – which makes most people happy but is against the concept of the whole thing.
Bottom line is: It’s still the same, and you can’t do one without matching it to the other.
We had “fun” examples in our project where writing down thousand lines of configuration has a complexity of kind-of 0 but is super time consuming. So the rated complexity was worthless, and we had to use the time as an indicator instead.
"Agile software development is a set of principles for software development in which requirements and solutions evolve through collaboration between self-organizing, cross-functional teams. It promotes adaptive planning, evolutionary development, early delivery, and continuous improvement, and it encourages rapid and flexible response to change"
Maybe this isn’t done in every scrum process, but usually you set in stone how and what is done at the beginning of a sprint. So during the sprint, you cannot react to changes in an agile matter (as that would invalidate the sprint planning and the estimated complexity, and as such break the velocity)
i was at a talk a couple of weeks ago, and the guy went off on a tangent and said "Y'know, it's really easy to be critical of MS, the way they come in and buy up young companies and transform them into lifeless bureacracies." And then stopped. Guy in the audience says "What's the 'but'"? "Oh, there's no but. It's just a statement of fact." then went on with his talk.
@AnttiHaapala I’m very sure that it’s not limited to “new” or even “product development”. I’m pretty sure that you can apply Scrum to any kind of project. And even so, I don’t see how that would change anything
Or are you trying to say that in “new product developments”, requirements don’t change?
My point is that I’ve been often enough in a situation where we planned to build X according to plan Y, and then during the sprint, requirement Z changes, which has an impact on X, so we should rather do it according to plan Y2 but we cannot do that since we already agreed to do Y even if that means we have to throw it away later (and even if we didn’t start with Y yet).
@user1375469 Docstrings should be at the start of the entity that they belong to. So the docstring of a class should be on the line after class MyClass:, i.e. before the __init__ method. There's (probably) not much point giving the __init__ method its own docstring.