@AndyK Hey, it happens. When you get stuck on a misguided track it can be hard to understand what you're doing wrong, and there's a tendency to misinterpret stuff to try and force it to fit the broken theory.
@RobertGrant Yeah, 3000 balls will slow things right down. :) I tend to go for ball numbers near numbers that are products of small primes, (hence the default of 30).
@RobertGrant If the number of balls is pq, when the balls form up into p groups there'll be exactly q balls in each group, which looks a bit more symmetrical than if the groups don't all have the same number of balls. And that makes it easier for your eye to spot when the groups are starting to form.
We think so :) Both good languages and frameworks, but we obviously prefer Python :)
Django is the closest thing to RoR you'll find on Python; there are also other frameworks you can try. I started with Django and didn't stay there, but it was pretty easy to get up and running with.
Would've guessed at that. I found (as a relative newbie), that Django obscured a lot of stuff that it would've been useful to understand, and I'm getting to grips with those things now.
Yeah I think the thing with Django is it doesn't teach you so much about Python as you use it, so you end up being more of a Django expert than a Python one. Flask doesn't have that so much, and Pyramid even less (although any framework will have it a bit).
That makes sense. I discovered that when I fell on my arse during a technical test last week as I was using flask rather than django, and effectively forgot a lot of stuff Django does automagically.
One thing I do rate about Django is that it does force you to separate "areas of interest". Been on projects where the lines between front end and back end got blurred and ended up as horrible, horrible code soup.
I guess to do that you'd need a Pyramid view of what a model is, and a perfect mapping to SQLAlchemy (and other persistence mechanisms) and then every Pyramid thing built on that Pyramid model
I once questioned on the Django core dev mailing list the fact that they don't have a login/logout module that comes with Django, but they do have that django admin thing. They weren't happy.
Okay... "kills flying insects in seconds"... half an hour later... I'm still waiting - I'm going to resort to a rolled up newspaper shortly... Although to be fair - they didn't specify how many seconds...
I converted my project in a couple of days from pyramid to flask; perhaps now I should go from flask to websauna! Anything to avoid actually adding features.
One major thing was that each framework has its own custom authentication plugin to handle logins etc; would be cool to have a generic one that sits on an ORM and then just little integrations to each framework on top of that. I guess the "I want to switch web framework at will" market isn't big enough to sustain that, though.
With Antti talking about "my friend's not-yet-so-completed websauna", I never doubted for a second that it's a project about a sauna controlled/maintained through a web app.
and a Finn girl working as a bartender said that a man in late twenties dressed in a suit, sober, said he cannot buy beer from foreigner, refused to pay, started pretending he doesn't understand what she's saying
I see it as a "good thing". These fuckwits have no doubt been racist to people in the past, and now they think they're in some sort of "majority" feel it's time to show their colours.
and then some spanish guy heard immedately after the election at his workplace that "now get the citizenship or go back to Spain. Don't understand why you got the job after all, because Spaniards are lazy"
and the more these assholes sense that they done fucked up with voting, the more they'll have to rationalize, an important part of which is being a dickhead towards everyone involved
since, you know, we didn't make the biggest mistake in UK's recent history, we did the right thing, fuck those foreigners
Was such an obvious thing to happen though. 5 years down the line, post deportations and people leaving, who do you blame when there's no Jonny Foreigners left to blame for your ills?
There'll literally be riots if it doesn't. The threat of violence was never far from the surface during the campaign and surfaced a few times, including fatally.
Well exactly. We're giving serious thought to leaving in any case. The atmosphere's been more febrile the last few years, and increasingly so. Not 100%, but seriously looking at it. So if anyone needs a remote worker... ;)
This year was the first of my life where we didn't automatically buy the cheapest line in Ikea. Felt like we'd arrived. Less so when we had to assemble it.