In my code it only prints the object is destroyed.. I don't need it for cleanup, just to make sure I destroy my object, and it is garbage collected. But for now I'm resolving references problem, that's why it doesn't get destroyed, probably.
I'm trying to get it working, I have a function that calls the class that should be destroyed , it's actually Tornado PeriodicCallback that points to a function in class, so I think that's the problem
honestly, it might just be me, but anytime I get called "techie" (after checking to see if I'm wearing my Spock shirt and simply misheard) it seems like a derogatory
got 10 A*'s and an E at GCSE... was supposed to do Maths, Further Maths, Physics, Chemistry, and a Business Studies AS at A level, but decided to just get a job and see how it went :)
and "techie" I've only encountered in industry (not yet in academia) in statements like, the last one I heard for instance, "I am not a techie, I spend my time on more important matters"
I think the professional programming industry is lucky as in that it's one where mostly most of the people that can do the job, will happily take criticism and can discuss/debates (admittedly - I know I've got into some heated debates) - but at the same time - see all sides, and analyse - rather than take anything personally etc...
my kids love Doctor Who cause Matt Smith was approachable or lovable or just wacky enough for them to start watching - this reminds me of watching my first episode with my Dad where Tom Baker threatened Leela with a banana and how this show became "our thing" - so its a sentimental thing
wait until school starts and I'll have BeautifulSoap scrapping both SO and Mathematics repeatedly looking for cheaters with multiple tabs and me just watching ;).....actually, this is true
I like those a lot, "Next Stop everything" is another favorite of mine
and yes, it is known by all three of those names which I also find very Doctor-ish
user559633
3:43 AM
@JonClements :) figured that while he was convinced playing with del was a good idea, might as well read about weakref
Given the extent of the racism and bigotry that's been seen in the last couple of days, here's hoping. (Also: NI isn't part of Great Britain, it's part of the UK. ;) )
@DeltaWeb Doing calendar calculations "by hand" can be a good learning exercise, but there is certainly a simpler way to print a sequence of dates in Python. As Andras mentioned, look at the datetime module, in particular the timedelta class and the date or datetime class. Personally, I'd probably create a generator function that takes the starting date as an argument. But if you're not comfortable with generators you can easily do it with a simple while or for loop.
@khajvah That sounds like a recipe for disaster. I'd keep all the timestamps in UTC, and store timezone data with each record (or wherever) if you need to handle multiple timezones.
Here's a sundial I did in POV-Ray several years ago. i2.photobucket.com/albums/y43/PM2Ring/SundialM1S90.jpg You feed the POV-Ray script the latitude, longitude and current date & time, and it builds the sundial for that location, and puts the Sun in the right celestial latitude & longitude so that the shadows are correct.
The shadows are a bit sharp though, because my Sun is a point source. It should really have an angular size of roughly half a degree. But I figured that sharp shadows make it easier to tell the time. :)
One of these days someone will explain to me why using screenshots for stack traces is a good idea, and I will refuse to believe them like a good Bayesian because my prior is literally 0.
@Technolohic27 Good for you, but what's your question?
We can't read minds here.
And even if we could read minds, we wouldn't use it to help you be lazy and rude by not posting a proper question, instead we'd have used it to short the pound.
Person having one answer on a slightly off-topic question on a tag wants to explain me (gold badge) when it’s appropriate to leave another irrelevant tag on questions.
Arguing that OP likely added that tag on purpose (because we all know that OPs always know what tags to use…)
I typed this in python url= 'http://www.magicmillions.com.au/' g.extract(url).title But I get the following error: IndexError: list index out of range Why is this the case?
And it may be your first time using chat, but you've spoken to other human beings before now I assume? Treat us as you'd expect to be treated yourself, with respect.
@Technolohic27 well without a definition of the Goose class - which looks like it comes from a third-party library - that doesn't help at all, does it?
Please read the website and you'll see, but in short, we should be able to copy+paste your code and see the exact issue you're having. We don't know what Goose is for a start.
And PLEASE don't just paste the whole program here :-)
The issue is that there are many things that might be wrong with your program. By isolating the cause of the issue you remove spurious and/or confusing extraneous detail and allow focus on the real problem. It's another programming skill
@Ffisegydd valid UK address plus a valid email address. But clearly they are also logging geoip info, as they are invalidating a number of fake votes where geoip info clearly shows that multiple registrations to the same address are coming from very different locations.
@poke So there's two really interesting things, one of which is that the Scottish parliament (technically) needs to ratify the withdrawal of Scotland from the areas that are devolved and subject to EU law - the Sewel convention says Westminster can't/shouldn't interfere with those areas.
I know right, in what world do we live in, that May is the Least Worst Choice right now?
I'd take just about any of them over BoJo though, he's a dangerous, dangerous flip floppy specimen of a human being. Will do literally anything that will advance the cause of Johnson.
@Withnail with respect to Sewel, I thought it was literally only devolved powers, and nothing to do with the EU. I thought the best the SNP could do is withold consent, not "veto"
@Ffisegydd I honestly don't know about about in inner mechanisms of the Labour party to have a hope in hell of predicting it. But even though I'd never vote for Corbyn-led Labour, I hope he wins the scuffle
Yeah, that latter bit's right. So the problem is that many of the devolved issues are Scottish implementations of EU law, right? So under Sewel, the UK government can't (again, technically ) interfere with the application of EU law on devolved issues; the counterargument, is of course that the EU treaty operates at UK state and inter-state level, so overrides domestic convention, and is a reserved power.
@Ffisegydd He'll lose it, probably by a lot. It has no consequence per the rules, and he seems very firm on not resigning, so their next step has to be to put a challenger forward. Legal action over interpretation of the rules re: whether Corbyn can automatically stand looks likely.
@Ffisegydd The farce that this has descended into will obviously have some effect, but the membership has doubled since he became leader, and most of those will have been Corbyn supporters.
@ZeroPiraeus Or Tories who think that Corbyn will guarantee a Labour loss and so join to be able to vote for him, though I suppose you could count them as "supporters" in a sense :P
@IntrepidBrit question for you: were there to be a Labour Party by the time the next GE rolls around, would you support an electoral pact between Labour & the Lib Dems (maybe with Plaid and the Greens too) to run the best-placed non-Tory? Do you think other Lib Dems would? Seems to me an enormous win from where you guys are right now, and the way things are going I can imagine Labour going for it too.
(excluding the SNP from this because why would they?)
I expect a deal on PR and Devo Max would be in there.
There's a considerably higher chance the conservatives will lose the next election because they're haemorrhaging support to UKIP in traditional tory areas, at a faster rate than Labour are. So it'd make sense.
@ZeroPiraeus It's a good and difficult question. By far, my biggest problem with Corbyn is that he would NEVER press the red nuclear button, therefore completely invalidating our nuclear deterrent. 10 years ago, I wouldn't have cared that much. Then Georgia and Ukraine happened...
"Nuclear deterrence is a far less persuasive strategic response to a world of potential regional nuclear arms races and nuclear terrorism than it was to the cold war"
I can see the argument (although it seems we disagree on nukes being any use in the first place). You'd likely get a Lib Dem Foreign Secretary, of course. Menzies Campbell springs to mind.
Yep Antii. A pity no other nation has reduced their nuclear capabilities to match our disarmament. We got rid of all our air delivery "first-strike" capabilities years ago. So I'll seriously consider disarmament when other countries decide to catch up.
That includes our allies as well as our enemies.
I thought it was the PM who wrote the letters of authorisation to be places in the subs, and nobody else
But one thing I REALLY like about Corbyn is the fact he actively wants to talk to our enemies. Keeps diplomacy back in the toolbox. I know the media likes to paint him as a traitor-kisser
As far as I know, no ex-PM has ever revealed what they actually wrote in those letters. I like to think that, when it came down to it, they were unprepared to commit to megadeath. Thatcher excluded, obviously.
> Although the final orders of the Prime Minister are at his or her discretion, and no fixed options exist, according to the December 2008 BBC Radio 4 documentary The Human Button there were four known options: retaliating with nuclear weapons, not retaliating with nuclear weapons, the submarine commander uses his own judgement, or the submarine commander places himself under United States or Australian command if possible.
> At the end of the Cold War the U.S. Fail Safe Commission recommended installing devices to prevent rogue commanders persuading their crews to launch unauthorised nuclear attacks.
> "the chief of the defence staff, if he really did think the prime minister had gone mad, would make quite sure that that order was not obeyed... You have to remember that actually prime ministers give direction, they tell the chief of the defence staff what they want, but it's not prime ministers who actually tell a sailor to press a button in the middle of the Atlantic. The armed forces are loyal, and we live in a democracy, but actually their ultimate authority is the Queen.
I have lines ending with windows line breaks (visualized by ^M in vim). When I yank and paste those, that line break disappears and appears to get normalized to unix line breaks. Is there any way to turn this off?
On Windows it’s apparently Ctrl+Q Ctrl+M but that just produces a line break (no idea which kind), but not a ^M control code appearing at the end of the line
I'm trying to write a golfing library for postscript. But it needs to be condensed itself. So I need a convenient way to type-in arbitrary bytes within mostly ascii text.
I know this can easily be done with absolutely any programming language, but can I do it in vi? (:help octal was no help).