> U GUYS R SUCH SCRUBS U STUPID MEMBERS OF STACK OVERFLOW!!! DELETING MY COMMENTS LIKE WTF!!!! WHERE DID ALL THE RESPECT GO?!?!?!?! I WILL HAVE TO LET U KNOW THAT I AM THE BEST PROGRAMMER EVER TO LIVE ON THE FACE OF EARTH!!! I WAS MERELY TESTING U PEOPLE CUZ I THOUGHT EVERYONE LOST THEIR MINDS!!! HOW DARE U PEOPLE DISRESPECT ME LIKE THIS?!?!?!?!? U GUYS DONT DESERVE RESPECT FROM A HOBO LIVING ON THE STREETS OF CHICAGO!!!
Well, if there's one thing we've established beyond doubt, it's that Polly Programmer will respond to any answer you post in a mature and rational fashion …
@paul23 When code is that bad the OP clearly needs more help than what SO can supply. And with an attitude like that who'd want to help them. I guess a rep-farmer might respond with a code dump, but they're unlikely to explain the actual problems with the original code.
I was idly mulling the idea of a "too easy" / "too hard" parallel voting mechanism for SO the other day - no effect on rep, but could be used to filter a question feed toward those who'd find it the appropriate level of interest/challenge.
Idea being that SO is clearly never going to be able to end the "flood of crap" problem, but might be able to direct the flood a little better. Nothing that radical is ever going to happen, I know, but I amused myself for a while considering how you'd do it.
@ZeroPiraeus I originally thought that the Triage queue was going to tackle that, but I spent about half an hour working the queue and ran away screaming. ;)
I haven't touched Triage in a long time ... when I last did, the categories were horrendously ill-defined.
SO does seem to have a recurring habit of half-assing something then getting bored (or, in the case of Docs, quarter-assing it and then stubbornly refusing to put it out of its misery).
Actually I suppose they have put a lot of work into Docs. I retract "quarter-assing" in favour of "wrong-assing".
Regarding Polly: there's a long-time troll in JS (java?) posting weird code with weirder alleged errors. I wouldn't be surprised if this was a similar troll or even a new one looking for new hunting grounds.
I was so tempted to post a pithy comment to Polly, but I realised that that would just be giving them attention, so I decided that the best course was to close-vote, flag the comment, and move on.
@SohaibAsif You could do that with a simple regex, but since the start and end portions of the source string have fixed length it's pretty easy to extract the desired field using string slicing.
Fair point. After all, SO didn't exist when I learned to program. For that matter the Web or personal computers didn't exist when I learned to program. :) OTOH, it's silly to ignore a useful resource like SO when it's only a click or two away.
anyways, I think I am quitting my job. There is a big inconsistency in my country. I work for a company which employs cheap locals but sells the product worldwide(mainly in US). I figured, the expected value is higher(in my country at least) when selling something on your own than working for somebody else.
Andras Deak, your comment made me laugh - thanks for ruining a perfectly good cup of coffee.
can someone suggest any good books/article/etc (better yet: online pdf) that deal with how to implement "multiplayer" functionality via the internet? e.g. a chess game that will listen until the other player sends information about the move he made?
I remember reading a blog which discussed network operations in detail, mostly in the context of real-time multiplayer games. Can't find it now, though.
I clearly recall that it had illustrations of a cartoon rabbit representing the author.
true story. When the two dollar coin was first introduced, there was a defect where the inner gold coloured piece would pop out. So, people in high school were selling them at premium dollar
> A failure in the bimetallic locking mechanism in the first batch of toonies caused some coins to separate if struck hard or frozen. Despite media reports of defective toonies, the RCM responded that the odds of a toonie falling apart were about one in 60 million.
cbg! I'm writing a CSV file, code is: `writer.writerow({'a': x, 'b': y, 'c': p[x,y], 'd': q[x,y]})` Now, p and q are dicts, which may or may not have value for key [x,y]. How to catch KeyError at specific parts? Like which one failed, p or q?
Alternate syntax if you're not averse to LBYL-style design:
d = {'a': x, 'b': y}
if (x,y) not in p:
print("Oops, p doesn't have that key")
elif (x,y) not in q:
print("Oops, q doesn't have that key")
else:
writer.writerow({'a': x, 'b': y, 'c': p[x,y], 'd': q[x,y]})
"Look Before You Leap". It exists in opposition to "easier to ask forgiveness than permission". The official docs speak more favorably of the latter to some extent
So, all by my own, when I was optimizing my code yesterday, I changed my all try-except blocks to if-else, now it doesn't seem like a smart decision lol
Or, actually, IIRC a KeyError being raised is slower than checking for the presence of the key. It's only really faster when the key is actually there and so no exception occurs. So EAFP is faster on average only if you're getting a lot more hits than misses.
I'm writing a test case now, for the sake of curiosity.
import timeit
d = {x: x for x in range(4)}
def f():
for i in range(5):
if i in d:
pass
def g():
for i in range(5):
try:
d[i]
except KeyError:
pass
print timeit.timeit("f()", setup="from __main__ import f, d", number=10000)
print timeit.timeit("g()", setup="from __main__ import g, d", number=10000)
#result:
#0.0267029911955
#0.0717262183666
So basically this simulates accessing a dict using a key which isn't in the dict 1/5th of the time. LBYL appears to be about 2-3 times faster than EAFP here.
I'm not 100% convinced that there isn't some wacky peephole optimization occurring in one of the functions, and which wouldn't occur in actual real code that doesn't just pass in the conditional blocks, but I'm not going to investigate further because I like it when an experiment validates my preconceptions even if the experiment isn't very sound.
As a workaround, you can move yourself to the left to create the illusion that the room is moving to the right. As a side-effect, the potted plants will also move, along with the rest of your observable universe, but there's nothing we can do about that right now.
The concept never got its own novel, but on second thought, maybe one of the books revolving around the newspaper or postal system mentioned it offhand.
I don't think there's an emoticon ref in Discworld, but I think icons get mentioned in reference to Vimes's dis-organisers. And there are control icons on the terracotta warriors in Interesting Times that were inspired by the icons in Lemmings.
@MartijnPieters: I didn't upvote it.. (which I was also tempted to do, admittedly, but I was able to restrain myself.) Unless you officially put on your diamond hat to order otherwise, I'm going to respectfully decline your request that only you mods should get to savour such choice morsels. #chicagohobo4life
":-)" is only significantly different from a drawing of a smile when "a colon followed by a hypen followed by a right parenthesis" has some kind of internal representation that's different than "two dots followed by a line followed by a curve"
@DSM I'm not putting on a diamond hat on this yet. But as soon as we see any kind of attempts to solicit reactions from chat channels, then please do put a lid on troll feeding. :-)
@Withnail There's also The Annotated Pratchett File, which was started before the Web existed, when PTerry was active on Usenet. I like to refer to it when I'm re-reading the books.
@MartijnPieters: You 1%ers are always about preserving your special privileges and saying it's in everyone's interest. Rest assured I have a youtube link entitled "I'm being repressed!" at the ready.