Hi @Kevin: I saw a confusing unclear Tkinter question yesterday. I has about to post a comment requesting clarification, suspecting some horrible XY problem. But then someone posted a crappy answer which the OP accepted. I didn't know whether to scream or cry. :)
Without an IntVar, there's no way (AFAIK) to get the state of the checkbutton. I wonder how long it will take until OP thinks "Ok, now how do I actually get the value of alpha_check?"
I finally finished my script that compresses data using Huffman coding.
problem is, I have a dictionary file containing the pickled huffman tree, and it's bigger than my compressed and uncompressed data. what do?
TBH, I thought it weird that Tkinter accepted variable = boxticks after boxticks was turned into an int. I thought the variable arg had to be a Tkinter IntVar, StrVar, etc.
@GLaDOS approximately how big is your uncompressed data? For something in the ~100 byte range, I wouldn't be too surprised if the setup for huffman coding might actually exceed the size of the thing it's encoding.
Alternatively, wild guess: when you encode the file, the resulting output is a string that looks like "010100011000...", which is inefficient because you're using eight bits per character when you could be using one bit.
@GLaDOS Well, that's the downside of Huffman: you need to store the Huffman table. But the usual approach is not to store it as a pickled Python object. :)
Perhaps it would be worthwhile to write your own serialization algorithm for the table. You can take some shortcuts that pickle can't, because you know e.g. that all keys+values are strings, that all keys are one character long, etc etc
Is there a way to get all phone numbers from a page I could use regex but matching phone numbers of all format would be almost impossible since it varies from country to country or am I wrong
@GLaDOS Are you directly pickling the tree? You don't necessarily need the entire node structure - you can just take all the leaf nodes and build a simple dictionary out of it
I've just caught myself writing this line of code (if type(self.next_mode) == type(self)) to check if we've actually changed class. I know it's not particularly pythonic, pondering a better way to do it
@VigneshKalai you used to get Skype thinking that things like ISBNs were phone numbers, because they're very similar
@VigneshKalai you do get a rel="tel" (all of that may be wrong) indicator that a field is a telephone number, but that's obviously only if the person making the page added that
Is there a term referring to the grief one feels when he understand he might need to refactor a major part of his code and it's going to take a while when thought he was nearly done?
I have a feeling it has something to do with castling or en passant or trifold repetition or the fifty move rule or some other goofy thing I never think about
@GLaDOS Man I've been there. Often on the night the thing needing refactoring is due.
@GLaDOS You don't need to pickle the Python dict holding your tree, you just need to save enough data for the decoder to be able to reconstruct that tree. Also, there are various ways to reduce the space needed for the Huffman table.
OTOH, if you're using Huffman to compress anything larger than a few kB the table size is not worth worrying about too much. But if you do want to make it as small as possible, you should have a look at Canonical Huffman code
No, you must do game swap. Replace the board with Stratego, where check doesn't exist and the colors are red and blue. Tadaa! Now white can't checkmate.
@GLaDOS: If you don't want to use one of the techniques given on the canonical Huffman page, why not use this one from the main Huffman page:
"[...] simply prepend the Huffman tree, bit by bit, to the output stream. For example, assuming that the value of 0 represents a parent node and 1 a leaf node, whenever the latter is encountered the tree building routine simply reads the next 8 bits to determine the character value of that particular leaf. The process continues recursively until the last leaf node is reached"
That shouldn't be too hard to implement, since you (presumably) have functions that can manipulate lists of bytes bit by bit.
I wonder if there's ever a justifiable circumstance to have a statement of multiple assignment that works if evaluation is left-to-right, but would fail if evaluation was right-to-left. ex. a = a[0] = [1]
Yes but it has the "no true scotsman" problem when you really deconstruct the assertion.
"What if you're so lazy that you never do anything ever?" "That's not true laziness. That's sloth". Ok, got it. So good laziness is laziness, and bad laziness isn't laziness.
FWIW, if you keep your code as modular as possible then refactoring part of it isn't so bad. In a modular design, each part of the program hides its internal details from the other parts. So if you need to change the internal design of one part it doesn't affect the other parts.
"Laziness The quality that makes you go to great effort to reduce overall energy expenditure. It makes you write labor-saving programs that other people will find useful, and document what you wrote so you don't have to answer so many questions about it. Hence, the first great virtue of a programmer."
And you're the guy who is writing his own language and did some weird lambda stuff I still can't even work out with your code right in front of me, so I'm not sure I'd know you're lazy, even in the non-Larry sense
("But you haven't made any commits to KevinScript for seven months", says the small voice of doubt. Quiet, you. Just because I haven't typed anything out doesn't mean I'm not working on it.)
Hmm, I just gave an OP 1.5 answers to the two questions in his post. I expect I'm about to get a "but what about..." comment and no points. grumble, I'm already giving 150%...
if you take a lot of humorous slogans, take the grains of truth out of them all, grind them into a fine powder, add water and insert into an oven. do you get a bread of truth?
This project has an "expression builder" that we use instead of writing raw SQL expressions. I need to find all rows whose short_code value is case-insensitive-equal to a given string. But the expression builder has no tolower component or anything similar.
@Kevin I see a problem with your answers to that Tkinter question: you don't call the .grid() method of direction_status_frame and you don't put the radio buttons into that frame. And that's why the frame border's not showing up.
So I parsed an xml tree using the elementtree library but I can't reference this tag directly: <TimeCreated SystemTime="2015-09-18T20:53:11.557089200Z"/>
You can read about it: stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/access-review-queues and you should have a little brown button with a number in it, up on the status bar to the left of your badges. That tells you how many posts are available for you to review.
@Katherina It could. :) You can pick up points for editing stuff, and collect a few badges. Feel free to skip stuff if you don't know what to do, or you're otherwise not interested in handling. I should warn you that there are occasional "audit" questions thrown in to the queues to make sure you're not mindlessly approving crap.
Unfortunately, the audit questions are selected automatically and occasionally they aren't appropriate. That is, it says you failed the audit even though you chose an appropriate action. But when that happens you complain on SO Meta & the mods will fix it.
The nuclear launch codes held by the President of the United States are secured by an unbreakable system: a plain brown envelope with a picture of Bruce Schneier on the flap.
As I may have mentioned before, I don't feel comfortable voting on questions that I don't understand, unless they're obviously bad. But what's obvious to you may not be obvious to those of us who don't know anything about Flask.
I agree the GoDaddy Q should be closed, but what's an appropriate closereason? It's not really a resource request. What do we usually use for questions that should be directed to some company's support desk? IIRC, Fizzy uses a custom close for LinkIn support questions...
@davidism: I've now written two flask apps and we have an RFP reply going out next week which would involve me writing a third, so your teaching has been useful at least for me. :-)
I'm reluctant to click on any reddit link, but if you're saying there are lots of LPTHW fans on Reddit, would it be too condescending to say I'm not surprised?
so... quick question... if you guys aren't fans of LPTHW (and the lack of Python 3 guidance does seem like a big issue), what would you recommend instead? Cuz I was just about to go start reading it :)
Honestly, I would have gotten us to clean up that page before submitting it. Right now it's just a dump of complaints with no organization or explanation.
Which is why we've had disagreements before on whether you say "an historical" or "a historical", because we disagree about whether you pronounce the h or not..
"an" goes before words that start with a vowel sound, and "user" starts with a "Y" sound even though it's spelled with a "U", and "Y" is a consonant in this case even though it's sometimes a vowel. Let's all bask in the perfect rationality of the English language.
I am trying to have the text grow with the size of the window which is inside a label in Kivy. But i also do not want the text grow outside the bounds of the box , say when the text is change to a longer phrase. I tried binding the texture_size to the label size then the text_size to the texture size but the text does not grow when i maximize the window
when i binded font_size to texture size the size of the text increase but beyond the label and when i maximized it did not grow any larger
@thefourtheye: it's rare, but not impossible. Say you had two icons, each labelled "foxes". You could refer to the "fox icons" (meaning the icons which were related to a fox), but you could also say "the foxes icons", where it's implicitly "the 'Foxes' icons". Again, it's rare, but not unheard of. (There are better examples, this was just the first one that came to mind).
"We are the group that meets to decide which features will be in the language. We are the features group. There are many features groups like us, but we are better than all of them"
Reminds me of the comic that illustrates the difference between the sentences "At the party I met the hookers, JFK, and Stalin" and "At the party I met the hookers, JFK and Stalin"