I had a fairly functional UndoableAndAlsoRedoableDict class that let you (un|re)do any setitem or delitem event. Then I thought "but what if the user wants to undo many events at once? I know, I'll let them add a "marker" event to the queue, and implement undo_to_last_marker and redo_to_next_marker functions". Now I am in fencepost error hell
when you undo to the last marker, should the history index point to the slot before the marker, or should it point at the marker? What if I want undo_to_last_marker to rewind to the very beginning of the event queue if it doesn't find any markers?
Well - I want you to tell me who had it before its 6th transmission. IS THAT SO HARD ?!?!?
;)
@MorganThrapp A little odd, maybe, for a Q/A pair. There's probably a dupe. If you replace the key tag with name, I'm sure it's been asked before. A user trying to drum up some rep, probably.
You tend to end up with a wildly underspecified question that is just a lead-in to the answer, or something that reads as an oddly-reorganised blog post
Recently I posted a question and answer that was marked as a duplicate by five users who clearly must not have read any answers to it. The question itself is unique. Nobody had previously asked how to use the SF font specifically. And it has a unique answer as well, if you actually read it.
In t...
In this episode of Legacy Code Disasters, our hero discovers that the error messages are hard coded and completely irrelevant as to what data is actually missing. (╥_╥)
Also, I wish I was kidding, but the error message is displayed when it fails to find the specified fee and instead of displaying what fee is ACTUALLY missing. It just displays the hard coded one that does in fact exist in the database.
@JRichardSnape FWIW, Folsom Prison Blues was derived from a then-recent hit, Crescent City Blues. I guess Folsom Prison was intended as a dark parody of Crescent City.
Theory: anyone asking a cipher question is automatically a bad person because anyone with rudimentary google skills can find a perfect working implementation instantly.
Chippy is also an artist that specializes in computer-generated imagery for Magic: The Gathering illustrations. They are highly mysterious and may be an AI.
Once I wanted to take a picture of the carpet in the hallway because one of the tiles was rotated 90 degrees with respect to the pattern of the rest of the floor, but my coworker advised against it
If carpet is classified, my monitor probably is too
Just enough clear desk for elbows. My 3D printing area was a bombsite this morning until someone tapped me on the shoulder and informed me that it was a fairly significant health risk
I've searched for the sorting, that's why I wrote "sorting", otherwise I would have used the word "ordering" (which in fact I have googled at first), cause it's more my natural vocabulary. I just didn't get the idea to use it like that. — bortran1 min ago
You didn't think to use sorted for sorting? You're right, that is confusing.
The bartender interjects. "I worked at Pixar, may I? Maybe if I add a little joie de vivre..." does so, then wireframe fades out of existence. "Pay the man"
@MorganThrapp I'd like to (vote to) close that as a dupe. But the question is so basic that it's hard to find a (dupe target) question that's sufficiently generic. :)
@MorganThrapp But all the sorted() examples I can find want something a little more complex than a plain sort - they tend to want fancy key functions. So they aren't really suitable. Really, the question is too basic for SO. It should be answered by reading the docs.
Not sure that makes sense as a CV reason, but if memory serves official position on Meta is not to get too hung up on what the reason is if it deserves to be CVd.
The client excuses himself to use the restroom. "No, not that door!" says IntrepidBrit as he reaches for the bulging doorknob. Too late! All of the junk he crammed in there comes spilling out, carrying the client into the hall in a comical wave of stuff.
When I try to open a key using winreg it says it can't find a file, but only for paths with a space in them. I've tried using r"" but that isn't changing anything
@KevinGuan: Sorry about my last comment: it's getting late. :) You weren't using list as a variable name. :oops: But your new code is better, since using l=[] is definitely preferred to doing l=list(): it's shorter & it saves a function call.
I know how you feel. Some of my early languages automatically declared variables whose names started with [I-N] integers (although you could override that with an explicit declaration), so that pattern is kinda ingrained for me.
The massive downvoting and the "put on hold as too broad" by 5 users clearly shows once more that the mechanisms, which were ment to make stackoverflow a solution oriented platform, are totally disfunctional in the way of keeping human emotion out of the process. It's a simple question that has a simple and distinct answer. Rage over something else, how about? — bortran28 mins ago
It's never been entirely clear whether we should up- and down-vote to bring the total score toward the score it "deserves", or whether each decision should be taken independently so the total score something has is basically a function of how many people see a question.
Just to be clear here: don't downvote just because everyone else is and you like big numbers. A question deserves the evaluation of each user who votes independently.
Believe it or not, I haven't actually down voted on that one. I think he's got more than enough downvotes. OTOH, I reserve my right to dv if he gets nasty.
Hey @Kevin, I had a quick question. I'm thinking about giving a talk at my local developer meetup, and I was wondering if I could use your lambda fizz-buzz in it. I'd give you credit and whatnot.
Straight assignment dump: stackoverflow.com/questions/32744240/… & the OP's not responding. I say we give the OP a couple more minutes and then CV. Sorry, the OP did respond. With a line of nonsense code.
Sometimes I wonder why people don't break down the stuff they don't understand into pieces and try to get help on the different parts. Then I wonder if that itself is a skill which takes practice and which beginners don't have.
@JoeKington The original context gives more detail and has a less-obfuscated version. Short answer: it's church encoding plus a gratuitous amount of copy/paste
@DSM It's definitely an important fundamental skill to programming. I think it's partly "instinctive ", but it can be improved with practice. And most newbies seem pretty bad at it.
Funny, the Collatz sequence fascinated me in my youth. I aspired to find a loop, but I didn't get my hopes up.
Nevertheless I found it to be a useful exercise for getting acquainted to the syntax of a new programming language. It's the first thing I'd try after "Hello, World!"
From reading the Wikipedia page I knew that there wouldn't be any very short cycles, so I mostly resorted to seeing if randint(1, INT_MAX) looped or not
When the analytical approach fails, try throwing a dart at the board.
Emergent complexity is very interesting to me. Collatz sequences, the Ulam Spiral, The Mandelbrot set, formulas for calculating Pi...
Sure. I tried expanding it to the Gaussian integers to look for patterns, since 2D patterns can be easier to see than 1D patterns, and because complex analysis can give great insights into problems that arise in the reals. But it didn't really help. :)
I think if I'd encountered more mathematically puzzles along these lines I would have enjoyed various math classes in undergrad a lot more... As it was, I just stumbled through the usual Calc1-X, lin alg, diff e, pde sequence without really getting very much out of it. ...And then I became a geologist and forgot anything I'd learned.
@Kevin Emergent complexity is what got me into doing stuff in Life. I really ought to get back into it, butit can suck up a huge amount of time. I'm not an expert on advanced Life theory, but I'm reasonably good at putting stuff together. I'm not a Life scientist - more an engineer. Or a plumber. :)
Well, you can just apply the usual "is it divisible by 2", but that's a little boring. 2 isn't a prime in the Gaussians: it can be factored into (1+i)(1-i), so the Gaussians of the form (±1±i) kinda take the place of 2 in the Gaussians.
But it's getting very late (again), and I should say "rhubarb"... So I will.
@DSM Reminds me a bit of the opening chapter of "Surely you're joking Mr Feynman", where he fixes his neighbor's radio by deducing what's wrong before opening the set.
If a child can impress an adult in this manner, then critical thinking skills must be pretty rare.
Do you mean fixing radios by thinking, or asking the same question as another student, or finding the lattice points that lie inside a circle of some radius?
There might even be a perverse incentive to write intentionally confusing questions, in order to filter the class size down to something more manageable for subsequent classes
Well my c/c++ teacher wrote really vague questions with little to no in-class discussion on the topic and graded harshly. Then we didnt even have him for the last month of class. Good times
The AV Club is worried that this will make quality uneven, as DW has a tendency to "backload" all the good stuff into the second half of multipart stories
Sometimes I like the exploration part (figuring out what's going on) more than the problem-solving side, which has a tendency to invoke the Rule of Cool more than it should.
Reminds me of the crossover episode where the three Doctors try to atomize a door by running a complex mathematical operation in their sonic screwdriver for centuries. Then it turns out the door isn't locked.
Sometimes the coolest solution is not the best solution.
I expect to see a lot of incredibly dire cliffhangers in the future.
So, Im quite new to python 3.5.0, recently Ive been working on a sleep calculator, however Ive encountered an issue, this is my code so far... its been annotated with tags/comments:
#sleep calculator, user enters there hours slept over a nicght and the program
#will work out different facts ab...