Morgan's suggestion looks too poorly specified to me - it could hide the error of the 'outer' key not being there - but so would the others - it's just that it's not an error, so I wouldn't use exceptions here.
@corvid All of them. I prefer warriors/bruisers the best, so Butcher, Leoric, etc. I'm also partial to some Kharazim or Azmodan though. I also really, really love Murky :D
I want to make an android app that lets you use Twitch emotes in your text messages. I feel like I'd probably be violating some sort of copyright though lol.
I forget what it's called, but it's like a cellphone app or you can use pokemon's device they're coming out with. Anywho, it's like 'real life' pokemon
(7 ** 30) % 2 has to calculate out the full decimal form of 7**30 before doing mod 2 on it. pow(7, 30, 2) can do mod 2 on each successive operation, which greatly reduces processing requirements.
Ergh. Say you have two arrays. Each is 5 elements, but one is shifted x indexes. Eg, ['d', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e'] and ['c', 'd', 'e', 1, 2]. How could you extract the ones that are shifted in the second one?
>>> a = a[0] = [0]
>>> a
[[...]]
>>> b = b[0] = (0,)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: 'tuple' object does not support item assignment
I dug up my pre-BigCorp version, so I only need to add one entry
and possibly remove some detail from the Education section, now that I have proven myself to be an actually employable person and people no longer need to know my Humanities GPA or whatever
@QuestionC in Python you're always passing around a reference. A copy only happens when you make an actual copy. Immutable objects have no need for copy methods, because any "copy" can never change, so all copies would be redundant. Mutable objects allow for copies so that they can change independently of each other.
"Oh, cool. Write one for us. In C. On this whiteboard. No googling allowed, and yes, we'll ding you points if you can't remember whether it's memcpy or memcopy"
"What makes you a rockstar?". "Well I'm glad you asked:" Quickly point them to your git repo after you have conveniently performed this magic: github.com/avinassh/rockstar
I take no credit either. A friend was looking through my code and moaning
I couldn't be bothered with anything clever so I used a global
This is just for a statistics thing. Counting how often the code does certain things, in and out of threads. So as long as the incrementing part is thread safe, I guess if I just store a copy of the value in the class, the worst that could happen is the code will read an out of date value (out by a single increment).
import threading
class Count(threading.Queue):
def __init__(self):
self.put(0)
def increment(self):
val = self.get()
self.put(val+1)
return val
def get_value(self):
val = self.get()
self.put(val)
return val
def set_value(self, new_val):
self.get() # pull current value out
self.put(new_val)