A sufficiently determined attacker can prevent the registered function from running. But then again, a sufficiently determined attacker can thermite your motherboard, so it's pretty hard to defend against them in general.
Or is it just "calling hashCode on a byte array will return the hash of the array's address rather than its contents" or something?
Or is it "we can't trust the user to maintain a good copy of the page on their machine"? Ok sure, but if they're doing something that clears out the cached copy, wouldn't that also clear out the ETag value?
It would be weird if they deleted one but not the other.
@MorganThrapp I'm thinking something like
import collections
a = [1, 2, 5, 6, 2, 3]
b = [6, 2, 3, 5, 1, 2]
c = collections.Counter(b)
result = []
for item in a:
if c[item] > 0:
result.append(item)
c[item] -= 1
print result
Not sure how to make that one line, if you're golfing.
I found the "program that outputs a picture like starry night under N bytes" problem funny. Turns out the solution is to just embed the picture in your code and have a little rendering stuff.
Figuring out which compression algorithm to embed alongside compressed data, in order to conserve as much space as possible, is itself a compression problem :-)
Interestingly this means that there must be at least one string where just printing the uncompressed literal is the shortest possible program to produce it.
Although which string that is, varies from language to language.
Speaking of jobs, is there a good place to find Python/JS contractors with flask + JS frontendy skills? Not sure where the cool kids advertise these days.
C++ is tough to pick up quickly. Not because it's that difficult per se, but because the language is soooo big. (To be fair, people usually restrict themselves to the saner portions.)
I feel like the problems you have in C++ are different from most other languages too. You're really forced to think about memory addresses a lot compared to say... Python.
Recently at a family get together my cousin-in-law very excitedly told me about his "sass" classes, and a confusing conversation ensued until 20 minutes later when we determined I was talking about SAAS and he was talking about SAS.
Ideally I would find something that pay slightly more than what I make now and is also fun. And has free beer. And I don't have to commute. And there are magical rainbows and unicorns.
My ideal job is to be owner of a tucked-away curio shop which sells what the buyer needs and not what they want, even if it isn't apparent at the time.
Ex. I persuade them to buy a tire jack even though their car is fine. The next day, they help a disabled motorist on the side of the road who turns out to be Richard Branson in disguise.
Branson gives them a ferrari as thanks and when they return to my shop to express gratitude, there is only an empty alley way, seemingly decades old.
I just get my business partner to enter the store as a customer and I sell them a couple gold bars for a dollar. Then they sell them elsewhere at market value and we split the profits.
Sorry to interrupt, but to solve my issue from earlier, I now tried to use the nquad parser from rdflib, but I'm getting this error message, does anyone have a clue what I could do? (docs: http://rdflib.readthedocs.org/en/stable/_modules/rdflib/plugins/parsers/nquads.html) >>> g.parse(data, format="nquads") Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Python33\lib\site-packages\rdflib-4.2.1-py3.3.egg\rdflib\plugins\parsers\nquads.py", line 64, in parse self.parseline() File "C:\Python33\lib\site-packages\rdflib-4.2.1-py3.3.egg\rdflib\plugins\parsers\nquads.py", line 85, in parseline
Based on my sample size of 3, you generally get paid better based on how impossible it is to get anything done, so it's helpful to learn enterprise languages.
user559633
So what about FP languages? No one actually gets anything done in those ;)
Last examn one of the solutions was - (answer sheet, solution too kmore than 4-pages with only equations solving):
This equation cannot be satisfied because there are no terms in the left hand side to match the x ^ 3 term in the right hand side. So there is no solution that satisfies the requirements.
He's a prof who stated at the start of course: "hello I'm your proffesor. I like research but sadly I have to educate at least 10% of my time, so here I am. Go to my TA's for questions I won't reply on any mails."
Small victory today. I was explaining to my manager that Create and Update should not be the same operation, and while he was nonplussed I caught a nearby coworker afterwards reading about CRUD in Wikipedia.
Now I just have to wait a couple years for that co-worker to get promoted to some decision-making role and the world will be a little better.
Hey guys, I noticed that len(str(None)) returns 4 That said, I'm iterating over a dictionary. I want to check that every value is not empty string or None
Is this good enough: for k,v in some_dict.items(): assert v is not None and len(str(v)) > 0
class Fred:
def __init__(self):
self.x = None
a = Fred()
b = Fred()
for q, (lambda x: a if x%2==0 else b)(q).x in enumerate(range(10)):
print(a.x, b.x)
The answer to "why is this allowed" is probably "because forbidding it would require more work", which is the justification for many language quirks that one normally never encounters.
We already have a perfectly good target_list grammar item, and making an extra identifiers_only_target_list for for-loop clauses would end up with a lot of code duplication in the parser.
I just read that as "The answer to "why is this allowed" is probably "because forbidding it would require more work", which is the justification for KevinScript"
@Ffisegydd "No, we don't want him to jump the gorge on a motorcycle. But we also don't want to build a fence around the whole thing. There's nothing valuable or irreplaceable down there, so, we're just going to let the problem solve itself."
If Django is anything like me, it can't get past the word 'schemamigration' without giggling, and it's dicking everything up. But I'm also an idiot, so...
"Can I affix this camera to a selfie stick?"
(Just kidding: nobody who has a selfie stick would ever use the word 'affix' in regular conversation.)
>>> pickle.loads(pickle.dumps(f))
TypeError: a class that defines __slots__ without defining __getstate__ cannot be pickled
>>> pickle.loads(pickle.dumps(f, -1))
<__main__.Foo object at 0x1129C770>
I think maybe that error message should be updated.
Selling big bundles of cards to a dealer/store will usually get you well below the sum of the market averages of each card. Selling cards individually on ebay or similar would net the most profit, but they'd have to be smart to avoid law enforcement monitoring for patterns of sales matching the theft.
There aren't that many The Tabernacle at Pendrell Vale s floating around the free market, don'cha know.
If the buyer knows they're hot (and they will probably be able to tell if the binders have the store's logo or if a list of the missing cards is made public) then they're going to get super gouged.