then I don't get why they asked me to do that... they said authentication was hard or something. Is there some sort of ephemeral container for data? Just need to acquire an auth token
That's using json.dumps(data, cls=CompactEncoder, indent=4, sort_keys=True)
So it honours the passed-in indent arg except for the inner-most nested lists or dicts, where it reverts to indent=None, it also adjusts the : and , separators, if necessary.
As an added bonus, it doesn't yam up if you try to use sort_keys=True on a dict that has mixed integer and string keys. :)
Hey guys, if I have a string'd JSON value I want to turn into valid JSON, but fails because some potential values have double quotes in them, what's the easiest way to target it and run the replace?
Here's some big band bebop from the incredible kids of the Sant Andreu Jazz Band: Hi-Fly by Randy Weston featuring Magalí Datzira on vocals and bass. The tone of her voice isn't great, but she certainly has great jazz feel.
@SterlingArcher I suspect they tried to do backslashing to escape the embedded quotes, but just didn't do it properly. So if possible, try to get them to fix it, rather than creating a nightmare parser to deal with it at your end.
So there's probably a way to write a regex that looks for something between quotes that come after a colon and come before a comma or a curly brace, but that still doesn't cover all cases. You just need to keep working out what the unique boundary is and hope that something that looks like it doesn't happen in the value.
But yeah, the good quotes should have a word boundary on one side or the other, and the bad quotes don't. So it may make it simpler to do it in 3 passes. On the first pass replace the good quotes with a char that doesn't occur in the document, then replace remaining quotes (which should be the bad quotes) with properly backslash escaped quotes, and then revert the good quotes.
I've heard good things about the online novel Worm but I couldn't slog through the chapters about high school bullying to get to the primary plot which is apparently "metahumans try to prevent the destruction of all universes". Talk about scope creep.
BTW, I wrote a SO Meta answer a few hours ago on the topic of newbies editing other people's answers to add newbie-friendly code comments to them. meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/327869/… Feel free to upvote, downvote, or ignore as you see fit. :)
Is there anyone here available to explain to me how process_request works in Scrapy? For example, what would have been the code solution to this stackoverflow.com/questions/16040311/…
@AndrasDeak If the derived answer adds value, I don't see a problem, as long as proper attribution is given to the original answer.
On a similar note, I occasionally write answers that generate timeit info for the code given in the existing answers. I don't expect to win points from such answers (although I do get them sometimes), I just do it to help readers see for themselves the speed differences between the algorithms. So even though the answer isn't directly answering the OP's question, it's still adding value to the page.
And it can stop the endless arguments that can occur in the comments when people debate the merits of their favourite algorithms without hard timing info. :)
A new user by the name of "jon snow" just posted a really bad question where they show they know very little about the thing they're asking about. I am beyond tempted to just comment "You know nothing" on their question.
It seems the router requires a special activation code that we haven't got. We're brainstorming ways to get it without being on hold for two hours with tech support
I have a python ordered dictionary where each keys value is a list. Im trying to remove duplicates in the values, how do i do that. a set inside a list would do the job?
If you look at the example, i have a dictionary. key is 345 and the value is an ordererd dict. Inside that there is a set which i wanna to convert to a list. I have n number of keys for which i want to do this
So you basically want to turn {'345': OrderedDict([('ADMNICU', {'N', 'Y'})])} into {'345': OrderedDict([('ADMNICU', ['Y', 'N'])])}. That doesn't sound too bad.
@Anonymous: it might help if you show what you're trying now and why it's not working. If you know how to loop over the key/value pairs of a dictionary, and you know how to turn a set into a list, and you know how to assign a new value to a dictionary, then that's all there is to it.
As a room owner on chat, you can move messages out of the room. To do this, we can click on the Room link in the sidebar and select Move Messages. This results in the following instructions:
Now on a Mac, Shift-click works fine for selecting an entire set of consecutive messages. However, Ctr...
Hi all, I have a quick question about matplotlib's subplot. If I create a list of subplot objects. and then make all the subplots share an x axis with one, do I have to plot the data in the chosen-to-share plot first before calling subplot.sharex = the-chosen-plot?