> The function containing the yield keyword is a generator. When you call it, its formal parameters are bound to actual arguments, but its body isn't actually evaluated. Instead, a generator-iterator is returned. Each call to the generator-iterator's next() method performs another pass through the iterative algorithm. Each step's value is the value specified by the yield keyword.
> Think of yield as the generator-iterator version of return, indicating the boundary between each iteration of the algorithm. Each time you call next(), the generator code resumes from the statement following the yield.
What is the use of the yield keyword in Python? What does it do?
For example, I'm trying to understand this code (**):
def node._get_child_candidates(self, distance, min_dist, max_dist):
if self._leftchild and distance - max_dist < self._median:
yield self._leftchild
if self....
Where would I go for a javascript utility that will markup php/javascript in a more readable form (just colors I think) on my webpage (like SO or jsfiddle)
hrm, analogy > metaphor > simile perhaps. All similes are metaphors, all metaphors are analogies? But aren't analogies more of a logical comparison than an abstract comparison?
How To Steal The Space Shuttle: A Step-By-Step Guide Boeing proposes using gas clouds to bring down orbital debris Samsung Creates New File System F2FS For Linux, Good News For Android
Speaking of games, I really wonder WHY THE HELL there are still different release dates for different continents for a game that can be bought via steam.
Yeah, with never-ending life, you won't get anything done. The majority of us already don't do or achieve a particle of what we wish to do or achieve because of procrastination, and we essentially doubled our life-span
It'll take several generations before humanity can progress, both physically and emotionally, to match the current technology, and it's already blazing past us. That's really the human race - how fast we can catch up with our defiance of nature, before we destroy ourselves.
it's an old practice , mostly perpetuated by different marketing departments , because they assume that there will be +2% income , if they release game when yo have the most money
it assumes that gamers are 14 year old kids who get the "lunch money" when parents receive salary .. and especially kids, incapable of saving and watching gaming-news
and yes , censorship laws are extremely stupid too .. fueled by assumptions that countries are isolated and people are stupid
I just overheard the following at school.... "I want it so when the page loads there's tabs..." "Yeah that's what jQuery's for." "What's jQuery?" "jQuery's like a built-in library for doing stuff like that..."
hours later, tired and pissed off at the days events; the young Thomas Shields calls up his fellow schoolmate and asks him to meet him in the back lot behind the liquor store..... Thomas brings his shovel.
@tereško frontal lobe controls your morality, which actually begins to shut off when morality goes down. when that happens, you get more intelligent and begin to die younger, unless you keep good health.
if startup starts talking extensively about the patterns the use internally, it means that they actually have nothing real to show ... it's a sinking boat
This is how I checkout to see if a number is in a range (in between two other numbers):
var a = 10,
b = 30,
x = 15,
y = 35;
x < Math.max(a,b) && x > Math.min(a,b) // -> true
y < Math.max(a,b) && y > Math.min(a,b) // -> false
I have to do this math...
hey - I have a question - I have a div set to a certain height - like 150px with overflow set to hidden , another div is positioned relative under it, now when I change the top one to overflow visible the height of the div stays at 150px , but the contents go down another 150px , but the div under it does not automatically get pushed down since its relative
what can I change to make the bottom div move as the top contents gets changed dynamically
nah - didn't work , its weird if I inspect element in firebug after I change overflow in js , the size of the div doesn't actually change , it stays 150px , the contents just go outside of it - and that causes the other divs positioned around it to not know what to do since it didn't actually expand , and their still right under it
yea, that would ruin the whole idea though , I have tags kinda like SO , and I only want 150px worth to be shown , then "show more" to be visible if the contents exceed the 150px height ,
but since they are variable size , it is impossible to tell if they exceed the 150px div unless a parent is set to 150px and then check if the child exceeds that
default as a value will throw a validation error. I couldn't remember what it was and I know the css engine will default to the default if the improper value is entered.