If you aren't getting your IP through DHCP you presumably aren't sending out DHCP requests at all, so it won't even try to change your hostname anymore anyway.
I suppose it'd be more fun if it wasn't just a case of looking at something, and thinking "oh that's the whatever problem, I can use whatever" - been there done that...
Apparently the best solutions to the problems in the GitHub sections can win free paid accounts, but there aren't any details about when that's judged or what the terms are.
Dragon's Breath is an exotic 12 gauge incendiary round. Dragon's Breath is primarily made up of magnesium pellets/shards. When the round is fired, sparks and flames can shoot out to about 100 ft. Dragons Breath is normally chambered in 12 gauge 2 3/4" shot shell. They are safe to fire out of an improved cylinder bore as well as a modified (tactical choke) barrel, commonly found on Remington 870 tactical, security and express model shotguns.
While its tactical uses are very limited, the visual effect it produces is impressive, similar to that of a short-ranged flamethrower. The rounds are...
just spent half an hour debugging why isinstance(some_instance_of_X, X) failed even though type(some_instance_of_X) and X had the same reprs (but were not equal for no obvious reason)
Ahh - strangely - I never know whether I feel better after having solved such debugging problems, or just more pissed off that it existed in the first place...
Well you could help by looking at my question and then maybe help me figure out the answer some guy posted... but it's a lot of stuff and i'd understand if you can't be bothered atm
guys if anyone feels like he's up for a challenge: stackoverflow.com/questions/16893219/… iv'e been struggling on this for more than a day now and some Asparagus would be quite banana... That emmanuel helped me but i cannot seem to adapt his answer into my current code which is based on read two files at a time with a "with" execution block...
Ok, i edited the examples. And i did write what the output is supposed to be like. And no you do not need to start parsing data for me, this is not an answer and it was not my question. Each file is consisted of many dictionaries that each take up one line. I don't know what pickle is, i'll check that out. My use case is not that complicated, i can explain it here if you like.
It is VERY important that you understand something. You are trying to accomplish "X" and to do that, you have thought of method "Y" but it is not working for you, so you come here and ask for help with method "Y" . However - what you should do is ask for help accomplishing the task "X" and saying that you have tried method "Y". Then we can either help you with "Y" or give you a solution "Z" that works better. But giving us only "Y" is not helpful.
Always consult [The Zen of Python](http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0020/jj): Beautiful is better than ugly. Explicit is better than implicit. Simple is better than complex. Complex is better than complicated. Flat is better than nested. Sparse is better than dense. Readability counts. Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules. Although practicality beats purity. Errors should never pass silently. Unless explicitly silenced. In the face of ambiguity, refuse the temptation to guess.
I need to compare two files which have the same ammount of frames but different ID's. What i need to eventually write out is the start and end frame of every ID that has a difference between both of the files
What do you mean "why" i am trying to find differences between two video files that are translated into CSV files... do you want me to write a prologue for the answer? it would get edited out....
Well, if i figure out how to get the output i eventually need, i might be able to edit the former code and "pass the data directly". And this format is sort of the best i could do. And no i havent heard of pickle but i will check it out.
Also, my eventual output has to be a written text file that will be opened by avisynth... so writing this data as a string and concatenating it to a few other things is more than logical in my opinion
Pickling and unpickling isn't really easier than writing repr output to a file and passing the file contents to eval, for data structures as basic as dicts of nested lists of integers.
I'm not fond of binary serialisation formats as a go-to solution. Python may not be the only language through which someone might be trying to read your output.
It's been a philosophical day for me. I've been trying to reconcile my feelings about my own work ethic. Usually I rationalize goofing off as, "programming is an art, and artists tend to have peaks and troughs of productivity"
But now I'm wondering if that line of thinking stands up to scrutiny.
If I sit and think for a few more weeks, I'm sure I'll come up with an elegant solution. But perhaps there's a solution that requires less thinking and more typing.
@Kevin Some people like to define programmers as people who write code. But that is not true, you do not just write the code, you have to conceive of it, and plan it, and go through the logic. It is an artistic field. Most of your time is spent thinking, not doing.
Everything is modular, and the circle of programming just constantly goes around and improves the old modules, and constantly increases the circle of modules as it goes around, until you have a group of very well functioning modules
My primary intrinsic motivation is to write beautiful solutions. But this doesn't always jive with my employer's motivation of "get a working product in a timely fashion"
well.... don't.. just realize that sometimes it is better to get something working in a BAD way, so that you can better to see how to do it in a GOOD way
the wright brothers didn't just sit in their garage for years and then suddenly come up with a plane that worked, they did trial and error.
Thomas Edison tried to invent the lightbulb like 600 times, and when asked he said "I didn't fail 600 times, I found 600 ways NOT to make a lightbulb"
Think of this very site many questions are about "I am trying to do X, but it is not working" and then there are people who answer, "do X this way" and "do X that way"... and eventually the "best" way is chosen.... with many working methods.. none of which are "bad" they just are not "the best"
Well, I have exhausted my motivational speeches for today.
Now to take these lessons, and propagate them downwards into my subconscious, and lizard hindbrain. So that the next time a problem comes around, I am not tempted to just stare at a wall until the best solution appears fully formed from the ether.