I'm mulling a question that I don't think is on topic for SO: essentially "Why was file() removed from Python 3?" Is that the kind of thing that would work at Programmers.SE, or somewhere else?
Yeah, that's the kind of answer I see when I google it. But dict() returns a dict, set() returns a set ... open() seems like the one that should have kicked the bucket to me.
since readability is a really important thing in python @ZeroPiraeus (the most important thing of all) if you look at this statement as a sentence: with opening the filename as a file -- makes sense, but with file-ing a file name as a file -- does not
maybe they prefer open over file because opening a file has a side effect (the file becomes open). A verb better conveys the idea that something has happened, compared to a noun.
@Kevin I was thinking a lot on this 'nested box' thing, and I figured out, that I have to do it that way with pyoneer, if I want to: 1) be more like python, 2) be more intuitive, 3) being an educational purpose language 4) don't loose any functionality that the textual version has..
It's one of those questions that either has a single canonical answer that can be sourced to an official doc, or can never be answered unless you kidnap and interrogate Guido Van Rossum.
@ZeroPiraeus OK, but in a textual code you don't have to look inside, since the scope is for example indented or on curly braces (depends on the language)
it makes a lot of things truly harder, to handle -- but makes sense in a way, that neither the loop nor the branching has nothing to do anything about what's going on inside it's scope
except the fact the number of times it runs: branch: 0/1 loop: 0/len(iterable)
Me neither (well, maybe before I knew better) ... but that's only because docs told me not to. For some reason I woke up this morning thinking "but whyyyy .."
@ZeroPiraeus sure thing, but that is newly added feature to texteditors not for the language itself! -- I only used them for reading pretty large XMLs (like a tmLanguage file)
@JonClements I was searching for the discussion about removing it (which I didn't find) and came up with a checkin where a unit test opens a file, calls type() on it, and has a comment "sneaky way to get the file() constructor". :)
Okay... anyway, from what I remember, file was the type, and was effectively replaced by the io module, the idea of open was that it would be a factory function, so it would be possible to just do open('http://www.google.com') or something, and have it translate to urllib2.urlopen or whatever... but I must have missed that if that happened.... (so in that case file is the wrong word...
I'd like to think I have a healthy imagination, but then I'd also like to think it'd make stuff up, that's a lot more entertaining than stuff about Python's IO
Maybe it's more a python-list question. Some people with long memories there ... although then if an answer is forthcoming, it'll be buried in a mailing list archive. SE has taught me that mailing lists are not good repositories of knowledge.
I'm developing a rather big GUI with Tkinter for my cocktail-robot and now I'm trying to disable the mouse for a few seconds, so that no click on the screen will cause any event.
The reason why I need to do this is that the programm crashes if there're to much incoming events. Because I'm using ...
@JonClements Quite possibly you need to track down when the python 2 docs started saying to never use it. By the py3k design time it may have been obvious to everyone. :)
The user's problem is essentially "occasionally, my program completely locks up for a few seconds. If the user clicks on the window during that time, then Windows will think it's not responding.". Instead of asking, "how do I make a more responsive application?", he asks, "how do I stop the user from clicking on the window?"
@Wooble well basically, the idea is I have data by month. I want to check which items show up ONLY in a specified month (ie, this month) and not anywhere else.
@Kevin take it something like: "Allocates size bytes of storage, suitably aligned to represent any object of that size, and returns a non-null pointer to the first byte of this block." would be much of a conversation continuer either then...
heya @JonClements I'm fine, well.. sort of.. realised yesterday night, that I have to change a LOT OF THINGS in pyoneer, to make it more like python and to have all the features the 'textual version' has..
@MartijnPieters you didn't answer me yesterday, or the day before yesterday, that are the PSF guys are working from home too? Or do they have an office?
Zope Corp hired several core Python devs, including Guido, in one go, because another company that tried to build a consultancy around them had failed to come up with a viable business.
According to the editing help:
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public static bool IsAwesome { get { ret...
and that's exactly my problem atm -- how to tell my compiler that the list comes from the outside should stay as an "above the scope" and transform the input of the append widget into this list
@Kevin yeah, well.. but in this case, I thought I have a good direction, and I achived something in the last 4 weeks... but now it turns out, I have to rewrite everything from zero...