For you point: 'The main in @main is defined to run the decorated function if the file is run as a script, while the main in def main(): ... is the function to be run.' this is what i understood
The main in @main is defined points to this function def main(fn):
my question is, As you said, When python interpreter reaches the line, @main, It executes the def main(fn): which is imported from ucb, But how does this function def main(fn): from ucb is able to call def main(): which is yet to be interpreted by python interpreter?
First, Python creates the function object from def main(): .... However, it does not yet assign it to the main variable.
Then, Python looks up the current value of the main variable, and finds the main function from ucb.py.
It calls the main function from ucb.py with the function object from def main(): ... as an argument. The main function from ucb.py runs the function it received.
Finally, Python assigns the return value of ucb.py's main to the main variable. This return value is the main function you defined.
are you saying that, there are multiple pass done by python interpreter, and in first already python know the function object def main(): and in second pass variable main is named to object def main(fn):?
@overexchange: Not really. The whole problem you're experiencing is only slightly related to anything you're actually supposed to be learning in that lab.
@user2357112 am trying to understand this point: First, Python creates the function object from def main(): Is python creating function object [def main():] after entering into function [def main(fn):]?
First, the name main is bound to the imported function from ucb. Then that function is used to decorate a function called main in the current module, which rebinds the name main to the decorated function. Read the module from top to bottom, that's the order it will bind in at the top level.
It's the same with a decorator. The function you're defining is an argument to the decorator, and it has to be created before the decorator can be called.
@user2357112 For your point: 'The double use of the main name is awful.' I think the reason is to replace variable main binding from [def main(fn):] to [def main():](which ever function you define below @main)
if we define as [def abc():] instead of [def main():] below @main there would be two names pointing to two different function objects
@user2357112 For your point: "If you pass arguments to your script on the command line (like python -i your_script_name.py argument), the @main decorator will call the decorated function with the text of the command-line arguments as function arguments (like main('argument') )"
Does decorator @main or any other name @abc take care of passing command line arguments?
A decorator is just a function, it can do anything. In this case, yes the main decorator captures command line arguments and passes them to the decorated function.
Please consider trying to solve those basic problems, rather than understanding these details. You are asking questions that you don't seem equipped to understand. As you learn more by going through these lessons and others, you will be able to understand what is happening without asking us.
Here is my suggestion: research how to build apk files, research how to write python programs, and write a python program to build apk files. Your question is too broad. Demonstrate an actual problem and we can help.
@david in this example link , when second() is called explicitly, the pointer points to @first rather than def second()? Do you think it make sense to know this?
@Volatility yeah would be a lot better, but never mind.
@EricCartman please don't take what he said personally, you should know by now that this is 99% a welcoming room to be in (we can't help the occasional 1%). I hope this won't stop you joining us here.
And now I'm going to make some food, I'll take my laptop with me though so if it kicks off again or a mod turns up to sort things out I'll be around (might need to @ping me)
Worst comes to the worst I can Gallery mode the room and give people write access, a lá JS room.
Can anyone help me to convert a scanned image into a searchable image or a scanned pdf to a searchable pdf ? Is there a way to do so in python. I have been stuck in this situation since quite a while now. i have tried pdfocr application in ubuntu but no sucess.
Try this. This is working for me. You need to install the requests module first!
pip install requests
Then
import requests
r = requests.get("http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/07/19/cartels-suspected-as-high-caliber-gunfire-sends-border-patrol-scrambling-on-rio/")
print r.text
Urllib is hard ...
It seems that requests automatically sets a user agent
I bought some days ago a DOOGEE DG800 MTK6582 Kitkat Android (link) and I want to install the cyanogenmod. This mod doesn't support my device and I also can't root my smartphone, framaroot doesn't supports it too.
Now are you interesting :D
Can someone help me rooting my device and installing t...
@EricCartman draw a line under it now. If he does anything like it again then please report it to mods but I'd just suggest you don't engage with him at all.
@davidism I've pushed some commits in. Mainly template issues in chatroom etc but I've also added Cancel buttons to the update forms for both Canon and Wiki
Ideally I'd have liked to redirect to /canon/1 for example but wasn't sure how to do that if /canon/1 didn't exist (i.e. you cancel while creating for the first time). So I made them direct to /canon. And obviously same for wiki.
> The future is better than the past. Despite the crepehangers, romanticists, and anti-intellectuals, the world steadily grows better because the human mind, applying itself to environment, makes it better. With hands…with tools…with horse sense and science and engineering.
I really like when I work so hard on the solutions of lots of smaller problems at the same time, for a really long time, but after a while, all the small parts are building into one huge monolith -- which is just working
just as it should ;)
the most beautiful moments in life are these ones..