Is there anything in the Python standard library that will properly parse/unparse strings for using in shell commands? I'm looking for the python analog to perl's String::ShellQuote::shell_quote:
$ print String::ShellQuote::shell_quote("hello", "stack", "overflow's", "quite", "cool")
hello stack...
I'll always at least speed-read them. Sometimes I defer to greater knowledge - e.g. "Fizzy wants to close a Pandas question? Yeah, he'd know better than me ..."
No, I meant that I don't read questions that room regulars are asking to close in this chatroom. cv-pls tag doesn't seem to exist outside the chat system.
I've written a fairly extensive application using PHP and lately, I'm concerned that it might have become sentient. Just last night as I was about to run a build and the test suite, the socket server sent this message, which I caught in my browser's console:
No, don't - you know that's not go...
@AnttiHaapala I got Parent module '' not loaded, cannot perform relative import error. I've found the SO question, read it, but I still have a sense that I'm missing something important
"unfortunately, this module needs to be inside the package, and it also needs to be runnable as a script, sometimes. Any idea how I could achieve that?"
never run the scripts like that
run them as python -mmodulename
basically I disagree with about everything in ayas answer
so if you're up to writing a new ans then please do and I will +1
that is: Aya's answer is "You cannot shoot yourself in the foot because the gun has safety lever set to the safe position. Now, there are people who say that shooting yourself in the foot is an anti-pattern, but I disagree with them as I often find it useful to shoot whatever is left of my foot. Thus, follow these instructions: 1. set the safety lever to off position, 2. aim at your foot, 3. pull the trigger"
I might have already mentioned this, but when I first came to Chile, the border guards were very confused by my marmite (which looks exactly like honey to an X-ray machine).
when returning 1 time from Vietnam, my hand luggage was packed with coffee, which I think the Frankfurt am Main security guys mistook for plastic explosives...
re Python/Windows: 1) Windows is here, people use it, deal with it places sunglasses on. 2) As someone said the other day, putting Python on Windows will help Python a lot more than it will help Windows.
I mean don't get me wrong, Windows is a pain to develop on, I wish I could use OS X and I'm thankful that my PhD doesn't really require me to develop things (like use virtualenvs etc) because then you struggle to use the Christoph Gohlke's .exe releases.
I'm getting a weird bug on SO lately where I can't open the close box. It just says "You can only open the close box once every 3 seconds." Problem is I'm not sure it's a bug, or whether my PC is so incredibly slow and crap that it just times out in some way.
There exist irrational $x$ and $y$ such that $x^y$ is rational.
proof: if $\sqrt{2}^\sqrt{2}$ is rational we're done, otherwise we consider $(\sqrt{2}^\sqrt{2})^\sqrt{2}$, which evaluates to $2$.
edit: simpler to fit any audience, but somewhat related, the proof without words of the irrational...
In my office work, there is a JAVA function which has around 35 lines of validation of inputs (null, empty etc.. you name it, we got it there) and then a comparison which returns a boolean... Sigh...
with open(classno) as fin, open('class11.txt', 'w') as fout:
for line in (line for line in fin if line.rstrip()):
name, *nums = line.split()
print(max(nums, key=int), name, file=fout)
I believe I first read this in the mid/late 80s. Here what's I can recall:
It involved a boy and a girl - I believe 7-10 years old - I don't recall if they were friends or brother and sister
They were given a "stone" on a string necklace that enabled magic and protection of some sort from some ...
But I was talking about the fact that you can run any compiled Java on any future version of Java, a lack of which is the problem holding back Python 3
Can I list all unique values of a row in all columns in SQLAlchemy without going through each column and checking all value to extract the unique ones?
Is it possible at all to get the unique values without looping and appending them to a list and checking if it already exists in the list. That would take really long on a big database
anw, my point is that even with index, and knowing the cardinality etc, if there is only ['A', 'B', 'C'] in the list there and you know it then hardcode it :D
Can this program be written in less than 500 lines of code (including blank lines and documentation)? Perhaps my problem is that I'm generating AIs that are too simple.
in any case it is more like code review (though it ought to work)
@AnttiHaapala my nephew got quite annoyed that he couldn't win a game of tic-tac-toe against me... took a while to explain that really all games should be a draw...
Then we played some four-in-a-row - that didn't make him any happier either...
for GA it needs to be something that has game states that are slightly more expensive to evaluate than what could be done in 70s personal computers in 2 milliseconds.
Back in the late 1950s or early 1960s there was a Scientific American Mathematical Games column about a simple tic tac toe learning "machine" that a guy built. The machine consisted of a large set of matchboxes, each with a board diagram on the front and numbered tokens in the box representing moves. To select a move you locate the box representing the current board state & randomly remove a token. To teach the machine you don't replace tokens in later board states that lead to losses.