Sorry @Walle, I voted to reject that edit. The reason it's unclear is that OP clearly believes they have a tuple and even refers to their immutability, although what they have is a dict. Your edit may or may not conflict with what OP wants, because their question just doesn't make sense.
"Close Vote Please" - it's an invitation to people with enough rep to review the question, and vote to put it on hold if they agree. There's a browser plugin to assist with that.
Good luck. 18446744073709551615 is 2^64 bits, to store the sieve you need 2^60 bytes, which incidentally is 1048576 TiB. With current hard disk prices it will cost about 35 million dollars to store this data. — Antti HaapalaFeb 12 at 7:57
Sure. I mentioned in one of my comments on that question that I have a database here of all primes up to 3000000000. FWIW, I computed that database using C code I wrote on the Amiga 20 years ago. The database I built on the Amiga was quite a bit smaller; back in those days a 128MB hard drive was considered large. :)
Heh, and they failed to read my answer, so they repeated the mistake the OP made in their 'look, I edited mine to correct the mistake you told me about' edit.
My database is generated using a modified sieve, similar to this Python code. In fact, that Python script is so fast that it compares very well to the database extraction code. Even though the database stuff is written in C it's still time-consuming unpacking the prime data from the individual bits.
I am working on a small exercise.
There is a text file which has 3 columns: EmployeeID, First Name and
Last Name. Write a program to create dictionary whose keys() are the
EmployeeIDs in the text file and the values() are the first and last
names combined.
I tried first without loop....
The question also received a downvote, which was surprising given that the OP did clearly their best, provided all info asked for and linked to their research.
@PM2Ring the competing answer told the OP to use the file as a context manager (use with keyword, it makes the file IO safe:) and removed the loop altogether.
So I downvoted and left a comment. I got a downvote in return and found the other author had just lost 3 points from the rep they had when posting. Tsk tsk.
They then edited their answer to add the loop from the question, complete with the f.readline() still there.
Noob python question, I need to call a subclass's method in a base class and it's not getting to the subclass's module.
Basically I have a base class that implements foo and each subclass implements __foo - when I do self.__foo from the base class it calls the base class's __foo rather than the subclass's
@BenjaminGruenbaum Maybe I don't understand the question., but you can easily call a subclass's methods in the base class if you pass a subclass instance to the base class. But using the double-underscore prefix interferes with that, due to name mangling. Eg, try this:
class BaseClass(object):
def foo(self):
return 'Base foo'
def show_other(self, other):
return self.foo(), other.foo()
class SubClass(BaseClass):
def foo(self):
return 'Sub foo'
t = (BaseClass(), BaseClass(), SubClass())
for slf in t:
for other in t:
print slf.show_other(other)
Since there are no real django rooms I will ask here :D When I set blank=True in a model field and use a model form, do I have to say that it is not required once again?
@MarkR. Ah, I didn't notice that missing paren. :) Maybe you should also chuck in a link to the docs for time.strftime so the OP can see the table of format directives.
Sometimes I edit minor typos in answers myself, but I generally prefer to just drop a comment when the answer's still fresh, as it can be very annoying to have someone else edit your post when you're in the middle of fixing it.
I solved the below problem using nested while loops. Is there a way to solve the problem in a simple, Pythonic way?
Question:
Define a procedure that takes in a string of numbers from 1-9 and outputs a list with the following parameters:
Every number in the string should be inserted...
hate these kinds of questions "I have a problem that I cannot formulate in words, and I have some really complicated code for it and actually I do not know myself what it should do, but how to do it in a pythonic way"
In [38]: (3).capitalize()
ERROR: Internal Python error in the inspect module.
Below is the traceback from this internal error.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "c:\python34\lib\site-packages\IPython\core\interactiveshell.py", line 2883, in run_code
exec(code_obj, self.user_global_ns, self.user_ns)
File "<ipython-input-38-595c77ec7a2e>", line 1, in <module>
(3).capitalize()
AttributeError: 'int' object has no attribute 'capitalize'
>>> tokenize.tokenize(iter(['''3.capitalize()''']).next)
1,0-1,2: NUMBER '3.'
1,2-1,12: NAME 'capitalize'
1,12-1,13: OP '('
1,13-1,14: OP ')'
2,0-2,0: ENDMARKER ''
since there is no rule for "number followed by name" then it says "syntax error"
c.f.
>>> tokenize.tokenize(iter(['''(3).capitalize()''']).next)
1,0-1,1: OP '('
1,1-1,2: NUMBER '3'
1,2-1,3: OP ')'
1,3-1,4: OP '.'
1,4-1,14: NAME 'capitalize'
1,14-1,15: OP '('
1,15-1,16: OP ')'
2,0-2,0: ENDMARKER ''
... and on the related note, the tokenize function has the most idiotic interface of all
remnant of the time gone by when there were no generators
@Vader though if I were going to store strings in a list, I'd store them without the newlines included. Then if I needed to print with lines I'd use '\n'.join(my_list_of_strings).
@MartijnPieters is there any case when there is no __str__
ah indeed
because it is not in the class
@Vader consider this:
>>> class Foo():
... pass
...
>>> Foo.__str__
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: class Foo has no attribute '__str__'
@Vader it is because the Foo class itself does not have the __str__ method at all
Hey guys, I tried to give class based views a shot but unfortunately I make really slow progress. Is it worth trying to keep learning and practicing it or should I go with the more low level functions?