I always struggle to explain a downvote on a post like this. I'm inclined to think that the downvote is not to signal that the post isn't helpful, not when 84 others did think it helpful enough to upvote.
I'm trying to implement the Maybe monad in python.
However what I also want is some kind of a chaining ability.
So I have a class:
class Maybe:
def __init__(self, val):
self.val = val
def do(self, func): # Bind function
if self.val is None:
return None
...
"In communications and information processing, code is system of rules to convert information—such as a letter, word, sound, image, or gesture—into another, sometimes shortened or secret, form or representation for communication through a channel or storage in a medium."
to make something to conform into a code is called encoding
I guess I should qualify my last statement by saying that there isn't one objectively correct way to "get the hex of" a string. To be more precise, the concatenation of the hexadecimal representations of the ordinal values of each character in "Hello", assuming regular ANSI encoding, is 48656C6C6F.
@Vader Ok. Now we're getting somewhere. :) The a630 is the hex codes of 2 bytes. In Python you could write it like '\xa6\x30`. We use hex codes to represent binary files because only a subset of all 256 possible byte values are printable (and printable in a consistent way on all systems). Does that make sense?
I remember trying to do something similar with .wav files. Turns out, you need to do fourier transforms and stuff on the data to get the frequency values that Beep would expect.
I should probably flag more, but only flag stuff as I see it, rather than go out of my way to find it... don't think 924 is very good for someone that's been around for nearly 3 years :(
Umm.... in 2.7 is it better to have from StringIO import StringIO or from io import StringIO... I can't think of a huge advantage to the former... (just going through someone's code)
@JonClements I'd say import from io to avoid possible unicode confusion issues. From the StringIO module docs: The StringIO object can accept either Unicode or 8-bit strings, but mixing the two may take some care. If both are used, 8-bit strings that cannot be interpreted as 7-bit ASCII (that use the 8th bit) will cause a UnicodeError to be raised when getvalue() is called.
I haven't tried, since I don't ask how to succeed, I can use logstash, ask for the app devs to put the info in the headers, or in the request args... Trying isn't helping, everything would work, I want to know what is the proper way to do it — Remi Delassus2 mins ago
> Exceptions to the grace period are permitted, including: typos, duplicates (or asking for dupe targets, spam, offensive posts, resource requests. These are permitted to be used for cv-pls at any point, due to their nature.
@puredevotion the question I linked to? There is a list of things that are explicitly off-topic. Asking for a 3rd party resource (library, tutorial, etc.) is such a topic that is not on-topic here.
@Kevin I must say that finding a 3d lib for C++ can be daunting task. I was once looking for a good lib to use for a virtual-desktop environment using oculus. Took me hours to figure out which would be good suited.
I think the C++ philosophy is "our standard libs should work even on computers that don't have monitors" so it wouldn't make sense to have a standard graphics library
I would like to know how to make it possible for a python server to wait for messages from 2 clients without any pre-assumption as to who would be messaging first. Can I do something like--
message=client.recv(BUFSIZ) or targetsoc.recv(BUFSIZ)
Can I try something like this where both targetsoc an...
Was thinking of doing "needs minimal code sample" but he's asking "how do I implement this new thing" rather than "why isn't my current implementation working"
If you mean "how can that be considered wrong?", the OP wants strings of length 4, not zero. If you mean "how could that be the output of my code?", it's because "moinmoin".replace("moin", "") is the empty string.
@Kevin well, for starters, there's no reason to believe there was a permissions issue, there's a later step that's being run through ansible, and the error is related to ansible talking to upstart not knowing about the init file
user559633
and the "answer" is a "i think it's this wild guess, also, here's a question"
Incidentally, does the common questions list do any kind of duplicate detection? I occasionally worry that I'm adding a link that already exists in there.