When I have a tricky CSS question I ask Tab Atkins Jr, who wrote the CSS Syntax spec. He's a regular on the xkcd forums, with username Xanthir. Here's a typical post from him.
Here's a nifty little password generator he wrote in JavaScript. I must admit that the lack of <html>, <head> and <body> tags is a bit disconcerting, but if a member of the W3C does it, I guess it must be ok. :)
The reason is that variable.split() will only return non-empty strings, whereas variable.split(' ') will create a list of n + 1 strings for a string that has n spaces; if you have 2 consecutive spaces, you will get an empty string '' and that will lead to ValueError. — Antti Haapala27 secs ago
Emailed the Environment Agency to a generic "contact-us" email with a question about their API. Had no hope that they'd actually reply. Not only did they reply within 2 days but they'd contacted other people within the agency and had an actual detailed answer for me. Very impressed.
I would like to add the returns of a json to excel cell by cell, like
2003-1 2003-2 2003-3 2003-4 2003-5 2003-6 2003-7 2003-8 2003-9 ....
number number number number number number number number number ....
Here is my code, but as can be understood it only pastes to the first ce...
I like to think we were plenty fair before, but if waiting 600 seconds makes the guys on the receiving end happier, then it's not too dire of a burden for us
Sounds like bad design. I would do a main function then for command line usage, it really is not a good idea to make a function do something completely different just because __name__ == '__main__' — Antti Haapala12 secs ago
@AnttiHaapala I have plans. A bot that lets me tag things as "check in 10 minutes if I still need to link this", as well as tracking if edits are made to reopen.
I'm using lxml 3.4.2 for Python 3.4 on a win 7 64 computer. I got lxml from http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/#lxml. One of its parts is libxml2 2.9.2. I'm having a problem that a user of lxml 3.4.2 with libxml2 2.9.0 is not having, so I'd like to try libxml2 2.9.0, but can't figure out ...
Okay, I think I have a legitimate reason to call in the mob :-) This accepted answer to a basic but legitimate question is terrible, but has a ridiculous number of upvotes. This answer on the other hand is very good. We can't do anything about the accept, but maybe we can redress the balance a little ...
It's been viewed 207161 times, and the accepted answer, while technically correct, is terrible advice. Obviously the Q doesn't show any research effort, but it isn't close- or deleteworthy.
There is now an article on the leading Finnish newspaper how the whole faculty @ department of psychology at uni Helsinki spent the day thinking about the colour perception in a certain photo of a certain dress...
@AnttiHaapala It's absolutely about colour balance. The dress is blue, but the photo makes it look white because it's a bad photo. Perception doesn't come into it - the photo makes it look white/gold, but it isn't, because it's a bad photo. Did I mention that it's a bad photo?
the researchers say they actually do not know why the perception is not identical from person to person... some ppl just do not have a color correction in their brain
This is a good question, I think, the guy who originally wrote it didn't realize asking for a module is the wrong approach here, I edited, think we can reopen? stackoverflow.com/questions/28767896/…
I dunno, if there were a function urllib.urlcheck which detected suspicious URLs, that seems to me like it would be a valid answer. And if a question could have a good answer, and it simply doesn't, then it can't be that horrible a question, IMHO.
the right answer is you cant really ... you can try a bunch of stuff but none of it is bullet proof ... instead you should be using that string with a template library that cleans it prior to using it (most template libraries you need to explicitly mark stuff that should be htmlish with safe)
It would be really hard to do a regular expression that would know if an URL is an attempt at script injection or not. To match the example you gave, searching for <script would be enough.
But a <script> tag is not the only dangerous thing in HTML: consider for example the URL http://example.com...
posted
now that is so bad question that even the answer is pretty awful.
This encrypts so that (‘w’, ‘f’) returns ‘b’. How do I write the inverse of the code to decrypt it so that (‘b’,’f’) returns ‘w’?
def char_encrypt(plaintextchar, keychar):
result= chr(ord('a') + ((ord(plaintextchar) - ord('a')) + (ord(keychar) - ord('a'))) % 26)
ciphertextchar = result
...
That close reason
Yes, I believe it was condescending and somewhat rude. However there is a mass of questions that fall under a crystal clear criteria:
They're poorly written.
They have formatting issues.
They don't show any research attempts.
They don't show any attempt at solving the problem...
stackoverflow.com/posts/28731665 ... here is an example where the code I wrote is not very clear (the question looks better now (OP pasted her attempt in a comment ... someone was nice enough to move it into the question))
but i wrote code such that a teacher of a beginning programing class would feel obligated to ask the student about their solution
My homework is the following:
Python program that reads and processes the file, and that calculates the total number of points per person.
Your program should print the name of the person who received the most points and how many points they got ! Hint: read the file line by line.
S...
Well to provide you the scenario. The system currently stores the url into a db and I just want to throw and alert if it catches an injection when the user is providing the url. I am not using any templating library — Fizi1 min ago
@Air: You fail to state why there is such a pressing need for the syntax on Community Building, nor on any other site. Meta.SE is not more separate then when it was called Meta.SO.