There are a few ways to create iterators, but the custom iterator class is the most extensible:
class skip_if: # skip_if(object) for python2
"""
iterates through iterable, calling skipper with each value
if skipper returns a positive integer, that many values are
skipped
""...
Speaking of esoteric...
How ironic -- I just got the bronze [enums] badge a couple days ago. :/
I've created a Set class that has the set types, ListSet and DictSet which are represented by a list and dictionary respectively. Both sets need to be iterable which I've created a SetIterator class to do so, however when I try testing DictSet, I get the following errors:
Traceback (most recent ...
I'm working on an emulator. At the moment, I'm making the interpreter. It's basically a long if/else construct. LD A, NN is similar to LD NN, MM in the sense that set(constantA, value) is likeset(address, value) with one parameter predefined. How can I keep the function logic outside of the lookup table in order to exploit these similarities in operations?
Ideally, I'd have something like a dictionary that returns the functions with prebaked parameters so that I could avoid re-implementing the same logic in slightly different ways, spread throughout the if-statement.
Of course, I could write a 500+ element if/else statement of if opcode == number : do function; return cyclesTaken... I feel that there might be a more legible way, but I can't think of it
I don't think a dictionary could do something like '43' : ldFunc('B', 'E'), '06' : ldFunc('B', fetchValue())
@Aaron3468: You can probably do this with a dictionary. If you write a small example using if/else logic, I'll show you a dict-based equivalent. If the example is under a dozen lines or so you can paste it here (use the Fixed Font button to preserve formatting), otherwise put it on an external site and link it.
That is such an open-ended question that has so many different factors (that we have no information on) that anyone who tries to answer it is doing you a disservice.
@Afnanalam Even though they are both OO languages there are some major differences between Java & Python. It will take a while to get used to Python's more "relaxed" approach. But why do you feel that you want to change?
Once you get used to it, you'll probably find that Python is faster to develop in than Java. OTOH, Java uses a JIT compiler, so it runs faster than standard Python. And Java is certainly more useful than Python if you want to develop Android apps, although there are now some ways to deploy Python code on Android.
@Afnanalam I used Java for a while and transitioned to python. As PM 2Ring says, Python is faster to develop and isn't as strict as Java; you don't need to double/triple check variables, and it's easier to do a lot of things. Python's fun and fast, Java's effective and makes secure code.
@PM2Ring Syntax isn't perfect (I forgot self.), but it's a good representative of what I've got so far
If op isn't guaranteed to be valid you may want to wrap that in a try...except, but I assume you've already validated the opcodes before calling loadOp.
Of course, my code assumes that all the opcodes load a byte using self.nextByte. If that's not the case, eg some load larger values using other functions, we can deal with that by storing additional info in the op_reg dict.
@PM2Ring That's definitely better than my list, and I can still do for c in op_reg: if opcode == c : to validate before calling :) Because I'm using numpy.uint values, the code is fairly bulletproof. Because I'm reading binary, so numpy is fed integers anyways.
For longer sets of parameters, I can just start using tuples as the values in the dictionary. Then I just unwrap those values into a function call once I find the key! So it's the perfect wrapper I knew existed, but couldn't puzzle out myself. I have functions to deal with longer byte values
To deal with the various byte loading functions, you can either store the loading function directly in the dict. Or make a list (or tuple) of the functions and just store the list index in the dict. That would be less typing, but harder to read. And it won't save any RAM, since a list index takes up the same room as a function pointer.
Anonymous
does python has a package management like Composer for PHP?
@samayo PHP code is generally running in an environment that provides Web access; that's not always the case for Python code. So install-on-demand is generally not a suitable strategy for Python.
btw, is there a way to return the matching key in the dict while checking membership? That way I don't need to loop once to see if the key exists, and a second time to execute a function with the arguments mapped to that key
Anonymous
@PM2Ring I don't know how that makes it different, for example when I work on local and push to prod, I have to always manually install requests library, among many others. I think a solution to write those library in a json file and install them at once is a very good idea.
What do you mean "write those library in a json file"? Bear in mind that Python packages can contain plain Python source, but they may also contain other resources, eg, C source that needs to be compiled. For people on Windows, packages containing pre-compiled binaries instead of C source are available, (but not via pip, AFAIK).
@Aaron3468 Another option is to use mydict.get(key, default_value) which returns default_value if mydict doesn't have an entry for that key. If you don't supply a default_value you get None as the default.
@PM2Ring thanks, this is the one I have been searching for. Is there a good tutorial of the usage, like where to store or call the it after listing all the requirements?
@Aaron3468: BTW, defining self.onebyteloads outside a method is a bit odd. Either define it inside the class's __init__ method. OR define it as a class attribute, as onebyteloadswithout the self. stuff.
Also, I'm not quite sure why you bother doing opcode = format(opcode, '02x'). You can write the opcodes in hex form eg 0x2e, it's still only 4 keystrokes, and small integers use less RAM than small strings.
@PM2Ring Sssh ;) Really, it's because the opcodes are read from a binary file. I'm not the one writing them into the code. All documentation for the device I'm emulating uses hex notation for opcodes, so using hexadecimal in the lookup function makes it readable for anybody looking at my implementation
But it doesn't make much difference really. And Python caches or interns small strings and small integers, so if you have 0x2E or '2E' in multiple places through your script only one integer or string object is actually created.
@Aaron3468 I think you're missing my point: I'm saying there's no need to convert the opcodes from int to string: you can just use the raw int opcodes. 0x2E is an integer.
@PM2Ring Yeah, it's pretty late so I'm not thinking straight. I realized what you meant a moment before you responded and you're right. It's more efficient to just if opcode == 0x2e. I was wondering why you'd suggested (or so I thought) if hex(opcode) == 0x2e instead of the `if format(opcode, '02x') == '2e' that I already had.
Thanks for the great help nonetheless. Program logic is fairly easy for me, but common sense and refactoring are entirely different beasts ^^;
Fair enough. FWIW, I agree that using format(opcode, '02x') is generally superior to hex(opcode), since the latter gives you no way to control the length of the string. Also, hex() gives you that pesky leading 0x in the returned string.
@Aaron3468 Not a problem!
After a while, refactoring becomes semi-instinctive. But I guess it helps to read and (play with) lots of examples of good code.
FWIW, I enjoy reading Martijn Pieters' answers, even to fairly simple questions. His code is almost always clear and tight, and generally impossible to improve. :)
To be honest, I'd been putting off the interpreter because I knew if/else wasn't robust enough and one dict couldn't handle every case. Using multiple dictionaries actually makes it easy enough to be a bit fun.
I'll check them out
Oh! I've already seen maybe two or three by him and thought the same each time xD
Now that I'm intermediate with Japanese, I'm getting ready to take on another language and maybe visit Japan for a while to practice. I've got Chinese, Finnish, German, and French on my list
@idjaw Rightio. I've also voted to re-open. And I've pinged the author of the accepted answer to the previous question, although he doesn't have enough re to cast a re-open vote.
It's also weird that Suren hasn't tried to use the logic of that answer to the previous question in his new question. I guess that maybe he doesn't actually understand it.
I get the feeling he speaks a different language, hence describing the previous answers as cryptic, but I'd expect him to at least have copied code and tried messing with it
@idjaw Well, it is a little bit different. And a dupe target should actually have an answer, unless it is an exact dupe by the same poster. AFAIK. But it does sound like the OP just wants code he can use without understanding it, and I hate helping cargo-culters.
is it just me or is this more about the answer I provided? Is OP asking how to use the Yahoo API as well? I'm realizing that this might be an even worse question than I originally thought.
deleted answer for now as it seems like they want to know how to use the Yahoo API. unclear.
It won't be long until I finish my emulator now that it works on about 1/4 of the machine codes. For now, it's time to sleep, so have a good night/day everybody!
for val in b'', None: rv = field.deserialize_value(val, pad=pad) assert isinstance(rv, MarkdownDescriptor) rv = rv.__get__(source) > assert not rv E assert not <lektor.markdown.Markdown object at 0x7fd616e6d0f0>
For some reason, people who say "I'm trying to write a function" when they show no code and really mean "I'm trying to get other people to write a function" infuriate me, but commenting snarkily enough so they get the point would be nonconstructive and so I'd have to flag my own comment..
It's been too long now and I don't interact with students nearly as much as I used to, so I no longer have a good feeling for what parts of programming beginners find hard.
@JonClements If we're going to be pedantic re: American vs British spelling, then perhaps we should also be pedantic about using an adjective "wrong" where an adverb "wrongly" is required. :)
@PM2Ring found this "Wrong" and "slow" didn't become adverbs recently, they have always been adverbs and are listed as such in dictionaries without any reference to slang or colloquial use.
So, that guy I was helping last night with Git stuff wanted to thank me and randomly upvoted 10 answers of mine. Not surprisingly, I have a -60 “Voting corrected” today… *sigh*
I've not decided whether I should use spelt or spelled
Firefox spell-checking seems to accept both
favor is rejected, of course.
though of course "But when spell carries the sense to temporarily relieve (someone) from work, spelled is the preferred form throughout the English-speaking world. This is a minor point, though, as this sense of spell is rarely used outside the U.S., where it is most common."